MIFTAH
Sunday, 30 June. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

The Palestinians have made huge leaps and strides this week in Cairo towards implementing the reconciliation agreement. The factions met together along with Hamas and Fatah on December 22, agreeing to activate and reconstruct the PLO so that non-members such as Hamas and Islamic Jihad could join. After the meeting President Mahmoud Abbas then issued a presidential decree for the establishment of a new Palestinian Elections Commission that would prepare for presidential and parliamentary elections. While no date was officially set for the vote, talk has been circulating about May 4, 2012. The only main issue postponed for later was the formation of a unity government, which the leaders agreed to push back until January 26.

On December 24, Khaled Meshaal, Hamas’ leader said on route back to Damascus that both Hamas and Fatah had made mistakes and should admit to them and not blame the other side. The Hamas leader has also made some drastic changes, saying in an interview with AP on December 22 that Hamas would focus on popular protests to unify Palestinians, adding that the movement would accept a Palestinian state along the 1967 lines.

Popular protests, he said, have "the power of a tsunami," Meshal said. "Now we [Fatah and Hamas] have a common ground that we can work on … the popular resistance, which presents the power of people," he said.

While the Palestinians may be rejoicing over their leaders finally coming together, this has not been the case with Israel, which is ranting and raging over a reconciliation deal between the two. On December 22, spokesperson for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu Mark Regev said that if Abbas "embraces Hamas, if he walks toward Hamas, he is walking away from peace,” calling Hamas a “genocidal terrorist organization.”

The United States is not faring much better in terms of support for the Palestinians. The Palestinian leadership criticized the US on December 22, saying the US’s unwillingness to condemn Israeli settlement construction was isolating Washington in the international arena.

The criticism came following the December 20 Security Council session where the US blocked a condemnation of Israel’s settlement construction as opposed to the 14 other members.

Britain's UN Ambassador Mark Lyall Grant, speaking for EU members France, Germany and Portugal, indirectly criticized the US by saying that "Israel's security and the realization of the Palestinians' right to statehood are not opposing goals.

"On the contrary they are mutually reinforcing objectives," he said. "But they will not be achieved while settlement building and settler violence continues."

The US repeated its usual empty mantra on settlements in its own defense. "The only way to resolve the outstanding issues between Israelis and Palestinians is through serious and substantive direct negotiations."

The United States also opposes Security Council action on "final status issues" because this "would only harden the positions of both sides and make the resumption of negotiations more difficult," the spokesperson said.

The Palestinian delegation to US said in a statement on the 22nd that they were "encouraged by the latest positions of the international community with regards to the Palestinian right to self-determination and Israel’s illegal settlement policy". In the same statement, however, they added that the “General Delegation of the PLO to the U.S. is concerned by the U.S. position in these sessions," adding that, “Such positions are making the U.S. more isolated in the international arena."

Settlements have, as a result, continued unabated. The European Union Ambassador to Israel, Andrew Stendly made a complaint on December 23 regarding the eviction of Bedouin residents and the demolition of Palestinian homes in part of the E1 area of the West Bank in which Jewish homes are planned that would create territorial contiguity between Jerusalem and the settlement of Ma’aleh Adumim.

The Obama administration only seemed to be making things worse on December 23 when President Obama signed a bill that includes a provision to expand U.S. military assistance to Israel. The bill, which was approved by Congress this week, would have the U.S. provide additional support to the annual $3 billion for 10 years.

And while Palestinian aid is reportedly on the budget, as well, the Obama Administration said Palestinian funding would be conditional upon the Palestinians putting an end to pursuing unilateral recognition at the United Nations.

On December 21, President Abbas met Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan during an official visit to Istanbul. The president also met with freed Palestinian prisoners who were exiled to Turkey as part of the prisoner swap deal between Israel and Hamas. This set Israel off again. A spokesman for Netanyahu called the meeting "sickening", saying that "Instead of seeking peace and reconciliation with Israel, the Palestinian leadership honor killers”.

The Israeli official also said the move, "Raises a question mark about [the leadership’s] commitment to peace and ending the conflict."

On the ground, Israeli settlers and the army continued to crack down on Palestinians. One Palestinian was shot in the leg during the weekly protest on December 23 in Nabi Saleh near Ramallah.

An army spokesman termed the protest a "violent and illegal riot". The protester was shot while throwing stones at an armored army vehicle.

On December 21 Israeli settlers cut down 27 trees in Ithna near Hebron and bulldozed wells and shacks in the area. Two days earlier on December 19, a group of settlers set fire to four cars in Beitin near Ramallah, almost burning down an apartment building nearby.

Finally, the Ministry of Tourism said on December 24 that it expects more than 100,000 tourists to visit Bethlehem by the end of the month for Christmas and New Years. Tourism Minister Khulud Deibes said 50,000 pilgrims would visit Bethlehem on Dec 24 and 25 for the midnight mass and Christmas celebrations. Merry Christmas from Palestine.

 
 
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