MIFTAH
Tuesday, 2 July. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

The gravity of any situation is often measured by the extent to which extraordinary incidents spiral out of control. For the Palestinians, the unrest on the internal front has been gradually rising and intensifying over the past several months, branching out and manifesting itself in several areas of society. The most recent attack on Al-Arabiyyah Satellite Channel offices in Gaza City is yet one more example that our society is on the dangerous brink of collapse.

On Monday night, January 22, a group of masked and armed men threw explosives into the network’s office in Gaza City, causing extensive material damage but no casualties given that the office was empty at the time of the attack. The assault was hence understood to be a “warning” to Al-Arabiyyah, which if not heeded, would lead to much more serious measures.

While the incident itself is extremely disturbing, - it is widely believed that Hamas-affiliated groups were behind the attack given a dispute between the network and the government over a recording of Prime Minister Ismail Haniyyeh, which was aired without his consent – it is the underlying mentality that propels such acts of vigilantism that are an even bigger matter of concern.

This is certainly not the first time a Palestinian media outlet or journalists have come under fire for expressing sentiments not always popular with the powers-that-be on the ground. Al-Arabiyyah in particular has had its share of harassment over the years because of its reporting.

In 2004, Al-Arabiyyah Gaza correspondent Saif Al-Din Shahin was followed by Fateh gunmen and physically assaulted, ostensibly for one of Shahin’s earlier reports about the power struggle within the movement.

A few months earlier, in September 2003, Al-Arabiyyah offices in Ramallah were broken into and ransacked by masked and armed gunmen, also because of the network’s coverage of internal Palestinian affairs.

According to rights groups, in 2006 alone, seven Palestinian media outlets have been damaged by armed groups and four Gaza Strip journalists physically attacked. Furthermore, six foreign journalists were kidnapped in the course of last year.

Such attacks on the media are just one symptom of a much more perilous societal disease and of a leadership that is grossly lacking in its ability to lead. For months now, we have all become aware of the slippery slope down which our entire society is falling because of the inter-factional fighting raging on undeterred, the lack of respect for political pluralism and now the utter lack of respect for freedom of speech or expression.

Journalists everywhere are supposedly protected by a code of honor that safeguards their personal safety and their right of expression, as long as it does not impinge on any legal boundaries. Even in cases when these lines are shady, any civilized society should resort to the legal system to resolve disputes as opposed to this vigilante justice we are currently seeing here in Palestine.

Here is where the second problem lies. While the Hamas-led government has claimed that it would hold Al-Arabiyyah accountable for its misstep through legal venues, i.e., taking them to court and boycotting their broadcasts, in practical terms it has yet to rein in those groups that identify with it and who so casually decided to take the law into their own hands.

This is a shortcoming, not only of Hamas, but of Fateh as well, whose armed groups have also enjoyed a free hand in meting out this so-called “street justice,” a result of which several lives have been claimed, properties destroyed and personalities defamed. As the two major factions and those in control of key government positions, Hamas and Fateh must both be held responsible and accountable for the anarchy that has taken grip of our streets.

Our leaders do have one thing in common, however. When the time comes to make an official statement, no one can say they don’t know how to choose their words. Following the bombing of Al-Arabiyyah’s Gaza office, government officials condemned the attack, saying they would provide the necessary protection for Al-Arabiyyah in light of the assault and the previous verbal threats. On his part, President Abbas called for the interior ministry and the General Intelligence Services to take immediate action in pursuing the perpetrators.

Here, unfortunately, is where all the bravado ends. Like so many incidents in the past, the culprits will most likely get away, unidentified and unpunished, thus giving yet another negative message to these groups that, yes, they can take the law into their own hands with impunity.

Anyway, it is not as if our leaders are setting such a flawless example for the masses. Ever since the Hamas-led government was formed, Fateh and Hamas have been at each other’s throats, spewing accusations against the other and failing to reach an amicable compromise that would best serve their people’s interests. National unity government talks seemingly reached their last stages several times before plummeting down to square one yet again. Last week President Abbas finally met with Hamas politburo chief Khaled Mash’al in Damascus after the meeting was postponed several times because of “differences.”

Again, while the two agreed to put their best efforts forward in terms of forming a unity government, the Palestinians have learned to adopt nothing more than guarded optimism where their leaders’ pledges are concerned.

If Fateh and Hamas, along with every other political force on the scene want to see a cohesive, harmonious and strong society that would only then be properly equipped to put up a fair fight with the Israeli occupation, they must put words into action.

A good first step would be to find those responsible for attacking Al-Arabiyyah’s office in Gaza and handing down the appropriate punitive measures against them. Not only would justice be served in this incident, but such action would also set a precedent for all those who have been allowed to believe that the leadership tolerates such anarchy.

We cannot allow our society to rot from within unless we are willing to give up the dream we have so long struggled for, because a disintegrated society can never defeat a power as strong as Israel. And even if, against all odds, we do rid ourselves of the occupation, it won’t be long before we self-destruct.

Joharah Baker is a Writer for the Media and Information Programme at the Palestinian Initiative for the Promotion of Global Dialogue and Democracy (MIFTAH). She can be contacted at mip@miftah.org

 
 
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