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US, EU threaten cut-off of funds to Palestinian Authority
following Hamas victory
By Chris Marsden
30 January 2006
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The election of Hamas has been met with threats by the United
States, Europe and Israel to cut off funds to the Palestinian
Authority (PA).
The US, the United Nations, the European Union (EU) and Russiawhich
make up the quartet backing President Bushs so-called Road
Map to Peace in the Middle Eastissued a statement
calling on Hamas to renounce violence and accept Israels
right to exist. The Arab League has also insisted that Hamas recognise
Israel.
Israeli interim Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, in power following
Ariel Sharons stroke until the March elections, said there
would be no talks with an armed terror organisation that
calls for Israels destruction, while Foreign Minister
Tsipi Livni called on the European Union to oppose the creation
of a terrorist government. She was asking specifically
for the EU to end funding to the Palestinian Authority.
The US has already stated that funding to the PA will now be
reviewed. Most US aid$300 million last yeargoes through
NGOs. European aid to Palestinian institutions totalled around
$330 million last year, but this does not include figures at least
twice as high donated by individual governments.
James Wolfensohn, the former head of the World Bank and the
quartets special envoy, has warned that cutting off aid
would push the Palestinian territories into chaos. The crunch
time is next week, he said, when the wages of 135,000 security
personnel and civil servants are due. Mazen Sinokrot, the present
Palestinian economy minister, said the PAs 135,000 employees
were the main breadwinners for 30 percent of Palestinian families:
If these salaries do not come in, this is a message for
violence.
Though immediate action has been rejected, Israel by itself
could threaten the continued existence of the PA. Joseph Bachar,
the director-general of Israels finance ministry, said the
PA relies on customs and VAT tax transfers from Israel and money
from Saudi Arabia, and warned that it was very difficult to see
how his ministry could continue to work with a government committed
to the destruction of Israel. If Israel closed all borders, this
would deprive the Palestinians of their major markets and their
ability to export, as well as deny incomes to many Palestinians
who work in Israel. The PA depends on Israel for its electricity
and water supply.
There is also a very real possibility of a stepping up of the
low-level warfare being conducted by the Israeli Defence Forces
(IDF). On January 28, Israeli Defence Minister Shaul Mofaz threatened
targeted killings of Hamas leaders if the group did not comply
with the terms dictated to it by Tel Aviv and Washington. The
IDF arrested at least 15 suspected Palestinian militants, including
8 from Hamas, in overnight raids following the elections.
There can be no clearer exposure of the pretence of the US
and the European powers to champion democracy for the Palestiniansor
anywhere else in the Middle Eastthan their dismissal of
the results of the election as illegitimate.
The Palestinian people voted massively in support of Hamas
in the January 25 elections that were sponsored by the Western
powers, giving it 76 of the 132 seats in the PA. But because they
had the gall to vote the wrong way, their chosen government is
proclaimed to be illegitimate and they are threatened with a siege
and mass starvation.
Hamas was elected as a mass protest motivated by the desperation
created by Israeli occupation and anger that the so-called peace
process has only made things worse for most Palestinians. Beginning
under President Clinton in 1993 with the signing of the Oslo Accords
and continuing under President Bushs Road Map,
the peace process has provided a cover behind which
Israel has occupied and quarantined entire cities and towns, mounted
repeated attacks on the civilian population that have cost thousands
of lives, undertaken political assassinations and massively extended
its settlement programme. Under the Road Map, Sharon was given
carte blanche for the building of his so-called security wall
that will permanently annex about half of the West Bank to Israel,
including the whole of East Jerusalem.
The experience of more than a decade has exposed to broad masses
the cynical claim made by US and Israeli leaders that they have
any intention of seeking a just settlement with the Palestinians.
The anger this has generatedfuelled by crushed illusions
that the creation of the Palestinian Authority would provide a
means of realising the democratic and social aspirations of the
workers and peasantswas directed against PA President Mahmoud
Abbas and the sections of the Fatah leadership. These are the
forces most associated with the so-called two states solution,
who are now seen as collaborators in a cruel political deception.
The sweeping victory of Hamas has exposed one of the fictions
propounded by the US in justifying its policyof relegating
the organisation to the status of merely a terrorist outfit. Hamas
is in fact a political movement with considerable popular support,
which has employed terrorist methods. Its basic outlook is communalist
and it offers no genuine alternative to Fatah or any other strand
of Palestinian or Arab nationalism. However, it has been able
to successfully appeal to the discontent of a population living
under the most impoverished conditions by maintaining a network
of social services and the extensive charity work it carries out.
Above all, it has benefited from the fact that it has formally
opposed the peace process and its authors since Oslo.
But this does not translate into popular support for Hamass
overall programmea fact recognised by the organisation,
which emphasised its opposition to the corruption of the bourgeois
layers around the Fatah tops and promises to alleviate the lot
of the poor. Hamas co-founder Mahmoud Zahhar pledged, We
are going to change every aspect, as regards the economy, as regards
industry, as regards agriculture, as regards social aid, as regards
health, administration, education.
The Financial Times acknowledged, The vote reflected
more a popular backlash against Fatah than an embrace of Hamass
Islamist and rejectionist ideology. But it also represented frustration
with a much talked of, but now moribund, peace process
that failed to fulfil Palestinian aspirations during a decade
of Fatah rule.
Jibril Rajoub, the former head of the West Bank Preventive
Security Service, while defending Fatah, also observed correctly
in the New York Times: Israel has done everything
to hurt the Palestinian Authority and sabotaged the chances to
negotiate and reach an agreement. Hamas has reaped the fruit of
this policy.
Though Hamas was the main beneficiary of popular resentment
towards Abbas and his clique, popular anger also finds expression
within Fatah. The party was already deeply split before the elections
and fielded opposing candidates in some districts. The past days
have seen demonstrations by tens of thousands of Fatah militants
calling for Abbas to resign. Thousands of protesters in the refugee
camp of Nusayrat called for the entire Fatah leadership to go.
A thousand protesters stood in front of Abbass Gaza residence,
denouncing him as an Israeli agent. They and thousands
of others then marched on the legislative council, burning symbols
of the regime, demanding an end to corruption and that the party
not join a Hamas government. About 15,000 Fatah activists were
demonstrating throughout Gaza.
Hamas has made clear that it desires a compromise with Israel.
Speaking from exile in Damascus, Hamas leader Khaled Mashal suggested
that Hamas was prepared to honour previously signed Palestinian
Authority agreements once it assumes office. We will not
recognise Israeli occupation, but we are realistic and we know
things are done gradually, he said. Mahmoud al-Zahar, the
top Hamas official in Gaza, told CNN that a long-term hudna
or long-term truce is possible, while other leaders have
mooted leaving foreign policy in the hands of Abbas as per the
stated wishes of Washington.
However, there is every chance that things will deteriorate
to the point where this is not an option. Sporadic fighting has
already taken place between Fatah and Hamas supporters, and Fatah
still controls the security services, which voted en bloc for
the party. Hamas has proposed creating a Palestinian army and
wants a reorganisation of the Palestine Liberation Organisationboth
of which will be seen as a threat by all factions of Fatah.
Whatever their intentions, it is Tel Aviv and Washington that
bear ultimate political responsibility for the victory of Hamas.
It is they who decided to marginalise and ultimately eliminate
Arafatwho retained a degree of popular support and authority
amongst the Palestinian massesin order to install a new
leadership of Fatah made up of conservative and pliant businessmen
led by Abbas. The result was to drive millions into the arms of
Hamas, something that Sharon himself welcomed as an excuse to
declare negotiations at an end. Immediately Likud came to power
in 2001, Sharon declared that PA President Yasser Arafat was not
a partner for peaceand placed him under military
siege in his Ramallah headquarters with the full support of Washington.
After Arafats death in November 2004, Abbas was also rejected
as a partner for peace because he would not disarm
Hamas for fear of provoking civil war. Sharon then began his so-called
unilateral disengagementimposing new borders favourable
to Israel.
Whatever happens, Israel will accelerate its attacks on the
Palestinians using the situation it has created as a pretext.
The debate within Israeli ruling circles following the election
is whether to complete Sharons land grab or to launch what
would have to be a massive military offensive against the Palestinians
to retake control of Gaza and yet broader portions of the West
Bank.
Kadima, the political vehicle Sharon created before his stroke,
favours a completion of unilateral withdrawal. This
would include completing the separation barrier and determining
the final contours of Israels frontier with the West Bank.
In this, it has the full support of the Labour Party and Meretz.
Labour Chairman Amir Peretz told the Knesset (parliament),
If we have to, we will implement unilateral moves. We will
not agree to a diplomatic stalemate. The changes in the Palestinian
Authority will not hold us hostage.
Ami Ayalon, a former director of Shin Bet now running for a
seat with the Labour Party, added, There is now a broad
consensus, that Israel will go ahead and build our borders to
preserve Israel as a democratic Jewish state. The Palestinian
Authority constructed by Fatah no longer exists, he
said.
Benjamin Netanyahu, who now leads the far-right rump of Likud
and has the support of the settler and religious parties, has
rechristened the PA Hamastan...an Iranian satellite state
in the image of the Taliban.
Denouncing Sharons disengagement, he added, It
was created in close proximity to Jerusalem, Tel Aviv and Ben-Gurion
International Airport.... A policy of unilateral withdrawal rewarded
Hamas terror.
Netanyahu and former foreign minister Silvan Shalom have been
touring the route of the security fence. Shalom warned ominously,
This will not be the border of the State of Israel.... This
current border stands in the range of fire by the terror organisation
which took control of the Palestinian Authority a number of days
ago.
See Also:
Hamas victory in Palestinian election
[27 January 2006]
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