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As humanitarian crisis hits Palestinian territories
US and Israel continue drive to overthrow Hamas-led government
By Rick Kelly
16 May 2006
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The ongoing international financial embargo of the Palestinian
Authority, initiated after the Islamist organisation Hamas won
the legislative elections in January, has led to a humanitarian
crisis of unprecedented dimensions within the West Bank and Gaza.
The already impoverished Occupied Territories are facing a complete
economic collapse, with skyrocketing unemployment and poverty
and increasing hunger and malnutrition. Palestinian Authority
(PA) employees, including medical and education workers, have
not been paid for two months.
The response of the Israeli government and the Bush administration
to the crisis has been to further tighten the screws. Neither
Tel Aviv nor Washington has wavered from its commitment to destabilise
and ultimately overthrow the Hamas-led PA. Exposing the hypocrisy
of its claim to be promoting democracy in the Middle East, the
Bush administration responded to the democratic election of Hamas
by seeking to reverse the result through the collective punishment
of the Palestinian people. It backed Israels withholding
of more than $50 million in monthly tax and customs revenue owed
to the PA and coordinated an international funding freeze.
Foreign funding last year amounted to $1.3 billion of the PAs
$1.9 billion annual budget. Almost all of this money, including
the European Unions $600 million a year, has been withdrawn.
Countries still providing direct aid include Saudi Arabia ($92
million), Iran ($50 million), Qatar ($50 million), and Russia
($10 million). This money still leaves a massive shortfall and
is insufficient to cover the PAs monthly wage bill of approximately
$100 million for its 165,000 employees.
It was against this background that representatives of the
diplomatic Quartetthe US, the European Union,
Russia, and the United Nationsmet in New York on May 9 and
announced the formation of a temporary international mechanism
to distribute humanitarian aid in the West Bank and Gaza.
The new funding arrangement came after the release of a series
of reports describing the deepening crisis within the West Bank
and Gaza. In its quarterly report released last month, the World
Bank estimated what will happen if the embargo of the PA continues:
Real GDP per capita declines by 27 percent in 2006, and
personal incomes (real GDI per capita) by 30 percenta one-year
contraction of economic activity equivalent to a deep depression.
Under this scenario, unemployment hits 47 percent and poverty
74 percent by 2008. By 2008, the cumulative loss in real GDP per
capita since 1999 has reached 55 percent.
On May 7, the World Bank released a short statement admitting
that these estimates were too rosy.
Most of the PAs employees have not been paid, and about
a quarter of the West Bank and Gazas population depends
on these incomes. Media reports have described Palestinian families
selling heirlooms and jewellery to buy food and medicine for their
children.
The funding cutoff has further damaged what little remains
of the social infrastructure in the West Bank and Gaza. With salaries
unpaid, municipalities have been unable to collect taxes needed
to fund basic services. Rubbish collection has been cut in Gaza
City, and sanitation and sewerage systems in other urban centres
are threatened. Other services were put under further pressure
last week when Israel cut off fuel supplies for three days, resuming
supplies only after President Mahmoud Abbas agreed to pay $30
million. Israel is the sole supplier of petrol and cooking gas
to the Occupied Territories.
Palestinian schools and hospitals have run short of vital equipment.
At least four kidney patients have already died after their dialysis
treatment had to be cut from three times to twice a day in order
to conserve drugs. Cancer patients are no longer able to receive
chemotherapy, while other patients have had to forego painkillers
and anaesthetics.
The catastrophic situation in the Occupied Territories goes
beyond anything witnessed even when former Israeli prime minister
Ariel Sharon was in power. It has been accompanied by a sustained
Israeli military offensive.
In the six weeks since March 31, the army has fired more than
5,100 artillery shells into Gaza. At least five civilians, including
an eight-year-old girl, have been killed as a result.
The government also continues to assassinate Palestinian militants.
Six men were killed on Sunday, May 14, in the West Bank, including
Elias Ashkar, a senior Islamic Jihad leader. Ashkar and another
militant were killed in the town of Qabatiya after an armoured
Israeli bulldozer demolished the house they were in. Amir Peretz,
Labour Party leader and new defence minister, hailed the operation
as an important achievement in the war against terrorism.
US maintains destabilisation efforts
The Quartets response to the humanitarian crisis thus
represents little more than a band-aid pressed over a gaping wound.
It remains unclear how much money the US and Europe will channel
through the new funding mechanism. But Washington and Tel Aviv
are insisting that whatever money is disbursed be directed through
humanitarian organisations and not through any section of the
PA. They have also indicated that they will oppose any move to
pay the salaries of PA employees, including health and education
workers, despite the fact that humanitarian organisations unconnected
to the PA do not have the capacity to address Palestinians
medical needs.
US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice made clear that the
Quartets statement did not represent any real concession
or shift in US policy. Nothing changed with the Quartet
statement, she bluntly declared in an interview on Fox News.
Haaretz reported on May 5 that the US had blocked earlier
proposals by Britain, France, and the Arab League for direct funding
to sections of the PA. Quoting an unnamed Western diplomat, the
Israeli newspaper reported that this move was driven by the
belief that an aid cutoff will prompt Palestinians to rebel against
the Hamas government.
A Reuters report, also released May 5, stated that some
Western diplomats say Washingtons goal is to shore up Abbas
while making it impossible for the Palestinian Authority to function.
Abbas has left little doubt that he is willing to go along
with the Bush administrations efforts to subvert Januarys
election result. The Palestinian president gave an interview with
CNN, broadcast April 23, in which he threatened to remove the
Hamas government from power unless they recognise the Zionist
state and work with the Israeli government. If Hamass
behaviour continues in its present form I will act against them,
since the international communitys conditions are also mine,
he told foreign diplomats.
The aggressive stance of the US has provoked objections from
within the Quartet. After meeting with Abbas on April 28, French
President Jacques Chirac called for the creation of a fund overseen
by the World Bank that would allow the payment of Palestinian
officials salaries. The plan was backed by Britain, while
an EU spokesperson described the proposal as not at odds
with the position of the European Commission.
At the Quartets meeting, however, the European powers
backed down in the face of American opposition. The statement
subsequently released was deliberately vague as to exactly how
the temporary international mechanism will function.
Some European officials have suggested that the new fund could
direct money to PA employees such as medical and education workers,
notwithstanding US and Israeli objections.
Even if this occurs, it will not resolve the crisis in the
West Bank and Gaza. One issue all of the major powers have avoided
addressing is that of paying the salaries of those employed in
the PAs massive security apparatus. An estimated 70,000
men work for the police and security agencies, almost all of whom
are linked with Fatah. The inability to pay many of these forces
has exacerbated factional rivalries between Hamas and Fatah-linked
militants and contributed to the eruption of shootouts on the
streets of Gaza in the past few days.
The European powers differences with the US are of a
solely tactical character. No European government is prepared
to challenge Washingtons aggression or Israels ongoing
oppression of the Palestinian people. Europe merely hopes to prevent
the disintegration of the PA, in which it has invested billions
of dollars, by cajoling the Bush administration into adopting
a less reckless strategy.
Reflecting the increasingly antagonistic relations between
Washington and Moscow, Russia last month defied the international
financial embargo and donated $10 million to the PA. President
Vladimir Putin met with Abbas on May 15 and discussed proposals
for further aid transfers.
The Arab League again demonstrated the political bankruptcy
of the bourgeois nationalist regimes in the Middle East when its
secretary-general Amr Mousa reportedly told Abbas last week that
it could not go ahead with a plan to transfer $70 million directly
to PA employees. The Arab League claimed that the donation could
not proceed, as regional and international banks refused to transfer
the money due to fear of US anti-terrorist laws, which allow for
institutions to have sanctions imposed and their assets frozen.
See Also:
Israeli officials threaten
to assassinate Palestinian prime minister
[20 March 2006]
Israels confiscation
of Palestinian revenues: a brazen violation of international law
[25 February 2006]
Palestinian parliament sworn
in as US and Israel step up destabilisation drive
[21 February 2006]
US and Israel plot overthrow
of Hamas-led Palestinian Authority
[18 February 2006]
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