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Blairs international donors conference: Another
conspiracy against the Palestinian people
By Jean Shaoul
19 December 2007
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Mondays conference in Paris of potential donors to the
Palestinian Authority, chaired by former British Prime Minister
Tony Blair, had nothing to do with the development of the Palestinian
economy or the alleviation of the appalling suffering of the Palestinian
people. Rather, it will serve to increase unemployment, poverty
and oppression.
Following last months Annapolis summit, it is part of
an ongoing effort by US imperialism to be seen as attempting some
kind of resolution of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. This is
so as to provide a cover for the Arab regimes continuing
support for the American and British occupation of Iraq and their
planned assault on Iran.
Blair, in his opening remarks to the conference, told donors
their pledges would be indispensable to the creation
of a Palestinian state. But the monies will in fact be used above
all to maintain the Palestinian Authority (PA) and the security
forces it is using to suppress opposition to Israel in the West
Bank and to mount a counteroffensive against the Hamas-led regime
in Gaza.
Appealing for aid, PA President Mahmoud Abbas of Fatah told
donors in Paris a moment of truth had arrived. Without
the payment of aid ... we will be facing a total catastrophe in
the West Bank and Gaza, he said.
US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice called for the
continued and unwavering support of the international community.
The Palestinian Authority is experiencing a serious budgetary
crisis, she told the gathering. This conference is
literally the governments last hope to avoid bankruptcy.
The conference, attended by delegates from 68 countries, pledged
a $7.4 billion aid package. The European Union pledged $650 million
in 2008. The US pledged $550 million for 2008, although only $150
million is new money as President Bush had already promised $400
million and this has still to be agreed by Congress. France, Germany
and Japan pledged $300 million, $290 million and $150 million
respectively over three years. Britain has promised about $500
million a year, linking this explicitly to developments in security.
The rest of the money is expected to come from the Arab states.
Saudi Arabia has pledged $450 million. However, while the Arab
states pledged $55 million a month in 2002, little of this has
materialised.
While the PA has received $10 billion in aid since 1993, mainly
from the EU, much of this went toward buildings since destroyed
by the Israeli army or on shoring up businesses that could not
get their goods to market due to the hundreds of roadblocks and
border closures.
As of the beginning of 2007, Iran was by far the largest donor
to the then Hamas-run PA. Earlier this year, the head of Israels
secret service Shin Bet warned that international sanctions against
the PA were having the perverse effect of forcing it into a closer
relationship with Iran. Iran, Syria and Yemen sent only ambassadors
to the conference, which means that they will not be contributing
to this aid package.
Palestinian prime minister and former International Monetary
Fund staffer and banker, Salam Fayyad, pledged that 70 percent
of the money would be used to scale back the PAs public
sector, which is the main source of employment in the occupied
territories. That can only mean an end to what little still exists
in the way of public services. He also promised to end the hundreds
of millions of dollars that go into subsidising utility charges.
Only 30 percent would be available for economic development,
which includes a rehash of proposals that have long been languishing
on the shelf: a trade park in Jericho linking it to Jordan, and
the development of tourism in Bethlehem.
Fayyad said he had no guarantees from Israel that it would
ease travel restrictions. There has not been much progress
in the six months since we took over, he added. He also
said Fatah would supply trained security forces at Gazas
Karni cargo crossing point, which has long been closed to all
but humanitarian aid, adding, We are prepared to accept
our responsibility if Israel agrees to lift the blockade.
The World Bank has admitted that the aid will be money down
the drain unless Israel lifts some of its 500-plus roadblocks
in the West Bank and allows Gaza to open its borders. The widespread
closures implemented after the Palestinian uprising in September
2000 have decimated the Palestinian economy, wiping out jobs and
plunging three-quarters of the population into poverty. Agricultural
products rot on the roadside as they wait for days for clearance
from Israeli security forces. Per capita income has fallen by
60 percent since 1999. The Palestinians are now almost entirely
dependent upon remittances from those living abroad and the international
aid agencies. Tens of thousands have fled Gaza for Canada and
Cuba, which still offers legal immigration, or sought political
asylum in Europe, in recent years.
The World Bank admitted in a report published last week that
even if all the donors deliver on all their promises, the Palestinian
economy would still shrink by 2 percent a year.
While the aid package formally includes Hamas-controlled Gaza,
with a new sewerage system for Gaza, this is only a sop to international
public opinion. The money is destined for the Fatah-controlled
West Bank.
Hamas, which had formed the elected government until illegally
deposed by Abbas and Fatah last June, was not invited to the Paris
conference. Sami Abu-Zuhri, a Hamas spokesman, called the talks
a declaration of war on Hamas.
This was very clear in the speeches, he said. [French
President Nicolas] Sarkozy, for example, called on the Palestinians
to unite behind Abbas and said there would be no peace with a
group that refuses to recognise Israelmeaning Hamas,
he continued.
The Paris conference follows last months US-backed conference
in Annapolis, Maryland, which launched negotiations nominally
aimed at creating a Palestinian state within the next 12 months.
A key element of the renewed peace talks is the US-backed road
map, which requires Israel to freeze settlement-building activity
and the Palestinians to disarm militants. However, any conditions
on Israel are a dead letter. Until the enfeebled PA can somehow
prevent Palestinian explosives and rockets from attacking any
Israelis, then Israel does not have to abide by its responsibilities
under the Road Map.
Israel is utilising pressure from the US to push the PA into
a direct conflict with Hamas in Gaza, while continuing its own
efforts to grab most of the best Palestinian land, secure its
control of Jerusalem and divide the West Bank in two.
Within days of the Annapolis talks, Israel unveiled plans to
build 300 new homes in Har Homa, a settlement on occupied land
between Jerusalem and Bethlehem. As Mondays Financial
Times editorial, headlined More Israeli settlement on
Palestinian land will sink peace, explained, Neither
the significance of Har Homa, nor the timing of this initiative,
can be easily understated.
The original establishment of the settlement, announced by
the then Prime Minister Benyamin Netanyahu in 1997, and started
just before the Oslo peace talks finally collapsed, was widely
denounced at the time as contravening international law. The expansion
of Har Homa is aimed at completing the encirclement of East Jerusalem,
illegally annexed by Israel after its conquest in the 1967 war,
with Zionist settlements. This would prevent any possibly of a
compromise solution to the Palestinians demand for East
Jerusalem as their capital and make travel for those Palestinians
living in West Jerusalem outside the city limits all but impossible.
Just as talks are due to restart between Israel and Palestine
on the borders of the two states, in order to achieve a Palestinian
state by the end of 2008, the possibility of sharing Jerusalem,
essential to that outcome, is being foreclosed, the Financial
Times continued.
Rice has made a ritual statement warning Israel that this might
prejudge final status negotiations.
Meanwhile, Israeli military incursions into Gaza continue on
an almost daily basis aimed at stopping the firing of homemade
Qassem rockets into southern Israel. Last Tuesday, in what an
Israeli military spokesman called a routine operation against
militants, 30 Israeli tanks and bulldozers pushed 1.5 kilometres
into Southern Gaza. They killed at least six militants, destroyed
75 acres of olive groves and citrus orchards, demolished homes
and left others without power near Khan Younis.
Last Thursday, following a barrage of at least 17 Qassem rockets
that injured a woman in Sderot, Ehud Barak, Israels defence
minister, announced that the town near Gazas border will
be placed under military rule. Prime Minister Ehud Olmert has
agreed to a military proposal to regularly bomb Hamas compounds.
See Also:
Annapolis: US prepares Palestinian
civil war and rallies Arab support against Iran
[29 November 2007]
Annapolis talks: A cover for
fomenting Palestinian civil war and preparing assault on Iran
[26 November 2007]
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