National Post (National Edition)

Gaza protests gained ‘less than zero’

- dEClan Walsh isabEl KErshnEr and GAZA CITY, GAZA STRIP

• After weeks of protest at the Israeli border fence peaked this week, Gazans returned to their daily lives of struggle, many wondering what, if anything, had been accomplish­ed.

The cost was clear: More than 100 Palestinia­ns killed by Israeli snipers, 60 of them on Monday alone, and more than 3,500 wounded since the campaign began March 30, Gaza medical officials said.

Hamas, the Islamic militant group that governs Gaza and organized the protests, did score a victory in internatio­nal messaging, with Israel widely condemned for what critics said was disproport­ionate use of force against mostly unarmed protesters.

In Geneva on Friday, the United Nations Human Rights Council voted overwhelmi­ngly to censure Israel and called for an inquiry.

But to many Gazans, the tangible benefits of so much bloodshed were hard to discern, with plenty of blame to go around — including for Hamas.

At a market near the main protest camp, Abdul Rahman, 59, a vegetable trader, called the effort a total waste. “Zero,” he said. “In fact, less than zero.”

He condemned the Israelis, the Arab allies who he said had betrayed the Palestinia­ns, and the leadership of Gaza. “We didn’t open the fence, and the blockade has not been lifted. There was only killing.”

In his sermon at noon prayers on Friday, Ismail Haniyeh, the leader of Hamas, put a positive spin on the protests, called “The Great Return March,” a reference to the goal of Palestinia­n refugees to return to lands lost to Israel in 1948.

“We are living in the throes of victory and the beginning of the end of the humanitari­an tragedy,” he proclaimed.

Haniyeh hailed Egypt’s rare gesture of goodwill toward Gaza in opening its border crossing at Rafah, on the southern edge of the territory, for the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, which began a day earlier. The opening would ease the 11-year-old blockade of Gaza, he said, adding that the border protests would continue until the blockade was entirely lifted.

But many Gazans, having lost friends or suffered grievous wounds in the protests, feel cheated by Hamas.

Eight lean young men, some still wearing bloodstain­ed clothes, dragged away clumps of barbed wire on Thursday that protesters had torn from the fence dividing Gaza from Israel.

Selling the wire as scrap for 70 cents a kilo, they could at least salvage something from of the protests.

“Nothing achieved,” said Mohammed Haider, 23. “People are dead. They deceived us that we would breach the fence. But that didn’t happen.”

Inside Hamas, a very different debate has erupted. The response of Israeli soldiers on Monday has created “strong pressure” inside the movement for a military response, said Basem Naim, a former minister of health in Gaza who now works with the Hamas internatio­nal relations office. “People say ‘If we have the capacity to resort to armed resistance, why not do it?’ ”

But the Hamas leadership was resisting such “emotional” calls, Haim said, in recognitio­n of the rare public relations coup their movement, once better known for suicide attacks and rocket strikes, had scored this week.

The strains of the blockade on Gaza, which Israel and Egypt imposed, citing security reasons, have been obscured in recent years by other crises in the Middle East. Now Hamas hopes to pressure Israel into making some concession­s.

The effort seemed to make headway Friday with the vote by the UN council.

“Those responsibl­e for violations must in the end be held accountabl­e,” Zeid Ra’ad al Hussein, the head of the council, said in a statement Friday. “What do you become when you shoot to kill someone who is unarmed, and not an immediate threat to you? You are neither brave, nor a hero.”

Israel, which considers the council biased, said in a statement by the Foreign Ministry that the council “once again has proved itself to be a body made up of a built-in, anti-Israel majority, guided by hypocrisy and absurdity.”

As the Gaza protests evolved, they had a series of shifting goals in addition to casting Israel in a negative light: breaching the fence to symbolize the return to the lost lands; challengin­g the blockade to ease economic distress; and, ultimately, expressing Palestinia­n rejection of moving the U.S. Embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.

Israel said the protesters were being used as cover by militants who intended to attack its soldiers and nearby communitie­s.

To prove that point, Israeli officials pointed to a statement by a Hamas leader this week that 50 of the 60 protesters killed Monday were members of the group.

Naim, the Hamas official, said the 50 people described were Hamas supporters as well as militants, and that all were unarmed when killed.

The Israeli military said eight armed militants were killed in a shootout with its forces at the fence during Monday’s protest.

In any event, the “great return” did not pan out, given Israel’s determinat­ion to prevent any breach of the barrier. By the end of the week, the world’s attention had moved on to North Korea, the latest Trump administra­tion scandal and Britain’s royal wedding.

And in the meantime, Hamas is no closer to improving the lives of increasing­ly restless Gazans. The group lacks money to even pay public employees’ salaries or other expenses of governing.

Its plight has been deepened by the faltering reconcilia­tion efforts with its archrival, the Fatah-dominated Palestinia­n Authority run by President Mahmoud Abbas in the West Bank.

“Overall Hamas is in the same corner it was a month or two ago,” said Nathan Thrall, director of the Internatio­nal Crisis Group’s Israeli-Palestinia­n project. “It simply doesn’t have an answer about how to get out of this predicamen­t or even how to capitalize on these protests.”

 ?? MAHMUD HAMS / AFP / GETTY IMAGES ?? Palestinia­n demonstrat­ors shout slogans during clashes with Israeli forces along the border with the Gaza strip east of Gaza city on Friday.
MAHMUD HAMS / AFP / GETTY IMAGES Palestinia­n demonstrat­ors shout slogans during clashes with Israeli forces along the border with the Gaza strip east of Gaza city on Friday.

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