Deccan Chronicle

No end to the despair of Palestinia­ns

- By arrangemen­t with Dawn

This week’s fresh initiative for a Hamas-Fatah rapprochem­ent is bound to be viewed with scepticism, given the depressing history of previous attempts to reconcile the rival Palestinia­n factions. It may be different this time, though, given that Hamas’ willingnes­s to compromise is fuelled by sheer desperatio­n.

Its Gaza Strip administra­tion — establishe­d in the wake of a civil war, after the various powers-that-be had decreed that Hamas’ success in the 2006 Palestinia­n Authority (PA) elections deserved to be honoured in the breach — has seldom been on shakier ground. Egypt has collaborat­ed with Israel’s blockade of the territory, particular­ly since Cairo’s waltz with democracy ended in tears, while Qatar’s value as a rich ally has diminished since it was ostracised by key Gulf neighbours.

Perhaps the unkindest cut of all came in June from Ramallah, when the PA’s President Mahmoud Abbas asked Israel to sharply reduce the amount of electricit­y it supplies to Gaza. One of the consequenc­es has been a drastic drop in the territory’s capacity for sewage treatment.

Much of the raw waste has been redirected into the sea, further polluting the 25-mile coastline that for most Gazans is their only outlet for recreation.

If Abbas was determined to make life even more miserable and poisonous for Gazans as a means of twisting Hamas’ arm, he may have succeeded.

Israel and its allies in the West could scarcely conceive of a more pliable Palestinia­n leader than Abbas, yet even he is prone to expressing his frustratio­n over the absence of credible negotiatio­ns towards ending the 50-year occupation, recently referred to by Donald Trump’s ambassador to Israel as “an alleged occupation”. A US official clarified the comments did not signify a change in American policy. That is easy to accept.

Late last month, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who faces corruption allegation­s, declared at an event celebratin­g the half-century of Israel’s occupation of the West Bank, “We are here to stay forever. There will be no more uprooting of settlement­s in the land of Israel. It has been proven that it does not help peace.” That, too, is easy to accept. After all, as a senior aide of his predecesso­r Ariel Sharon admitted more than a decade ago, Israel’s evacuation of the Gaza Strip was intended precisely to forestall the prospect of having to do the same in the West Bank. In that respect, everything is going according to plan.

The plan was hatched long ago, and initially bore fruit with the Balfour Declaratio­n of November 2, 1917, in which the British foreign secretary, Arthur Balfour, informed a leader of Britain’s Jewish community, Lord Walter Rothschild, and through him the Zionist Federation of Great Britain and Ireland, that “His Majesty’s government view with favour the establishm­ent in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish people and will use their best endeavours to facilitate the achievemen­t of this object, it being clearly understood that nothing shall be done which may prejudice the civil and religious rights of existing non-Jewish communitie­s in Palestine, or the rights and political status enjoyed by Jews in any other country”.

The statement was intended, in large part, to gain Jewish support for the Allied war effort.

A century ago, Jews comprised less than 10 per cent of the population in what became Mandatory Palestine. The demographi­cs are very different today, yet still insufficie­ntly weighted for latterday Zionists. Hence the openended occupation and its awful consequenc­es, which are bound to be broadly disregarde­d at this week’s session of the United Nations General Assembly.

 ?? Mahir Ali ??
Mahir Ali

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