The Jerusalem Post

PA: Security coordinati­on with Israel fully restored

- • By ADAM RASGON

The Palestinia­n Authority has completely restored security coordinati­on with Israel, PA police chief Hazem Atallah said on Wednesday.

“They are coordinati­ng. Everyone is coordinati­ng now,” he said when asked if all the PA security forces resumed security coordinati­on with Israel. The decision was made two weeks ago, he said.

Atallah was speaking at an event organized by the Foreign Press Associatio­n at the Carmel Hotel in Ramallah.

In July, PA President Mahmoud Abbas announced that security coordinati­on was halted in response to Israel’s placement of metal detectors near the entrances to the Temple Mount, a site holy to Jews, Christians and Muslims.

However, Atallah said security coordinati­on between the PA police and Israel largely never stopped.

“Even when it was stopped or cut or frozen or whatever, that did not apply to the police,” he said. “We don’t work for politics; we work for people.”

According to Atallah, the only aspect of security coordinati­on that was halted between the police and Israel was joint field meetings.

“So 95 [percent], if not more, of the activities of the police were working,” he said.

Regarding other branches of the PA security forces, such as the Preventive Security Service and the General Intelligen­ce Service, Atallah did not say how security coordinati­on had been halted.

In many respects, the police had no choice but to maintain security coordinati­on with Israel, he said.

For example, Atallah said, the police cannot transfer prisoners through Israeli-controlled parts of the West Bank without security coordinati­on. Israel controls a majority of the West Bank’s territory.

Security coordinati­on is highly unpopular in the Palestinia­n territorie­s.

Seventy-three percent of Palestinia­ns supported Abbas’s decision to suspend security coordinati­on with Israel in

July, a September poll conducted by the Palestinia­n Center for Policy and Survey Research found.

When asked to confirm a Ynet report that PA security forces thwarted seven attacks against Israelis in the West Bank in October, Atallah said: “Anybody who is trying to destroy stability and security is going to be arrested and stopped... This is our orders, clear orders.”

According to multiple Israeli and internatio­nal reports, over the past two years, PA security forces have foiled hundreds of attacks in the West Bank that were supposed to target Israelis.

Atallah also reiterated Abbas’s position that the PA would not accept a scenario in which it takes responsibi­lity for Gaza and Hamas’s armed wing, Izzadin Kassam, holds onto its weapons.

In mid-October, Egypt brokered an agreement between Fatah and Hamas to advance reconcilia­tion efforts and restore the PA’s governing authority in the Gaza Strip. Hamas has controlled Gaza since ousting the Fatah-dominated PA in 2007 from the territory.

“No way,” Atallah said when asked if he would accept Izzadin Kassam maintainin­g control of their weapons. “It is impossible. How can I maintain security when there are all these rockets and guns and whatever? Is this possible? It doesn’t work.”

Over the past several weeks, many Hamas officials have dismissed the possibilit­y of disarming Izzadin Kassam.

“Disarming us is like Satan dreaming of heaven. No one can take away our weapons,” Hamas chief in Gaza Yahya Sinwar said on October 19, al-Shehab, a Gaza-based news site, reported.

Izzadin Kassam is comprised of some 25,000 members who possess hundreds of guns, rockets and other weapons.

Atallah also said he plans to call up the 8,000-9,000 police officers who worked for the PA before Hamas took over Gaza to run the police in the territory.

“These are the officers who I will work with as chief of police,” he said.

Hamas officials have said the PA should integrate the police officers the Islamist movement has appointed since taking over Gaza. But Atallah’s comments suggest he has no plan to do that.

Atallah also said Israel has been holding up the transfer of motorcycle­s donated to the PA by the Americans at Ashdod Port for 40 days.

He said Israel informed him two days ago that it plans to transfer the motorcycle­s to the PA traffic police, but they are still sitting at the port.

Israel also has denied the PA access to DNA tests, Atallah said.

“Why don’t we have these tests? It’s not because we are stupid,” he said. “It’s not because we don’t have qualified officers. It’s not because we don’t have a place. We have a lab. It’s because the Israelis are not giving us this test.”

Israel must approve all weapons and equipment given to or purchased by the PA security forces.

In response to a question about the motorcycle­s and DNA tests, the Coordinato­r of Government Activities in the Territorie­s unit said it “upholds ongoing communicat­ions with the Palestinia­n Authority’s security officials.”

According to an Israeli security source, the motorcycle­s were released to customs this week. The source did not say when they would be in the PA’s hands. •

 ?? (Adam Rasgon) ?? PA POLICE CHIEF Hazem Atallah says security coordinati­on between his force and Israel largely never stopped.
(Adam Rasgon) PA POLICE CHIEF Hazem Atallah says security coordinati­on between his force and Israel largely never stopped.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel