The Jerusalem Post

UN envoy: An outbreak violence in Gaza could destroy Fatah-Hamas deal

- • By TOVAH LAZAROFF

An outbreak of violence between Israel and extremist groups in Gaza could destroy the fledgling agreement to end the 10-year rift between Fatah and Hamas, UN Special Coordinato­r for the Middle East Peace Process Nickolay Mladenov told The Jerusalem Post.

“It is in their [the Islamic Jihad’s] best interest to deescalate as soon as possible. Any other path would lead us back into a cycle of violence,” he said on Tuesday. “If it does not lead us immediatel­y into a cycle of violence, it will destroy the prospect of reconcilia­tion and return the PA back [to Gaza].”

Mladenov, who will be appearing at The Jerusalem Post’s Diplomatic Conference on December 6 in Jerusalem, spoke with the Post amid a war of words between Israel and Islamic Jihad in Gaza, which prompted the IDF to move Iron Dome batteries into the center of the country to defend civilians against rocket attacks.

It followed Israel’s discovery and explosion of an Islamic Jihad tunnel from Gaza in its territory along the southern border.

Mladenov said Gaza is at a crossroad: between a reconcilia­tion deal that could lead to more normalized life, or an outbreak of violence with Israel that could make an untenable situation for its civilians even worse.

On November 1, based on the reconcilia­tion agreement signed in Cairo in October, Fatah regained control of the Erez and Kerem Shalom crossings with Israel on the Gaza side. But the process hit a snag with regard to the Rafah crossing with Egypt. It is also supposed to be in Fatah’s hands, but it did not open as scheduled on Wednesday. Except for intermitte­nt periods, it has been closed for the last 10 years.

“We are very far from [full] reconcilia­tion between Fatah and Hamas,” Mladenov said, adding: “We are very much at the early stages of this process, and there are too many things that can go wrong, and most of them probably will.”

The PA taking over of the crossings is just the first step in the reconcilia­tion process, he said, and only if it is completed could there be a possibilit­y of the normalizat­ion of the flow of goods in and out of Gaza.

It remains to be seen “whether the Palestinia­n Authority will be fully empowered to take over civilian and security control of Gaza,” Mladenov said. “If tunnel constructi­on from Gaza toward Israel continues, particular­ly by organizati­ons like Islamic Jihad, it will be difficult to justify any changes to the security and access to Gaza.”

“That will be very unfortunat­e,” he said. “That is why all of us have an important responsibi­lity to speak out absolutely clearly and equivocall­y to warn all those factions in Gaza that if they continue to engage in such activities, they are damaging the situation of their own people.”

For the last 10 years, since Hamas took over the crossings from Fatah, Israel has imposed stiff restrictio­ns on the Erez and Kerem Shalom crossings.

It remains to be seen, however, if the 2005 Agreement on Movement and Access, which dictated the terms of how the crossing would be operated, would now be reactivate­d or a new one would need to be drafted, Mladenov said.

“That agreement was put in place in a very different environmen­t,” he said.

The PA’s return to the crossings is just one step in the process that includes security, judicial and civil-service issues as well as the overall question of elections, Mladenov said.

“There are a lot of questions still to be addressed,” he said, adding that no matter how complicate­d the process was, he believed there was no other alternativ­e.

“What is the alternativ­e when you have two million people in abject misery in Gaza under Hamas control for 10 years locked in because of the closures,” Mladenov said. “The situation there is close to exploding. Since the beginning of this year, it has really deteriorat­ed.”

If the reconcilia­tion efforts fall apart, there could be “a meltdown of law and order in Gaza and a security threat for Israel, where the extremists decide they are better off fighting Israel because they can not resolve the internal problems of the [Gaza] Strip,” he said.

“If I were a Palestinia­n leader in Gaza, after 10 years of living in this hell that they have lived in and three conflicts, to go to people and say let us go back to that mentality and back to that way of doing things, I would think is a disastrous prospect,” Mladenov said. “People need to see hope for the future, and they do not want to see their houses destroyed and their lives put at risk by the recklessne­ss of someone.”

 ?? (Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) ?? NICKOLAY MLADENOV: ‘We are very much at the early stages of this [reconcilia­tion] process, and there are too many things that can go wrong, and most of them probably will.’
(Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) NICKOLAY MLADENOV: ‘We are very much at the early stages of this [reconcilia­tion] process, and there are too many things that can go wrong, and most of them probably will.’

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