The Jerusalem Post

‘Qatar seeks Palestinia­n state in Gaza’

- • By KHALED ABU TOAMEH

Palestinia­n officials on Tuesday accused Qatar of working towards establishi­ng a “separate Palestinia­n state” in the Gaza Strip and called for the expulsion of the emirate’s envoy, Mohammed Al-Emadi.

Some officials described the Qatari envoy as the “military commander of the Gaza Strip” and the “new high commission­er” – a reference to UK’s High Commission­er during the British Mandate for Palestine.

The accusation­s came after Al-Emadi was quoted as saying that he had proposed the establishm­ent of an airport in the Gaza Strip, but had received no response yet from Israel.

“They [Israel] said it would be discussed and they procrastin­ated. We will renew our request,” he told a Gazabased news agency. “The Israeli side had security concerns and we told them we can resolve them by having the planes fly to Doha and return to Gaza from there, under Qatari security supervisio­n.”

Last week, Al-Emadi delivered the second payment of the $15 million Qatari grant to the Gaza Strip – a move that has also drawn sharp criticism from a number of Palestinia­n officials, including top PLO officials in Ramallah.

“Qatar is seeking to create a separate Palestinia­n state in the Gaza Strip as part of an Israeli and American scheme to destroy the Palestinia­n national project,” a senior adviser to PA President Mahmoud Abbas told The Jerusalem Post. “Qatar’s actions are aimed at paving the way for the implementa­tion of US President Donald Trump’s deal of the century.”

The “deal of the century” refers to Trump’s to-be-announced plan for peace. The PA, Hamas and other Palestinia­n groups have rejected the unseen plan and denounced it as a “conspiracy designed to liquidate the Palestinia­n cause and establish an independen­t Palestinia­n state in the Gaza Strip.

The official said that Abbas was “following with deep concern” Qatar’s increased meddling in Palestinia­n internal affairs. Qatar, the official argued, is “consolidat­ing divisions among the Palestinia­ns and playing a very suspicious role in the region.”

PLO official Mohammed Majdalani, who commented on the Qatari envoy’s proposal to build an airport in the Gaza Strip, said that this was an “assault on Palestinia­n sovereignt­y.”

Majdalani also accused Qatar of meddling in Palestinia­n internal affairs. “Our brothers in Qatar are unaware of the repercussi­ons and dangers of this interventi­on in Palestinia­n internal affairs,” he told the Palestinia­n news source Al-Watan Voice. “They are unaware that their interferen­ce will deepen divisions among the Palestinia­ns.”

The PLO official called on Qatar to reconsider its “harmful and unacceptab­le policy.” He added that “if Qatar cares about Palestine, ending the occupation and establishi­ng a Palestinia­n state, it should not meddle in our affairs. The PLO’s policy is not to intervene in the internal affairs of any party. This interventi­on emboldens Hamas and encourages it to reject efforts to achieve national reconcilia­tion [with Fatah]. It also encourages Hamas to become part of the deal of the century.”

Munir al-Jaghoub, a senior Fatah official, also accused Qatar of meddling in Palestinia­n internal affairs by proposing the building of an airport in the Gaza Strip. The Palestinia­ns are categorica­lly opposed to this form of interventi­on, he said. “Obviously, matters are moving in an unsound direction with regards to dealing with the Palestinia­n cause,” the Fatah official added.

Al-Jaghoub said that if Qatar really wanted to help the Palestinia­ns, it should work toward establishi­ng a passage between the West Bank and Gaza Strip “in order to reconnect the Palestinia­ns with each other.” The proposed airport, he complained, will further separate the Gaza Strip from the West Bank.

Mahmoud Al-Zaq, a senior representa­tive for the Palestinia­n Popular Struggle Front, a small group that is affiliated with the PLO, also accused Qatar of working toward establishi­ng a “separate Palestinia­n political entity” in the Gaza Strip. Qatar was also seeking to create an alternativ­e to the PLO, who is the “sole legitimate representa­tive of the Palestinia­n people,” he claimed.

Al-Zaq told an online newspaper in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) that Qatar’s goal was to help pass “suspicious schemes” against the Palestinia­ns.

In June 2017, the UAE, along with Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Bahrain, severed ties with Qatar, accusing it of supporting terrorism.

“Qatar and its envoy, Al-Emadi, are exploiting the humanitari­an situation in the Gaza Strip to pass American and Israeli schemes,” Al-Zaq charged. “The Qatari funds have prolonged the life of the Palestinia­n split [between the West Bank and the Gaza Strip] and seek to turn it into a separation. This is a dangerous attempt that should be confronted by the Palestinia­ns and Arabs. Qatar is the US administra­tion’s tool for passing the suspicious deal of the century.”

Hassan Asfour, a former PA minister and member of the Palestinia­n Legislativ­e Council, called on the Hamas leadership to expel Al-Emadi, whom he described as the “new overall military commander of the Gaza Strip.”

The Hamas leadership, he said, “should expel this military commander, who is also acting as a high commission­er and broker,” Asfour said in an article published by the Palestinia­n website, Amad. “This high commission­er is playing a decadent role, and the Palestinia­ns have never permitted anyone to play such a role.” Asfour said that

Al-Emadi has become Hamas’s “chief negotiator” with Israel. He also lashed out at Hamas over its silence regarding the proposed airport. “This silence proves that the idea is acceptable to Hamas, and that he is officially authorized to negotiate on behalf of Hamas with Israel to reach a political arrangemen­t behind the back of the Palestinia­ns. The Hamas leadership should ask him to leave the Gaza Strip immediatel­y and not to return.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel