The Borneo Post

Palestinia­n startups innovate way past obstacles

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RAMALLAH, PALESTINIA­N TERRITORIE­S: At first glance, Mashvisor is just one of thousands of websites specialisi­ng in US real estate.

But it has a unique feature, undetectab­le to customers: its designers created it in the West Bank and it is run from the Israel- occupied Palestinia­n territory.

“The great thing about a start-up is you can work on it anywhere in the world. You can be in Palestine, you can be in Cambodia, Vietnam, China. It doesn’t matter,” explains Peter Abu al-Zolof, who founded Mashvisor more than a year ago with a friend.

Last week, Mashvisor became the first Palestinia­n company to get the support of the influentia­l American 500 Startups venture capital fund.

It is one of a number of Palestinia­n start-ups in the occupied Palestinia­n territorie­s, long overshadow­ed by Israel’s so-called ‘Start-up Nation’.

The online platform automates and analyses US real estate data nationwide to find investors the best property deals.

As in Silicon Valley, the staff dress casually, drink coffee from state- of-the- art machines in garish colours, and pad through the office wearing US-made headphones around their necks.

But working in the West Bank brings unique challenges.

In October 2015, a wave of violence broke out across Israel and the Palestinia­n territorie­s.

Abu al-Zolof’s friend and founding partner Mohamed Jebrini, who lives in Hebron, found himself stranded in the city as roads were closed, 45 kilometres ( 30 miles) from their Ramallah offices.

“He was stuck in Hebron and I was stuck in Ramallah and we were still working on our company,” explains Abu al-Zolof.

And the American-Palestinia­n says the online nature of what they do means they can avoid many of the frustratio­ns for other companies in the West Bank, where the Israeli army checkpoint­s often present very physical challenges to commerce. — AFP

 ??  ?? A worker harvests palm fruit at a plantation in Indonesia’s north Sumatra province. Global consumer companies, including Unilever, Nestle, Kellogg and Procter & Gamble, have sourced palm oil from Indonesian plantation­s where labour abuses were...
A worker harvests palm fruit at a plantation in Indonesia’s north Sumatra province. Global consumer companies, including Unilever, Nestle, Kellogg and Procter & Gamble, have sourced palm oil from Indonesian plantation­s where labour abuses were...

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