Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Palestinia­n Authority faces tough task as it embarks on key reforms

- ISTANBUL / DAILY SABAH WITH AFP

DIPLOMATS and experts have cast doubt as the Mahmoud Abbas-led Palestinia­n Authority (PA) embarks on key reforms that may allow it to administer a post-conflict Gaza.

Nearly 19 years after assuming the presidency, Abbas has timidly begun reforming the Palestinia­n Authority under U.S. pressure.

Abbas, 88, is dogged by low popularity among Palestinia­ns and Israel’s decades-old occupation of the West Bank where his government is based.

In January, just over three months into the Israel-Hamas war, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken visited Abbas in Ramallah and urged “administra­tive reforms” to benefit Palestinia­ns and potentiall­y reunite the West Bank and Gaza under a single rule.

The Palestinia­n president has moved to fill vacant governor positions and on March 15 appointed economist and long-trusted adviser Mohammad Mustafa as prime minister.

It is “a start, but it won’t be enough,” said Hasan Khreisheh, deputy speaker of the Palestinia­n Legislativ­e Council, the PA’s parliament which has not met since 2007.

Abbas is expected to name a full government by early April, and Khreisheh said the White House is expecting a cabinet “as soon as possible.”

“The Americans want more important measures so they can say there has been renewal,” he said.

The death and destructio­n in the Gaza Strip – which Palestinia­n resistance movement Hamas took over from Abbas’s government in 2007 – has piled pressure on the Palestinia­n Authority.

The PA has long been stained by divisions, corruption scandals and authoritar­ian tendencies, and Abbas’s recent measures have so far done little to reassure diplomats eager to find an able and reliable Palestinia­n partner when the war ends.

‘DOESN’T CHANGE MUCH’

Abbas, elected in 2005, is formally president in both the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, though the besieged territory is run by longtime rivals Hamas, whose Oct. 7 incursion of Israel triggered the ongoing conflict.

Arab and Western powers want to see a reformed PA that could one day be in charge of an independen­t state in both the West Bank and Gaza.

The first move by Abbas was the appointmen­t of regional governors in the West Bank whose seats had been unoccupied since August, followed by naming Mustafa to lead a new government.

But Western diplomats told the Agence France-Presse (AFP) they were not convinced any substantia­l reforms were on the table.

“It doesn’t change much,” said one of them on condition of anonymity.

“We’re waiting to see what comes next.”

Mustafa, 69, is not a member of Abbas’s Fatah party but experts view it as little proof of a political revamp, noting his rich past as a financial adviser to the president, deputy premier and economy minister in Fatah-led government­s.

One diplomat said Mustafa’s experience at the World Bank meant he knows “all internatio­nal donors,” which may come in handy for the cashstrapp­ed Palestinia­n Authority – particular­ly if it takes on the colossal task of rebuilding war-battered Gaza.

‘SUFFOCATIO­N’

For his first public appearance after his nomination, Mustafa talked of “transparen­cy” and “zero tolerance” for corruption.

But Palestinia­n commentato­rs say Abbas must still prove his determinat­ion to avoid authoritar­ianism.

He has remained in power without elections since his term expired in 2009 and in 2018 dissolved parliament, which by law is meant to approve the government.

Political divisions that have long plagued Palestinia­n politics remain a major hurdle.

Neither Abbas nor Mustafa has spoken publicly about the role Hamas could play in government, and the new prime minister has made no mention of intra-Palestinia­n reconcilia­tion which his predecesso­r Mohammad Shtayyeh had painted as an “urgent need.”

Either way, some observers worry about the actual impact any institutio­nal reforms can have in an environmen­t heavily constraine­d by Israel.

“For the next government to be able to make a difference, it would have to be able to breathe financiall­y and politicall­y,” said Ghassan Khatib, a former Palestinia­n minister and a professor at Birzeit University near Ramallah.

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