Gulf News

PLO meeting to tackle Abbas succession, vision for future

Fears of potential vacuum at PNA have generated concern given Abbas’ worsening health

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Aseries of illnesses that sent Palestinia­n National Authority (PNA) president Mahmoud Abbas to the hospital has put the 83-yearold leader under renewed pressure to designate a successor, a decision he’s still resisting.

Abbas will outline his vision for contending with hostility from the Israeli regime, Hamas and the Trump administra­tion at a meeting of the Palestine Liberation Organisati­on’s (PLO) Central Council in Ramallah, that starts later yesterday. More relevant to the governing body’s 135 delegates may be how much longer he can sustain the rigours of office.

The two-day gathering this week is aimed at “trying to reinforce Abbas’s legitimacy, which is fumbling in a way that is apparent to all,” said Sam Bahour, a Ramallah business consultant and founder of Americans for a Vibrant Palestinia­n Economy.

Abbas’s rejection of US President Donald Trump’s peace plan even before its release sacrificed financial and political support that had buoyed the PNA since the Clinton administra­tion. A potential vacuum at the top of the PNA has generated so much concern because of the prospect for chaos and violence.

From time to time, Abbas has raised the possibilit­y of deliberate­ly letting the PNA collapse, potentiall­y forcing the Israeli regime to assume responsibi­lities it gave up 25 years ago with the Oslo peace process, ranging from providing electricit­y to postal service and sewage repair.

The leadership of Abbas’s Fatah party is so splintered that any succession battle is liable to turn bitter. “As long as Abbas is there, nobody in Fatah will dare press this issue openly,” said Khalil Shikaki, director of the Palestinia­n Centre for Policy and Survey Research in Ramallah. Once he’s gone, “there will be a very different environmen­t.”

Hamas waiting

After Abbas, if the PNA follows constituti­onal protocol, his immediate successor pending elections would be the Hamas leader, Aziz Dweik, Palestinia­n Legislativ­e Council speaker.

Abbas will do whatever he can to avoid that scenario, Shikaki said.

Top contenders in elections could include Marwan Barghouti and Esmail Haniya.

Barghouti has been a consistent front-runner in Shikaki’s polls even though he’s serving five life terms in an Israeli prison, convicted of planning terrorist attacks. Haniya, polling second, would stir a hornet’s nest if he were to win a presidenti­al election, facing vigorous opposition to his vision of Islamic government from secular Fatah leaders and much of the West.

Abbas addressed the succession issue obliquely in May speech to Fatah leaders, without indicating whom he favoured.

“We do not want to keep the culture of the individual,” he said. “We want the culture of the institutio­n.”

Uncertaint­y about succession plans could affect foreign direct investment in Palestine, said Bahour. FDI to Palestinia­n areas dropped 31 per cent in 2017 from the year before, to just over $200 million, according to the World Bank. “People are scared,” Bahour said.

“They want to know who is going to be in charge.”

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