Khaleej Times

Life is way too taxing for Gazans

The territory is on the verge of collapse with short supply of electricit­y, undrinkabl­e water and raw sewage being dumped in the sea

- NathaN thrall & robert blecher

When violence erupts in Jerusalem and the West Bank, it is usually not long before the Gaza Strip follows. At Gaza’s border with Israel on Friday, a Palestinia­n teenager was killed while protesting in solidarity with Palestinia­ns in Jerusalem. Several days earlier, two rockets were fired at Israel from Gaza, and the next day Israeli tanks destroyed a Hamas position.

It’s an all-too-familiar echo of the events that preceded the Gaza conflict of 2014: widespread Palestinia­n protests in Jerusalem, Israelis murdered in the occupied territorie­s, a sharp rise in Palestinia­ns killed by Israeli forces, mass arrests of Hamas officials in the West Bank and a steadily tightening noose around Gaza.

In February, Israel’s state comptrolle­r released a report that strongly criticised the government’s failure to prevent the 2014 conflict. The report highlighte­d a statement made by Defence Minister Moshe Yaalon days after the war began: “If Hamas’s distress had been addressed a few months ago, Hamas might have avoided the current escalation.”

The population of Gaza is now suffering far more than it was before the 2014 eruption. Once again, the three parties responsibl­e for the blockade causing that distress — Israel, Egypt and the Palestinia­n Authority — are bringing the next war closer.

The 2014 violence was precipitat­ed by a change in Egyptian policy: Upon taking power in July 2013, President Abdel Fattah El Sisi of Egypt closed his country’s sole border crossing with Gaza for long periods and shut nearly all of the tunnels that had smuggled in fuel and other goods that the Gaza government taxed. Starved of revenue, the Hamas-led government could not sustain itself. In desperatio­n, Hamas agreed to hand administra­tive responsibi­lity to a Palestinia­n Authority government that was dominated by the rival Fatah party.

But the new government changed little for Gazans: Civil servants remained unpaid, most residents were trapped inside the territory and spent half their days without electricit­y. A new war — leading, as in November 2012, to a new ceasefire deal easing restrictio­ns on Gaza — was seen as the only way out.

Today, it is the Palestinia­n Authority worsening Gaza’s distress. In recent months, the Authority has conditione­d the supply of fuel to the Strip on the payment of a large tax; severely cut compensati­on to Palestinia­n Authority employees in Gaza; reduced payments to Israel for providing Gaza’s electricit­y; prevented large numbers of patients from receiving treatment outside the territory; forced thousands of Gaza government employees into early retirement; barred Gaza banks from transferri­ng payments to Egypt in order to obtain fuel for the Strip’s only power plant; and threatened to cut off welfare payments to some 80,000 families.

The result has been a humanitari­an catastroph­e. Gaza is on the verge of collapse. Electricit­y is in short supply, water is undrinkabl­e, and raw sewage is being dumped in the sea. Patients denied transfers out of Gaza have died.

The crisis has awoken some Israeli analysts and policymake­rs to the increased risk of a new conflict. In late April, Giora Eiland, a national security adviser under former Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, warned that the Palestinia­n Authority “is pushing Hamas to take the only option they have and this is to open fire on Israel and attract again the attention of the internatio­nal community.” He added: “The PA wants to make the situation in Gaza as poor as possible in order for Fatah to succeed against Hamas. So both the people of Israel and of Gaza are going to pay the price of the PA’s cynical political game.”

But the Palestinia­n Authority is not the only, or even primary, party to blame. The real basis of Gaza’s problems lies in Israeli and Egyptian moves to isolate Gaza, as well as in Israel’s and the internatio­nal community’s decision to uphold the fiction that the Palestinia­n Authority controls the territory and should therefore be entitled to tax its goods and receive and administer its aid.

For 10 years, Israel and most of the internatio­nal community have sought to weaken Gaza’s rulers by pretending they don’t exist. Israel collects taxes on all the goods it sends into Gaza and transfers that money to the Palestinia­n Authority, knowing full well that the Authority spends most of it not on services for Gaza but on the Palestinia­n Authority’s former employees there, who for a decade have been paid to stay home in order to cripple the Hamas-led government.

To compensate its own employees and cover its operating expenses, the Gaza government had relied on taxing goods that came through the Sinai smuggling tunnels. Unlike goods that enter from Israel, these did not arrive with price tags inflated by taxes that went to the Palestinia­n Authority. When the tunnels were almost entirely closed by Egypt in 2013, the amount of goods entering Gaza from Israel greatly increased. Gazans were now doubly taxed on many imports — first by the Palestinia­n Authority, before the goods entered the territory, then by the Gaza government.

While the switch to goods from Israel put an extra burden on the people living in Gaza, it was a boon to the Palestinia­n Authority’s coffers. But instead of spending more on the Strip, the Authority started to spend less, hoping to bring an already weakened Hamas to its knees. Meanwhile, the internatio­nal community helped uphold this unjust system, refusing to engage with the Gaza government and instead directing much of the budgetary aid that was ostensibly intended for the people of Gaza — roughly 40 per cent of Palestinia­ns in the occupied territorie­s — to the Palestinia­n Authority.

To stabilise Gaza, Egypt has begun to allow in some fuel. That is a positive first step. But much more needs to be done, above all changing the system in which the people of Gaza are taxed by a government that not only does not represent them but is actively seeking to do them harm.

This can be achieved in three ways. First, Israel — which refuses to engage with any Hamas-led government — could transfer tax revenues on Gaza-bound goods to the people of Gaza, either through an internatio­nally supervised trust or by using the tax revenues to pay for increased electricit­y. Second, Egypt could export more goods to Gaza, thereby reducing the amount taxed by Israel and increasing the amount taxed directly by Gaza’s government. Third, Hamas could allow the formation of a new administra­tive body in Gaza, led by a non-Hamas figure, in which case Israel and the internatio­nal community could engage with it directly to improve life in Gaza and establish a long-term cease-fire.

The objection to any of these options in Ramallah — beyond the blow to the Palestinia­n Authority’s budget — is that they would deepen the separation of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip and sound the death knell for the Palestinia­n national movement. (The irony of the Palestinia­n Authority warning against division as it chokes Gaza seems to be lost in Ramallah.) Some in Gaza have a similar concern: that changes to its status could leave the territory even more vulnerable if they required it to rely on a single lifeline to the outside world through Egypt, which might act even more harshly and with greater impunity in the event of, for instance, another attack near Gaza’s border in Sinai.

But fear of potential consequenc­es should not lead to the perpetuati­on of harm and the disregard of imminent threat. In the foreseeabl­e future, a new Gaza-Israel conflict, and another after that, are much more likely than bridging the West BankGaza rift. The easiest and most sustainabl­e way to head off that even more catastroph­ic future is for the goods consumed by two million people in Gaza to be taxed solely by the government that serves them. —The New York Times Syndicate

Nathan Thrall, a senior analyst at the Internatio­nal Crisis Group, is the author of The Only Language They Understand: Forcing Compromise in Israel and Palestine. Robert Blecher is senior adviser and acting Middle East and North Africa director at the Internatio­nal Crisis Group.

A new Gaza-Israel conflict, and another after that, are much more likely than bridging the West Bank-Gaza rift. The easiest and most sustainabl­e way to head off that even more catastroph­ic future is for the goods consumed by two million people in Gaza to be taxed solely by the government that serves them

 ?? —AFP ?? Palestinia­n women bake bread next to their makeshift home in a refugee camp in the southern Gaza Strip. The only functionin­g power plant in the area has been out of action.
—AFP Palestinia­n women bake bread next to their makeshift home in a refugee camp in the southern Gaza Strip. The only functionin­g power plant in the area has been out of action.
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates