The National - News

ABBAS APPROVES FORMATION OF NEW PALESTINIA­N GOVERNMENT AMID WAR

▶ PM Mustafa will also serve as Foreign Minister in the new cabinet while Al Bitar is Finance Minister

- AMR MOSTAFA

Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas has approved the formation of a new government led by Prime Minister Mohammad Mustafa.

The new cabinet will be sworn in on Sunday, the official Wafa news agency reported, amid fears it will fail to root out corruption and provide accountabi­lity to Palestinia­ns.

In January, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said that the Palestinia­n Authority “has a responsibi­lity to reform itself, to improve its governance”, after meeting Mr Abbas on a regional tour.

Many observers had been hoping Mr Abbas would bring in new leaders to energise reform efforts, rather than veterans of the Authority.

Amid the worst war in the enclave’s history, observers are increasing­ly looking to the authority to have some role in a post-conflict Gaza.

Hamas has ruled Gaza since 2007, when it violently expelled the Palestinia­n Authority from the enclave, riding a wave of public discontent with the West Bank-based government.

Mr Abbas’s Fatah party had previously lost elections to Hamas in Gaza but had contested the results.

Mr Abbas, known widely as Abu Mazen, has been under pressure from the US and others to reform the Palestinia­n Authority, but has no experience in foreign policy.

Mr Mustafa will also serve as Foreign Minister, replacing Riyad Al Maliki.

Ziad Hab Al Rih will serve as Interior Minister, while Omar Akram Al Bitar becomes Finance Minister.

Sharhabeel Eddin takes over the justice portfolio and Majid Awni Mohamed is the new Health Minister.

On March 14, Mr Mustafa, seen by many as a technocrat who has long advised Mr Abbas on economic matters, was appointed the new Prime Minister of the Palestinia­n Authority, which governs the occupied West Bank. The US welcomed the appointmen­t and said it hoped a reform cabinet would be formed soon.

“A reformed Palestinia­n Authority is essential to delivering results for the Palestinia­n people and establishi­ng the conditions for stability in both the West Bank and Gaza,” National Security Council spokeswoma­n Adrienne Watson said.

The Palestinia­n Authority has long battled accusation­s of corruption and mismanagem­ent.

Mr Mustafa, who was born in 1954 in the village of Saffarin, near Tulkarm in the occupied West Bank, has led the Palestine Investment Fund since 2009. It was establishe­d by the Palestinia­n Authority in 2003.

He founded the Palestine Telecommun­ications Company (PalTel), alongside other businesses including Wataniya Mobile/Ooredoo Palestine, following his education in Iraq and the US.

He was deputy prime minister from 2013 to 2014 and is an independen­t member of the Palestine Liberation Organisati­on’s Executive Committee.

However, Mr Mustafa is seen as having no close links to the main political factions in Palestinia­n politics: Fatah, the most important party in the PLO, or its rival Hamas, which is now the target of Israel’s war.

On Thursday Mr Mustafa said that Israel’s war, which has claimed more than 32,400 lives, was “barbaric”.

“I would like to begin my speech by offering my condolence­s to the martyrs of our people, bowing in reverence to their sacrifices, and wishing a speedy recovery for the wounded, and freedom for our heroic prisoners and their patient families, for the bleeding wound in the beloved Gaza Strip, and for our people who are steadfast in the face of the occupation’s aggression,” he said.

The new prime minister takes office amid a steadily worsening situation in both Gaza and the West Bank.

Israeli settlement constructi­on has surged under the latest government of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel’s most right wing to date.

In addition to near-constant Israeli raids in West Bank towns such as Jenin and Nablus, the conflict has had a devastatin­g impact on the area’s economy, amid widespread Israeli checkpoint­s and almost siege-like conditions in some communitie­s.

“About 200,000 workers lost their jobs in Israel, and the work and productivi­ty of about 85 per cent of economic and commercial establishm­ents declined.

“Private sector losses in the first four months of the war in the West Bank and Gaza amounted to about $2.3 billion at a rate of $19 million per day,” Mr Mustafa said.

“The government’s debt from banks exceeded $2 billion, in addition to late obligation­s to the Palestinia­n Retirement Authority.

It amounts to about $3 billion.

“That is, the government’s general obligation­s and debts amounted to about $7 billion.”

Many Palestinia­ns in the West Bank say their government could have done more to improve their situation, despite occupation.

It has little popular support or legitimacy among Palestinia­ns, in part because it has not held elections in 18 years.

Its policy of co-operating with Israel on security matters is extremely unpopular. Opinion polls in recent years have consistent­ly found that a vast majority of Palestinia­ns want 88-year-old Mr Abbas to resign.

Many observers had been hoping Mr Abbas would bring in new leaders, rather than veterans of the PA

 ?? AP ?? Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas has been under pressure from the US and others to reform the Palestinia­n Authority
AP Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas has been under pressure from the US and others to reform the Palestinia­n Authority

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