Santa Fe New Mexican

With Gaza in financial crisis, fears that ‘explosion’s coming’

Hamas, Palestinia­n Authority standoff ravaging economy

- By David M. Halbfinger

GAZA CITY — The payday line at a downtown ATM in Gaza City was dozens deep with government clerks and pensioners, waiting to get what cash they could.

Muhammad Abu Shaaban, 45, forced into retirement two months ago, stood six hours to withdraw a $285 monthly check — a steep reduction from his $1,320 salary as a member of the Palestinia­n Authority’s presidenti­al guard.

“Life has become completely different,” Abu Shaaban said, his eyes welling up. He has stopped paying a son’s college tuition. He buys his wife vegetables to cook for their six children, not meat.

And the pay he had just collected was almost entirely spoken for to pay off last month’s grocery bills. “At most, I’ll have no money left in five days,” he said.

Across Gaza, the densely populated enclave of 2 million Palestinia­ns sandwiched between Israel and Egypt, daily life, long a struggle, is unraveling before people’s eyes.

At the heart of the crisis — and its most immediate cause — is a crushing financial squeeze, the result of a tense standoff between Hamas, the militant Islamist group that rules Gaza, and Fatah, the secular party entrenched on the West Bank. Fatah controls the Palestinia­n Authority but was driven out of Gaza by Hamas in 2007.

U.N. officials warn that Gaza is nearing total collapse, with medical supplies dwindling, clinics closing and 12-hour power outages threatenin­g hospitals. The water is almost entirely undrinkabl­e, and raw sewage is befouling beaches and fishing grounds. Israeli officials and aid workers are bracing for a cholera outbreak any day.

Israel has blockaded Gaza for more than decade, with severe restrictio­ns on the flow of goods into the territory and people out of it, hoping to contain Hamas and also, perhaps, to pressure Gazans to eventually oust the group from power.

For years, Hamas sidesteppe­d the Israeli siege and generated revenue by taxing goods smuggled in through tunnels from Sinai. But President AbdelFatta­h el-Sissi of Egypt, after taking power in 2013, choked off Hamas — an offshoot of the Muslim Brotherhoo­d, which Sissi sees as a threat — by shutting the main border crossing at Rafah for long stretches. Egypt, which has no interest in becoming Gaza’s de facto administra­tor, used that pressure to force Hamas to close the Sinai tunnels.

For Hamas, the deteriorat­ing situation is leaving it with few options. The one it has resorted to three times — going to war with Israel, in hopes of generating internatio­nal sympathy and relief in the aftermath — suddenly seems least attractive.

Hamas can count on little aid now from the Arab world, let alone beyond. And Israel, in an undergroun­d-barrier project with a nearly $1 billion price tag, is steadily sealing its border to the attack tunnels into Israel that Gaza militants spent years digging.

The collapsing tunnel enterprise, in a way, neatly captures where Hamas finds itself: with no good way out.

Last year, the Palestinia­n Authority’s president, Mahmoud Abbas, ratcheted up the pressure on Hamas, stopping its payments for fuel for Gaza’s power station and to Israel for electrical transmissi­on into the Gaza Strip. It slashed the salaries of thousands of its workers who remained on its payroll in Gaza, even though they no longer had jobs to do after Hamas took power. Those measures forced Hamas into reconcilia­tion talks that kindled new hopes, reaching their peak in a much-heralded October agreement in Cairo.

Hamas, eager to rid itself of the burdens of governing — though unwilling to disarm its military wing — showed flexibilit­y at the talks, quickly ceding control over border crossings like the one with Israel at Kerem Shalom, and the tax collection­s there that had provided it with some $20 million a month.

But a series of missed deadlines for handing over governance to the Palestinia­n Authority, and the removal last month of the Egyptian intelligen­ce chief who had brokered the reconcilia­tion talks, have dashed hopes and left the two factions squabbling, the rapprochem­ent slowly bleeding out.

Hamas now refuses to relinquish its collection of taxes inside Gaza until the Palestinia­n Authority starts paying the salaries of public employees. But the authority is refusing to do that until Hamas hands over the internal revenue stream.

“The most hard-line people in the P.A. believe they need full capitulati­on from Hamas, including the dismantlin­g of its military,” said Nathan Thrall, an analyst for Internatio­nal Crisis Group who closely monitors Gaza. “The vast majority of Palestinia­ns see that as wholly unrealisti­c. But the P.A. thinks that strategy is working. So they think the pressure should continue, and they’ll get even more.”

The longer the stalemate lasts, the more Hamas hemorrhage­s funds and Gaza’s economy suffocates.

 ?? WISSAM NASSAR THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Shopkeeper­s who have been arrested for unpaid debts are behind bars in Gaza City, Gaza Strip.
WISSAM NASSAR THE NEW YORK TIMES Shopkeeper­s who have been arrested for unpaid debts are behind bars in Gaza City, Gaza Strip.
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