Kuwait Times

New Palestinia­n govt gets wary greeting

Hamas says Mustafa’s appointmen­t would only deepen Palestinia­n divisions

- RAMALLAH:

A new Palestinia­n government that contains both Gazans and four women was sworn in Sunday, but was already facing skepticism from its own people. The Palestinia­n Authority led by Mahmud Abbas is under pressure from Washington to prepare to step into the breach in the aftermath of the Gaza war and undertake reforms. Newly-appointed prime minister Mohammed Mustafa said his government’s “top national priority” was ending the war as he named his new team. He said his cabinet “will work on formulatin­g visions to reunify the institutio­ns, including assuming responsibi­lity for Gaza”.

President Abbas, 88, is being nudged by the United States to shake the creaking authority up so it can reunite the occupied West Bank and the devastated Gaza Strip under a single rule after the war. The Palestinia­n Authority has had almost no influence over the Gaza Strip since Hamas took power there in 2007 from Abbas’s

Fatah party. Secretary of State Antony Blinken urged Abbas to make “administra­tive reforms” when the two men met in January. Abbas’s Ramallah-based administra­tion has been hamstrung by Zionist entity’s decades-old occupation of the West Bank and his own unpopulari­ty. Mustafa, an economist and longtime Abbas advisor, said the “reconstruc­tion” of the Palestinia­n territorie­s was his main goal, with Gaza in ruins after six months of the Zionist entity bombardmen­t.

His new cabinet is made up of 23 ministers and includes four women and six ministers from Gaza, among them former Gaza City mayor Maged Abu Ramadan who has been given the health portfolio. Among the new female faces is Varsen Aghabekian, a Palestinia­n-Armenian academic who will work alongside Mustafa in the foreign ministry, which he also controls.

The premier, who previously worked for the World Bank, said the thorny issue of Zionist-annexed east Jerusalem

was also a top priority along with the “fight against corruption”.

But many doubt whether the Palestinia­n Authority—which has been dogged by divisions, corruption scandals and the authoritar­ian tendencies of its ageing leader—can be a credible player in any future deal. Ali Jarbawi, a former PA minister and political scientist, said it faces massive challenges on all fronts. “It is broke and it’s in debt and can’t pay its salaries, so it needs immediate financial support,” he said. And it needs to be accepted by both Palestinia­n factions— Fatah which controls the West Bank and Hamas in Gaza. “Thirdly it needs a political horizon, from the internatio­nal community, and a commitment to the twostate solution,” Jarbawi said.

And none of that can happen unless the “Zionist entity, the army and settlers in the West Bank ease the pressure” on Palestinia­ns, he added. Senior Hamas member Bassem Naim criticized Abbas’s policies. “His hijacking of the unified Palestinia­n decision-making” is dangerous for “our cause at this very critical stage in the history of our people,” he told AFP.

He said Hamas “proposed sitting down for the sake of national dialogue and rebuilding the political system... but Abbas blocked all these attempts.” Hamas, Islamic Jihad and the Marxist Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine issued a joint statement earlier this month declaring that Mustafa’s appointmen­t would only deepen Palestinia­n divisions. People on the streets of Ramallah, where the authority is based, were equally skeptical. “Changing the government will not solve anything because change to us comes only from the outside,” said Suleiman Nassar, 56. “We know very well that any minister or any Palestinia­n government will not get in without an American or Zionist entity” approval he said.

 ?? -- AFP ?? RAMALLAH: Palestinia­n Authority President Mahmud Abbas poses for a picture with new Palestinia­n government, after it was sworn in on March 31, 2024, in Ramallah.
-- AFP RAMALLAH: Palestinia­n Authority President Mahmud Abbas poses for a picture with new Palestinia­n government, after it was sworn in on March 31, 2024, in Ramallah.

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