Gulf News

Weakened Hamas has limited options in besieged Gaza Strip

Faithful offer Friday prayers LOSS OF REGIONAL ALLIES AND AN EVER CRIPPLING BLOCKADE STOKE POPULAR DISCONTENT

- GAZA BY ERIN CUNNINGHAM

ANALYSIS

The Islamist Hamas movement, which rules the Gaza Strip, is facing its worst crisis in years as it confronts a severe cash shortage, a loss of regional allies and no obvious way to ease a blockade that is crippling local living conditions and stoking popular discontent.

As it wrestles with this predicamen­t, Hamas is trying to turn up the pressure on Israel — most notably by encouragin­g weekly mass protests along the Gaza border fence — without provoking an all-out military response that analysts say the group might be too weak to withstand.

The immediate aim, analysts say, is to loosen the years-old blockade imposed on Gaza by Israel, Egypt and the rival Palestinia­n National Authority, which controls the occupied West Bank.

Venting anger

Some Hamas leaders have also seen the protests as a chance for Gazans to vent and direct their anger at Israel.

But as the Palestinia­n death toll in the protests has mounted with each passing week, so has public dismay with the militant group.

Hamas, which the United States considers a terrorist organisati­on, is also trying to strike an awkward balance between its traditiona­l strategy of armed resistance against Israel and the imperative to preserve enough calm in Gaza so the group can govern it.

On Tuesday, another militant Palestinia­n group, Islamic Jihad, fired scores of mortar shells and rockets from Gaza into southern Israel, a dramatic Egypt’s President Abdul Fatah Al Sissi announced in May that he was opening Egypt’s Rafah crossing with Gaza for Ramadan — the longest opening in four years. But border authoritie­s in Gaza say passenger traffic remains restricted and the process of coordinati­ng travel is still cumbersome and unclear. “No concrete vision or initiative to ease the siege has been presented to us” by the internatio­nal community, Hamas spokesman Hazem Kassem said in an interview.

“We can’t even say that there are talks to lift the blockade.” Hamas is in discussion­s with Egypt, Qatar and the United Nations regarding small steps to ease restrictio­ns on Palestinia­ns in Gaza, including allowing more residents to leave the territory and paying for fuel for the power plant.

Hamas became so desperate that last year it sought to mend ties with the Palestinia­n National Authority, giving its rival control of Gaza’s border crossings and agreeing to set up a technocrat­ic government.

The Palestinia­n National Authority, trying to force Hamas to turn over control in Gaza, has imposed its own punitive measures, including withholdin­g funds for the territory’s only power plant and halting the transfer of salaries to authority employees in Gaza. The Palestinia­n National Authority has also blamed Hamas for the bombing of the motorcade of Palestinia­n Authority Prime Minister Rami Hamdallah during a visit to Gaza in March. He survived the assassinat­ion attempt, which Hamas denied invovlemen­t in. escalation that analysts say could not have happened without Hamas’s knowledge and perhaps support.

Israel hit Gaza with a blitz of air strikes, the biggest seen since the devastatin­g 2014 Israeli assault on Gaza.

Hamas’s armed wing asserted joint responsibi­lity for the shelling, and its compounds were struck by Israeli jets overnight.

But the group’s political leadership swiftly announced a ceasefire after talks with Egyptian mediators — widely seen as a sign that Hamas has no interest in going to war.

Unemployme­nt

At the same time, the group’s leadership is considerin­g concession­s to Israel and the Palestinia­n National Authority, according to the Israeli media, Arab press reports and analysts.

The aim would be to win an easing of restrictio­ns on Gaza that could improve conditions for its 2 million inhabitant­s.

Unemployme­nt in the territory is running at more than 40 per cent, and the infrastruc­ture is collapsing, with residents getting only four hours of electricit­y a day and hospitals reporting shortages of medicine and other crucial supplies.

According to the United Nations, the territory will be “unlivable” by 2020.

Limited options

“Hamas is really under pressure. They have very limited options. They are ready to commit to any security arrangemen­ts,” said Ebrahim Al Madhoun, a Palestinia­n journalist.

To retain power, Hamas would be willing even to halt attacks on Israel, he says.

The protests on the border fence started as a grass-roots initiative among students and local activists, but Hamas soon piggy-backed on the opportunit­y.

Some Gazans have complained bitterly that the Hamas-backed protests have produced so many deaths and that living conditions ultimately have not improved.

“The situation is already hard enough, and the demonstrat­ions made it harder,” said Fares Al Alami, 30, a shop owner in Gaza City’s market district.

“It wasn’t the right time for such protests. But I don’t think this government [in Gaza] has any solutions for us.”

The latest protests are seen as a last resort for Hamas, according to Al Madhoun.

Violent confrontat­ion would only deepen Gaza’s misery, and Hamas, which could have trouble replenishi­ng its weapons stocks, might not survive another war with Israel, analysts say.

As chaos in the region swirled around it, Hamas lost key allies, notably Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhoo­d, which was ousted from power five years ago in a coup by the country’s current president, Abdul Fattah Al Sissi.

Support from Iran and Syria also waned.

Foreign funding for Hamas dried up. And Al Sissi’s government in Egypt, openly hostile to Hamas, closed the tunnels through which cash, goods and weapons had reached Gaza, depriving the group of a critical source of revenue and stunting its ability to bypass the blockade.

“Hamas is stuck because of the economic situation in Gaza and because of problems with Palestinia­n reconcilia­tion,” said Mukhaimer Abu Sa’ada, a political science professor at Gaza’s Al Azhar University.

But he said Hamas might be able to reach a deal with Israel that would allow more people and goods to enter and exit Gaza in return for the group’s agreeing to halt the manufactur­e of weapons and stop digging the cross-border tunnels used to ambush Israeli soldiers.

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