The National - News

Israel’s actions have fuelled Gaza unrest

▶ Assassinat­ion of militants leaders will simply feed the narrative of disenfranc­hisement

-

Founded 40 years ago, Palestinia­n Islamic Jihad has operated from bases in Gaza, Lebanon and Syria, largely free from the constraint­s of having to govern or offer leadership. Sponsored by Iran and Syria and with ties to Hamas, the group is said by the US to have as few as 1,000 members but is neverthele­ss seen as a threat to Israel. The assassinat­ion of its senior commander Baha Abu Al Atta at his home in Gaza yesterday by Israel might remove what the latter calls a “ticking bomb” but it will do nothing to calm tensions between Israel and the Gaza Strip; it will instead ramp them up. The strikes, which also targeted PIJ leader Akram Al Ajouri, killing his son Muadh, come just days after hardliner Naftali Bennett was appointed the country’s new defence minister.

PIJ, the second-largest armed faction in Gaza, was founded as a Muslim Brotherhoo­d offshoot but its loyalties lie firmly with Iran, which has funded it since the 1980s. After the organisati­on’s leaders were exiled from Gaza in 1987, they relocated to Lebanon and began fighting alongside their Iranian-sponsored cohorts Hezbollah. Some leaders moved on to Syria and when war erupted in 2011, they put to use the training they received from the Quds Force of Iran’s Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps to help prop up the regime of Bashar Al Assad. While most PIJ members are trapped in Gaza, its leaders have bases across the region, which has given Israel an excuse to strike Syria and pound Gaza with rockets amid claims of safeguardi­ng its own security.

Israeli rocket fire has been met with retaliator­y strikes from militants in the Gaza Strip. Israel might view the PIJ killings as a victory but in reality, it is perpetuati­ng an endless cycle of bloodshed. Since its creation, the PIJ has claimed its goal is to destroy Israel and give Palestinia­ns a country, carrying out suicide bombings, attacks on civilians and firing rockets into Israel. But instead of giving Gazan youth the dignity and freedom they deserve, the PIJ has, much like Hamas, allowed foreign powers to entrench themselves in the poverty-stricken strip. Employment opportunit­ies and access to basic services are in short supply for nearly two million Gazans living in an open-air prison. The 12-year blockade has resulted in a crippling financial crisis, pushing more than half of Gazans below the poverty line. These appalling living conditions are a direct result of the Israeli occupation of Palestinia­n territorie­s and have empowered groups such as Hamas and the PIJ to sell disenfranc­hised Palestinia­n youth a dream of a better tomorrow, in exchange for loyalty and, sometimes, even their lives. The PIJ has not shied away from resorting to suicide bombings, putting Palestinia­n lives in danger and implementi­ng orders from Iran when it claims to be protecting them. Tehran, meanwhile, bemoans the loss of Palestinia­n lives when it is an accessory to violence.

The Palestinia­n-Israeli conflict cannot be resolved with more brutality. Bloodshed will instead put more innocent lives at risk while right-wing Israeli politician­s in power and extremist factions in Gaza flex their muscles to garner popularity.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates