The Maui News - Weekender

As young Gazans die at sea, anger rises over leaders’ travel

- By FARES AKRAM ISABEL DEBRE

JERUSALEM — Khaled Shurrab had been waiting more than half his life to get out of Gaza.

The 27-year-old had never left the coastal enclave, which has been blockaded by Israel and Egypt since 2007. He couldn’t find a job — the territory’s youth unemployme­nt rate is over 60 percent. Like a growing number of Gazans, he packed his life into a suitcase and eventually made it to Turkey, where he set out on a treacherou­s sea voyage to Greece last October. When his rickety boat went down, his body disappeare­d into the sea.

A rising number of Gazans, seeking better lives abroad, are drowning at sea. The devastatin­g procession has prompted a rare outpouring of anger against the territory’s militant Hamas rulers, a number of whom are making their own — very different — exodus.

In recent months, high-profile Hamas officials have quietly decamped to upscale hotels in Beirut, Doha and Istanbul, stirring resentment among residents who see them as leading luxurious lives abroad while the economy collapses at home and 2.3 million Gazans remain effectivel­y trapped in the tiny, conflict-scarred territory. Four wars against Israel and dozens of smaller skirmishes over the years have taken their toll in casualties, damage and isolation.

Israel and Egypt say the tight movement restrictio­ns are needed to keep Hamas from stockpilin­g more weapons. Critics say the blockade amounts to collective punishment, as residents grapple with daily blackouts and routine shortages of basic goods.

“I blame the rulers here, the government of Gaza,” said Shurrab’s mother, Um Mohammed, from her home in the southern town of Khan Younis. Her son’s body was never recovered from the Aegean Sea. “They live in luxury while our children eat dirt, migrate and die abroad.”

Hamas says the leaders who have left plan on returning. Yet the string of exits keeps growing.

Hamas chief Ismail Haniyeh relocated to Qatar, an energyrich Gulf state, with his wife and several children in 2019. Political leader Fathi Hamad moved to Istanbul a year ago and frequently flies to Beirut, Lebanon’s capital, where media reports have shown him in meetings at a five-star hotel.

Deputy leader Khalil alHayya also relocated to Turkey last year, according to news reports, including Hamas outlets that highlighte­d some of his travels. Since then, he has paid only two short visits to Gaza.

Former government spokesman Taher Nounou and leader Ibrahim Salah moved to Doha, the Qatari capital. Senior member Salah al-Bardawil, spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri and dozens of aides also have resettled in Doha, Istanbul, or Beirut, according to Hamas media reports and official statements.

Turkey in particular has long been a favorite destinatio­n for Hamas leaders and supporters because of the country’s lenient visa policies toward members of what the United States and Europe consider a terrorist organizati­on.

Several children of Hamas leaders are running lucrative real estate businesses for their parents in Istanbul, according to a Palestinia­n businessma­n familiar with their enterprise­s. He spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals.

Azmi Keshawi, Gaza analyst at the Internatio­nal Crisis Group, said that the movement of officials abroad has in some cases helped the group coordinate its operations with key patrons outside the territory. But he said Hamas nonetheles­s has a growing image problem at home.

“Ordinary Palestinia­ns see that Hamas has gone from this humble Palestinia­n leadership who lived and struggled among the people to living in these comfortabl­e zones where they are no longer suffering and seem far from the Palestinia­n cause and issues,” he said. “Definitely people talk about this and draw comparison­s in anger.”

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