organization:palestinian government

  • Bahrain debacle marks crash of Trump team’s campaign to diss Palestinians into submission

    Kushner’s Peace for Prosperity includes Utopian projects funded by non-existent money as part of peace deal that won’t happen
    Chemi Shalev
    Jun 25, 2019 9:12 AM

    https://www.haaretz.com/us-news/.premium-bahrain-debacle-marks-crash-of-trump-team-s-campaign-to-dis-palest

    The unveiling of the U.S. administration’s long-awaited production of Peace for Prosperity, premiering in Bahrain on Tuesday, garnered mixed reviews, to say the least. Barak Ravid of Axios and Israel’s Channel 13 described it as “impressive, detailed and ambitious – perhaps overly ambitious.” Former U.S. Ambassador to Israel and Egypt Dan Kurtzer offered a slightly different take: “I would give this so-called plan a C- from an undergraduate student. The authors of the plan clearly understand nothing,” he said.

    The plan, released in a colorful pamphlet on the eve of the Bahrain economic summit, is being portrayed by the White House as a vision of the bountiful “fruits of peace” that Palestinians might reap once they reach a peace agreement with Israel. Critics describe it as an amateurish pie-in-the-sky, shoot-for-the-moon, everything-but-the-kitchen-sink hodgepodge that promises projects that cannot be implemented, funded by money that does not exist and contingent on a peace deal that will never happen.

    But the main problem with Peace for Prosperity isn’t its outlandishly unrealistic proposals – such as the $5 billion superhighway between the West Bank and Gaza, which Israel will never agree to; or its occasional condescending and Orientalist attitude towards Palestinian society - their great hummus could attract millions of tourists; or even its offer to manage and foster Palestinian institutions and civil society in a way that can be viewed either as implicit state-building or as imposing foreign control on a future Palestinian government.

    >> Read more: ’There is no purely economic solution to the Palestinian economy’s problems’ ■ Trump’s Bahrain conference - not what you imagined ■ Kushner’s deal holds some surprises, but it’s more vision than blueprint ■ The billion-dollar question in Trump’s peace plan

    The Palestinians would have been suspicious in any case, even if Jimmy Carter or Barack Obama were President. They have always been wary of the term “economic peace”, especially when detached from the real nitty-gritty of resolving their dispute with Israel. Nonetheless, if the President was anyone other than Trump, Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas would have more or less emulated Benjamin Netanyahu’s reaction: Somber nodding of the head, then a non-committal reaction to Peace for Prosperity, followed by effusive but general praise for our lord and savior Donald Trump. Israelis and Palestinians would have attended the Bahrain conference, while doing their best to suppress their inner guffaws.

    If it was anyone by Trump and his peace team - which often doubles as Netanyahu’s cheerleading squad – the Palestinians might have allowed themselves to believe that A. A comprehensive peace plan isn’t just a mirage and is indeed forthcoming. B. The deal won’t be tilted so far in favor of Israel that it will be declared stillborn on arrival and C. That it isn’t a ruse meant to cast Palestinians as congenital rejectionists and to pave the way for an Israeli annexation of “parts of the West Bank”, as Ambassador David Friedman put it when he pronounced Trump’s imperial edict conceding territory to Israel, which even Palestinian minimalists claim as their own, in advance of any actual talks.

    But because the plan bears Trump’s signature, it was received in most world capitals with shrugs, as yet another manifestation of the U.S. administration’s preposterous handling of foreign policy – see North Korea, Europe, Mexico, Venezuela et al. Israel, of course, didn’t miss the opportunity to regurgitate the cliché about the Palestinians “never missing an opportunity to miss an opportunity”.
    A Palestinian man steps on a painting depicting U.S. President Donald Trump during a protest against U.S.-led Bahrain workshop in Gaza City, June 24, 2019.
    A Palestinian man steps on a painting depicting U.S. President Donald Trump during a protest against U.S.-led Bahrain workshop in Gaza City, June 24, 2019. \ MOHAMMED SALEM/ REUTERS
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    For Palestinians and their supporters, however, Kushner’s bid was but the latest in the Trump team’s never-ending stream of slights, slanders and slaps in their collective faces. In Palestinian eyes, the economic bonanza isn’t a CBM – confidence building measure – but a con job and insult rolled into one. It dangles dollars in front of Palestinian noses, implying they can be bought, and it sets up a chain of events at the end of which Jason Greenblatt will inevitably accuse them on Twitter of being hysterical and dishonest while praising Netanyahu’s bold leadership and pioneering vision. They’ve been there, and done that.

    This has been the Trump approach from the outset: Uncontained admiration for Israel and its leader coupled with unhidden disdain for Palestinian leaders and contempt for their “unrealistic” dreams. Trump’s peace team swears by Israel’s security needs as if they were part of the bible or U.S. Constitution; the ongoing 52-year military occupation of millions of Palestinians, on the other hand, seems to have escaped their attention.

    For the first ten months of Trump’s tenure, the Palestinians put up with his administration’s unequivocal pledges of allegiance to Israel as well as the White House’s departure from past custom and continuing refusal to criticize any of its actions – not to mention the appointment of a peace team comprised exclusively of right-wing Netanyahu groupies, which Palestinians initially thought was surely a practical joke.

    Trump’s announcement in December 2017 that he would recognize Jerusalem as Israel’s capital and move the U.S. embassy there was both game-changer and deal-breaker as far as the Palestinians were concerned. While Netanyahu and most of Israel were celebrating Donald the Daring and the long-awaited recognition of their eternal capital, Palestinians realized they were facing a President radically different from any of his predecessors - one willing to break the rules in Israel’s favor and to grant his bestie Bibi tangible victories, before, during and after elections - without asking for anything in return.

    The Palestinians have boycotted the Trump administration ever since, embarrassing Friedman, Greenblatt, Kushner and ultimately Trump in the process. They, in response, have increasingly vented their anger and frustrations at the Palestinians, and not just in words and Tweets alone: The administration shut down the PLO’s office in Washington, declared Jerusalem “off the table” and indicated that the refugee issue should follow it, cut aid to UNRWA and is endeavoring to dismantle it altogether and slashed assistance to Palestinian humanitarian organizations.

    In March 2018, in a move strongly supported by Israel and vigorously endorsed by Evangelicals and other right wing supporters, Trump signed the Congressionally approved Taylor Force Act that prohibits U.S. aid to the Palestinian Authority as long as it continued to pay monthly stipends to the families of what the Act describes as “terrorists”. Palestinians, who, to many people’s regret, regard such terrorists as heroes and martyrs, noted that the passage of the Taylor Force Act embarrassed Israel and spurred it to legislate its own way to withholding Palestinian tax money for the very same reason.

    Throughout the process, Trump and his peace team have lectured the Palestinians as a teacher reprimands an obstinate child. The Palestinians need to face reality, to lower their expectations, to land back on earth, Kushner and colleagues insist. Not only will they never realize their dreams and aspirations, they should also forget their core demand for an independent state free of outside control and not confide inside Israeli-controlled gates. Israelis are worthy of such independence, the Palestinians are told, but you are not.

    Trump approach is a product, first and foremost, of his own inexperience, arrogance and unwillingness to learn anything from a past in which he wasn’t in charge. It is fed by anti-Palestinian prejudices prevalent in his peace team as well as his advisers and most of his political supporters. Trump and his underlings basically adhere to the arguably racist tenet encapsulated in the Israeli saying “The Arabs understand only force.” The more you pressure them, the greater the chance they will succumb.
    Women protest against the U.S.-led workshop in Bahrain in the Moroccan capital Rabat, June 23, 2019.
    Women protest against the U.S.-led workshop in Bahrain in the Moroccan capital Rabat, June 23, 2019.AFP

    At this point at least, it hasn’t worked out that way. Bahrain, by any measure, is a humiliating bust. As Trump and his aides contemplate the reasons for their abject failure they are likely to blame stubborn Palestinians who don’t know what’s good for them, along with radical Muslims, perfidious Europeans, idiot liberals and all the other usual suspects.

    In a better world, they would take a hard look at themselves in the mirror and possibly have an epiphany. They can make an immediate adjustment that will cost them nothing but possibly achieve dramatic results. Instead of incessantly rebuking, reproaching, reprimanding, threatening and intimidating the Palestinians in a way that garners cheers from Christian messianics and Jewish zealots, they could try and treat them, as Aretha Franklin sang, with just a little respect. And perhaps, if it isn’t asking too much, take down their fawning for Netanyahu a notch or two.

    It might not be enough to reconcile irreconcilable differences or to make peace, but it will signal that Trump is finally getting serious about his claim to be the peacemaker the world has been waiting for. Alternatively, the Palestinians will continue to frustrate his designs and pray to Allah for his quick departure.

  • Israel restores electricity to West Bank after power cuts - The Washington Post
    https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/middle_east/israel-restores-electricity-to-west-bank-after-power-cuts/2016/04/06/5a3453fe-fc1d-11e5-813a-90ab563f0dde_story.html

    Israel’s state electricity corporation says it has restored power to Palestinian cities in the West Bank after a two-day reduction due to outstanding debt.

    The Israel Electricity Corp. said Wednesday it reached a stop-gap agreement with the Palestinian Authority, which will repay about $500,000 in debt. The company says the Palestinians owe it nearly $460 million.

    Israel halved electricity to Bethlehem on Monday.

    Company Chairman Yiftach Ron Tal says the Palestinian government must find a solution to the remaining debt within the coming days to prevent additional cuts.

  • PA leaders meet with Israel, threaten to end security coordination
    March 3, 2016 12:21 P.M. (Updated: March 3, 2016 12:27 P.M.)
    https://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=770538

    BETHLEHEM (Ma’an) — A delegation from the Palestinian Authority (PA) officially warned Israeli authorities several days ago that the Palestinian government would end its security coordination with Israel if the state did not “commit to past agreements,” a member of the PLO executive committee told Ma’an.

    Wassel Abu Youssef said the head of PA Intelligence Majed Faraj, as well as the Palestinian Minister of Civil Affairs Hussein al-Sheikh and head of PA preventive security Ziyad Hab al-Reeh, met with an Israeli security delegation to deliver the warning.

    The PA delegation informed their Israeli counterparts that the PLO Central Council came to an official decision to work towards ending security coordination with Israel if the “current situation” were to continue, Abu Youssef said.

    Abu Youssef stressed that Palestinian leadership does not fear the consequences of ending security coordination, as Israel is already “carrying out an open war against Palestinians.”

    He added that the decision to end security coordination has the support of other Arab countries.

    Abu Youssef said PA leaderships expects to be contacted by Israeli authorities trying to challenge the Palestinian government and to pressure the PA to reconsider its stance.

    Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas made the same announcement during a speech at the United Nations General Assembly on Oct. 30.

    While many understood the president’s speech to be groundbreaking, no clear changes have been made in regards to security cooperation between the PA and Israel in occupied Palestinian territory.

    #retenez-moi_ou

  • Hamas election call could put UN initiative at risk - Al-Monitor: the Pulse of the Middle East
    http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2015/04/israel-abbas-pa-elections-hamas-dahlan-un-resolution.html

    Yet, the current strife between Hamas and Fatah is not directly linked to the 2007 coup. While Hamas leaders do not deny that the Izz ad-Din al-Qassam Brigades forcefully expelled the security forces and took over the official national institutions in Gaza, the issue of the coup apparently ended the day the Palestinian unity government was formed, with both sides expressing their desire to bury the hatchet and declaring that they had turned over a new leaf. According to the reconciliation agreement, following which the unity government was formed in June 2014, a joint committee was supposed to prepare the PA for elections within six months — a period that ended in early 2015.

    In recent weeks, and especially after Abbas’ call for outside intervention in Gaza, Hamas has concluded that the only explanation is that Abbas is looking for any excuse to avoid elections in the PA. Sami Abu Zuhri, the movement’s spokesman in Gaza, said April 2, “Abbas was chosen in an agreement between the Palestinian factions to be the chairman for a specified period of time. His term is over, and he would do well to know his limitations.”

    Having been elected to the position in democratic elections after the passing of former Palestine Liberation Organization chairman Yasser Arafat in 2004, Abbas has been in office for more than 10 years. Holding elections now, amid a diplomatic campaign for international recognition of a Palestinian state, could prove hard for him for a number of reasons.

    Even if he were to win the elections in a landslide, just holding such elections would officially make Hamas part and parcel of the Palestinian government. In that case, not only would Abbas have to take into account the demands by Hamas members to participate in governing and determining foreign policy, but it might also drive away potential supporters of the UN move he has been carefully orchestrating for a very long time.

    Abbas is also apprehensive of another enemy lurking in the wings, waiting impatiently for an opportunity to get back in the ring. Former Fatah senior official Mohammed Dahlan, the president’s nemesis, has been rallying more and more supporters in the West Bank and Gaza. Having himself started a historic reconciliation process with Hamas, Dahlan has no intention of sitting idly by if elections are held, potentially posing a significant threat to Abbas’ re-election. Over the past year, Dahlan has raised tens of millions of dollars from Gulf states. This money, which was intended to alleviate the plight of Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza, has elevated him to savior status.

    Dahlan has been carefully planning his return to center stage. Having recently met with Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, he has reprogrammed his trajectory to return to the Fatah movement from which he was ousted on the orders of Abbas. It remains unclear whether at this stage it will be enough to garner support that will seriously jeopardize the president’s standing. However, when Dahlan openly said in a March 2 interview with Newsweek that he was going to run against Abbas, saying, “If there’s an election tomorrow, I’ll go back,” he left Abbas with no room to take unnecessary risks.

    While the Palestinians are preparing for their UN moves and Abbas and other senior PA officials threaten to appeal to the International Criminal Court, the stalemate in the reconciliation between Fatah and Hamas puts the Palestinian president in a bind. In the absence of elections, his legal status as PA president is questionable, but he is concerned that Hamas might once again exploit the democratic process it trampled violently eight years ago. He does not have a lot of time to vacillate.

    As someone wishing to champion historic moves in the coming year, he will have to call the shots on a number of key issues relating to the character of the Palestinian state that he wants to establish with the support of the UN. He will have to decide whether the future state will be democratic, whether it will include the Gaza Strip and whether Hamas will be part of the official government.

  • KUNA : Kuwait commended for alleviating Palestinians’ suffering - Human - 05/04/2015
    http://www.kuna.net.kw/ArticleDetails.aspx?id=2434284&language=en

    GAZA, April 5 (KUNA) — Palestinian Minister of Public Works and Housing Mufid Al-Hasaina commended here Sunday the Kuwaiti role, under the directions of His Highness the Amir Sheikh Sabah Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah, in alleviating the suffering of Palestinians harmed by the Israeli aggression on the Gaza Strip last year.
    Al-Hasaina said at a press conference that the USD-200-million donation agreement offered by Kuwait for reconstruction in southern governorates in the Strip will contribute to building about 1,500 housing units and executing several vital projects.
    He added that his ministry will coordinate with the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) to assess homes affected by the aggression for the reconstruction process, adding the units will be built through several stages.
    According to latest statistics, about 100,000 homes and institutions were destroyed by the Israeli aggression.
    On March 12, the Kuwait Fund for Arab Economic Development (KFAED) and the Palestinian government signed the agreement in Amman for the reconstruction of southern provinces in the Strip.
    The donation, which is part of Kuwait’s pledge made during the Cairo International Conference on Palestine and Reconstructing Gaza held in the Egyptian capital in October, will finance also projects of infrastructure, education and health. (end) wab.hm

    • 7 april 2015
      Kuwait to Pledge $200M to Gaza Reconstruction: The Palestinian government said, in a statement Tuesday, it had signed an agreement with its Kuwaiti counterpart regarding the latter’s contribution of $200 million to support the reconstruction process of the Gaza Strip. The agreement was signed by Abdal-Wahab al-Bader, Director General of the Kuwait Development Fund and Jawad Naji, Palestinian Prime Minister’s adviser for Arab and Islamic funds, on the sideline of the Arab financial institutions’ meeting held in Kuwait. Of this $200 million, $75 million will be allocated to the construction of 1,500 housing units in the war-weary enclave, while another $60 million will be devoted to the construction of a water pipeline stretching from northern to southern Gaza Strip. Some $35 million will also be allocated to infrastructural projects, while another $15 million will be earmarked to rehabilitation of partially damaged agricultural and industrial structures. An amount of $7 million will be dedicated to supporting projects in the education and health sectors. (WAFA)

    • Government: upon Al-Hamdallah’s visit to Kuwait, a final agreement signed on the reconstruction of Gaza worth $ 200 million

      The Government of national reconciliation said yesterday that on the sidelines of the annual meetings of Arab financial institutions held in the State of Kuwait, a final agreement for the contribution of the State of Kuwait in the reconstruction of the Gaza Strip, amounting to $ 200 million was signed. The agreement was signed by Director General of the Kuwait Fund for Arab economic development, Mr. Abdulwahab Ahmad Badr, and the Palestinian Prime Minister’s Advisor for Arab and Islamic funds, Dr. Jawad Naji.

      The Government stated that the signing of the agreement came after the successful visit of Prime Minister Dr. Ramy Al-Hamdallah to the State of Kuwait, and the meetings he held with officials in Kuwait, mainly the Emir of Kuwait Sheikh Sabah Al-Ahmad Al-Sabah, the Kuwaiti Prime Minister, State Minister and Deputy Prime Minister for Foreign Affairs, Director General of the Kuwait Fund for economic development, where Al-Hamdallah discussed urgent priority projects in the framework of the reconstruction of the Gaza Strip. (http://pnn.ps/index.php/policy/122430-%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%AD%D9%83%D9%88%D9%85%D8%A9-%D8%A8%D9%86%D8%A7%D8%A1%D9%8B)

  • Hamas declares opening of Gaza seaport - Al-Monitor: the Pulse of the Middle East
    http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2015/02/hamas-open-gaza-port-israel-reaction.html#

    Amid these disastrous conditions, Alaa al-Batta, the spokesman for the Palestinian Governmental Committee for Breaking the Siege in Gaza, told Al-Monitor, “The commission will launch ships from the Gaza port to a number of countries. A ship is prepared to carry patients and students, to be the first vessel departing from the port in the next two months. We have begun the necessary procedures in preparation for building the seaport that will connect the Gaza Strip to the outside world. We have received approval from several countries to begin implementing maritime trips.” He did not name the participating countries.

  • #Gaza Civil Servants, Palestinian Unity Gov’t Reach Deal on Overdue Salaries
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/gaza-civil-servants-palestinian-unity-government-reach-deal-overd

    Palestinian government employees stage a protest over their unpaid salaries in front of the council of ministers building in Gaza City, Gaza on January 13, 2015. Photo: Anadolu/Mohammed Talatene

    Civil servants in the Gaza Strip on Tuesday agreed to end their strike after government assurances to resolve their concerns regarding overdue salaries, as the #Palestinian_Authority (PA) Minister of Labor said that Gaza government employees would not be laid off. Meanwhile, #Saudi_Arabia stated that it transferred $60 million to the PA after #Israel froze millions of dollars in tax revenues on January 3 after the Palestinian Authority joined the International Criminal Court (ICC). read (...)

    #Fatah #Hamas #Palestine

  • Palestine’s UNSC defeat is nothing to celebrate
    Israel is now facing the conflict’s internationalization - and potentially the dock of the International Criminal Court.
    Haaretz Editorial | Jan. 1, 2015 Haaretz
    http://www.haaretz.com/opinion/1.634801

    The failure of the Jordanian-Palestinian UN Security Council draft resolution was not an Israeli success. It brought the Israeli-Palestinian conflict back to the starting point and also pushed the Palestinian government into applying to join the International Criminal Court by ratifying the Rome Statute. Both results are bad and pose threats to Israel.

    In putting the resolution to a vote in the Security Council, the Palestinians sought to punch through the diplomatic dead end by setting a short timetable for negotiations and an end to the occupation, or as the French envoy to the United Nations put it, with the vision of a two-state solution receding, “the peace process must evolve. If parties can’t take decisions alone, the international community has to share the burden.”

    This logical conclusion should also guide the policy of the United States, which has firsthand experience with the defensive wall that Israel has put up against negotiations with the Palestinians. If the U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations, Samantha Power, genuinely believes, as she said, that the vote “should not be interpreted as a victory for an unsustainable status quo” but rather “as a wake-up call to catalyze all interested parties to take constructive, responsible steps to achieve a two-state solution,” then she and those whom she represents must explain what is wrong with setting a short timetable for negotiating and ending the occupation. Do they have some untried invention, or are they in fact motivated by political considerations, by the calculation that were the resolution approved it could bolster the right wing in Israel’s March election?

    The states that voted against the resolution ostensibly did so because they disagreed with its formulation, particularly the reference to the refugee problem and the recognition of East Jerusalem as the capital of Palestine. But these two points, which are also included in the Saudi peace initiative, are not really an obstacle. Israel’s anger, which has so far managed to sweep along the United States as well, is over Palestinian temerity for “taking a unilateral step” and “creating a provocation” instead of sitting down at the negotiating table.

    Israel views the internationalization of the conflict as the real threat. This could deprive Israel of the exclusive management, of nonmanagement, of the negotiations, of setting preconditions and formulating the outcome.

    These states cannot carry the burden in the stead of Israel’s government. The resolution’s defeat is the wake-up call of the Israeli public, which in two and a half months must decide whether to continue to live with the explosive status quo or to give the peace process a genuine chance.

  • Construction materials to be allowed into #Gaza
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/construction-materials-be-allowed-gaza

    A final agreement has been reached between the Palestinians, #Israel and the UN to allow the entry of construction materials into the blockaded Gaza Strip, a Palestinian government source said Wednesday. “The agreement covers the mechanism by which construction materials will be allowed into Gaza, the monitoring mechanism and the means of distribution,” the source told Anadolu Agency. Israel routinely bars the entry of building materials into the embattled coastal enclave on grounds that Palestinian resistance faction Hamas could use them to build underground tunnels or fortifications. read more

    #Palestine

  • ’Death and horror’ in Gaza as thousands flee Israeli bombardment | World | The Guardian

    http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/jul/20/gaza-thousands-flee-israeli-bombardment

    The fiercest fighting of the 13-day war in Gaza erupted on Sunday as Israel dramatically widened its ground offensive, sending tanks and troops into urban areas and causing thousands of panicked civilians to flee.

    The Palestinian government has described the attack on Gaza’s Shujai’iya neighbourhood, in which at least 60 people were killed, as a “war crime” which required immediate international intervention.

    It came as the Israeli military announced that 13 soldiers had been killed in an attack by Palestinian militants in Gaza. No more details were immediately available.

    #gaza

  • #Israel to build 1,500 new illegal settler homes in #west_bank, #East_Jerusalem
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/israel-build-1500-new-illegal-settler-homes-west-bank-east-jerusa

    Palestinian demonstrators run for cover from tear gas fired by Israeli security forces during a demonstration in the West Bank city of Hebron against the Israeli occupation and in support of Palestinians being held in Israeli prisons on June 4, 2014. (Photo: AFP - Hazem Bader)

    Israeli Housing Minister Uri Ariel has invited bids for 1,500 new homes in illegal Zionist settlements in retaliation for a new unity Palestinian government, reports said on Thursday. Of the new homes, 400 will be in Israeli-annexed East Jerusalem with the rest elsewhere in the occupied West Bank, the online edition of Haaretz newspaper reported. “I congratulate the decision to give a proper Zionist response to the establishment of the Palestinian terror cabinet,” the paper quoted Ariel (...)

    #illegal_settlements #Palestine

  • Israeli forces bomb #Gaza
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/israeli-forces-bomb-gaza

    Rocket fire from Gaza and #syria hit “Israel” early Monday in two separate incidents that prompted the Israeli military to hit back, just hours before the swearing in of a new Palestinian government. The exchanges of fire took place as Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas was to unveil a new government pieced together as part of a surprise April reconciliation agreement between leaders in the West Bank and the #Hamas-run Gaza Strip, that has been fiercely opposed by the Israel government. read more

    #Fatah #israeli_apartheid #Palestine

  • Israel pushes West Bank toward economic disaster
    http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2014/05/israel-hamas-palestinian-authority-economy-collapse-boycott.html

    One should not put too much diplomatic stock into the threats of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to sever ties with the Palestinian Authority (PA), in reaction to the inclusion of Hamas in the new Palestinian government. Even when Hamas was a pariah in Ramallah, the nine months of negotiations did not generate anything near a permanent arrangement.

    The diplomatic damage will be nothing compared to the economic implications of severing contact with the PA. Turning the West Bank into an economic twin of the Gaza Strip will result in a similar situation in terms of security, as well. Initial signs of this are already evident in a new-old phenomenon of attacking Israeli journalists covering the occupied territories.

  • Hamas rejects Fayyad as unity government head - Middle East - Al Jazeera English
    http://english.aljazeera.net//news/middleeast/2011/06/20116121134512534.html

    Hamas has opposed Fatah’s nomination of Salam Fayyad for the post of prime minister in a transitional Palestinian government, exposing differences over implementing a Palestinian reconciliation deal between the rival groups.

    At a meeting late on Saturday, Fatah’s Central Committee, the secular movement’s highest decision-making body, named Fayyad, an internationally respected former World Bank economist, as its candidate for prime minister.

    But on Sunday, two days before talks with Fatah in Egypt on cabinet staffing were due to begin, Salah al-Bardaweel, a senior Hamas official, said: “It is certain that we will not accept Fayyad, neither as a prime minister of the unity government nor as a minister in it.”

    Bardaweel accused Fayyad of co-operating with Israel’s blockade of the Gaza Strip. He said that Fayyad, as prime minister, shared responsibility for the arrest of Hamas leaders and members in the West Bank in recent years.