Hi.  Here are broad, detailed analyses of the complex factors in
the Gaza situation, past and present.  It's long, but worthwhile
as counterbalance to much of mainstream media.  Some may
want to divide the reading.
ed

http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=07/06/15/1428213

Democracy Now!
Friday, June 15th, 2007

As Hamas Seizes Full Control of Gaza and US Prepares Further
Isolation, What Next for Palestinians?


With Hamas now in full control of the Gaza Strip following a week of deadly
violence, Palestinians are bracing for further uncertainty as the Occupied
Territories is divided with the other main Palestinian faction Fatah. We go
to Gaza for a report from independent journalist Fares Akram, and get
analysis from Palestinian filmmaker and journalist Laila el-Haddad and
author and Electronic Intifada co-founder Ali Abuminah.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hamas is in full control of the Gaza Strip following days of bloody clashes
with rival Palestinian faction Fatah. Hamas militants seized the
presidential compound in Gaza City overnight after a week of fighting, which
has left more than 100 people dead.

Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas on Thursday announced the
dismissal of the Hamas-led government and declared a state of emergency.
Abbas said he would now rule by presidential decree until the conditions
were right for early elections. However, Prime Minister Ismail Haniya says
his government will press on and impose law and order.

The Occupied Territories have now been effectively split into two separate
entities with Hamas in charge of Gaza and Fatah controlling the West Bank.
Chief Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erakat told Agence France Presse: "This is
the worst thing I've seen since 1967."

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice gave her backing to Mahmoud Abbas,
saying he had exercised his "lawful authority." There are reports today the
Bush administration will boost aid to Abbas while allowing Gaza to slip into
further despair in order to weaken Hamas' popular standing. Meanwhile,
Haaretz reports that Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert is planning to tell
President Bush that that there is an urgent need to view the West Bank and
the Gaza Strip as separate entities and prevent contact between them. United
Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon held preliminary talks on the idea of
sending an international force to Gaza, but Hamas rejected the move, saying
it would treat foreign troops as occupation forces.

There are new fears violence will now spread to the West Bank where Fatah
militants have rounded up nearly 90 Hamas fighters and claimed to have
killed a Hamas member in retaliation for events in Gaza.

This all comes as new details emerge about criticism from a former top UN
envoy on the U.S. and UN role in Israel and the Occupied Territories. In a
confidential report disclosed earlier this week, Alvaro de Soto condemns the
boycott on the Palestinian government and says the U.S. and Israel virtually
neutralized prospects for peace.


  a.. Ali Abunimah. Cofounder of the online publication Electronic Intifada.
He is the author of "One Country: A Bold Proposal to End the
Israeli-Palestinian Impasse."

  a.. Laila el-Haddad. Palestinian journalist and mother living in Gaza. She
writes for Aljazeera.net and is making a film on Gaza's underground economy.
She maintains her own blog "Raising Youssef: A Diary of a Mother Under
Occupation."

  a.. Fares Akram. Freelance journalist in Gaza city.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
RUSH TRANSCRIPT
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AMY GOODMAN: Hamas is in full control of the Gaza Strip following days of
bloody clashes with rival Palestinian faction Fatah. Hamas militants seized
the presidential compound in Gaza City overnight after a week of fighting,
which has left more than 100 people dead.

Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas on Thursday announced the
dismissal of the Hamas-led government and declared a state of emergency.
Abbas said he would now rule by presidential decree until the conditions
were right for early elections. However, Prime Minister Ismail Haniya says
his government will press on and impose law and order.

The Occupied Territories have now been effectively split into two separate
entities with Hamas in charge of Gaza and Fatah controlling the West Bank.
Chief Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erakat told Agence France Presse: "This is
the worst thing I've seen since 1967."

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice gave her backing to Mahmoud Abbas,
saying he had exercised his "lawful authority." There are reports today the
Bush administration will boost aid to Abbas while allowing Gaza to slip into
further despair in order to weaken Hamas' popular standing. Meanwhile,
Haaretz reports that Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert is planning to tell
President Bush that that there is an urgent need to view the West Bank and
the Gaza Strip as separate entities and prevent contact between them. United
Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon held preliminary talks on the idea of
sending an international force to Gaza, but Hamas rejected the move, saying
it would treat foreign troops as occupation forces.

There are new fears violence will now spread to the West Bank where Fatah
militants have rounded up nearly 90 Hamas fighters and claimed to have
killed a Hamas member in retaliation for events in Gaza.

This all comes as new details emerge about criticism from a former top UN
envoy on the U.S. and UN role in Israel and the Occupied Territories. In a
confidential report disclosed earlier this week, Alvaro de Soto condemns the
boycott on the Palestinian government and says the U.S. and Israel virtually
neutralized prospects for peace.

AMY GOODMAN: Laila el-Haddad is a Palestinian journalist. She writes for
Aljazeera.net and is making a film on Gaza's underground economy. She
maintains a blog "Raising Youssef: A Diary of a Mother Under Occupation."
Laila lives in Gaza and the United States. She returned from Gaza last week,
joins us in our firehouse studio. Ali Abunima is cofounder of the
publication The Electronic Intifida, author of the book "one country: a bold
proposal to end the Israeli-Palestinian impasse." he joins us from Chicago.
And on the line from Gaza is Fares Akram, a freelance journalist in Gaza
city. We will go to you, Fares, first. Tell us what is happening today on
the ground in Gaza.

FARES AKRAM: Well, now Hamas supporters and partisans, thousands of them are
taking to the streets to celebrate what they call the victory. A day of
victory in which Gaza was cleaned from the corruption and corruption makers.
Those [inaudible] have witnessed some violence as [inaudible] in central
Gaza Strip came under fire and one person from Hamas was killed. The
Israelis came after all the security compound that are loyal to a President
Mahmoud Abbas of rival Fatah, and have fallen in Hamas grip after days of
bloody fighting that left more than 130 Palestinians dead.

AMY GOODMAN: And what is the feeling of the general population right now,
about what is happening, about Hamas being in charge of Gaza now, in
control, and Fatah of the West Bank?

FARES AKRAM: During the fighting some of Hamas leaders have vote they will
clean Gaza from secularism. This has created fear among the ordinary people
that their personal freedom might be confiscated and Hamas maybe going to
impose radical thought on society. But soon after the capturing of the
security compound Hamas has assured the people that the fighting was aimed
at the coup-seekers among the security chiefs and those Fatah leaders who
implement US orders on the Gaza Strip. And their war was against those who
confiscate Hamas victory that the Islamic movement has achieved in January
in parliamentary elections. Now Hamas men are calling on the security
members to surrender and lay down their personal guns and give them an
ultimatum that ends after half an hour. But they said anyone who delivers
his weapons before that deadline he would enjoy full amnesty. And also Hamas
has given amnesty to Fatah people, including some major security chiefs who
were captured yesterday. And they released them today. Also, Hamas leaders
are assuring the people that they will spread Islam in a very civilized way
and will not be like the Taliban. They have been promising the people that
Gaza is very safe now. Any individuals can walk from Beit-Hanoon, in the
north of the Gaza Strip to Rafah City in far south of the Gaza Strip,
enjoying full safety without being ambushed or killed or his car stolen. So
Hamas has been promising the safety and security. And in the coming days
will show if Hamas promises can come through or not.

AMY GOODMAN: And the reports that Hamas had executed some Fatah fighters
yesterday?

FARES AKRAM: Yeah, at least they have executed two Fatah leaders. A day
after the execution the chief Hamas Moofti has issued the fatwa approving
the killing of Sami al-Madhoon, who Hamas accuses of being a symbol of those
who try to confiscate Hamas legitimacy. Sami al-Madhoon used to live in
northern Gaza and was responsible for affecting tens of Hamas men and
torturing them and also killing a number of Hamas partisans. Two months ago
Hamas reached a deal to evacuate al-Madhoon from the northern Gaza Strip and
position him in a security compound. The deal came into effect. But when the
previous round of violence erupted last month, al-Madhoon was responsible
for affecting and killing a number of Hamas men including three pro-Hamas
journalists. So Hamas has taken a decision to kill al-Madhoon, and they
mostly have approved that decision. But on the other hand this was the only
two events of public execution.

AMY GOODMAN: Fares Akram, thank you for being with us. Joining us from Gaza
city, a freelance journalist. When we come back from break, Laila el-Haddad
and Ali Abunimah will be with us to talk further about the mass crisis in
Gaza and the West Bank.

AMY GOODMAN: As we continue on Gaza and the West Bank, our guest Laila
El-Haddad, Palestinian journalist, mother, living in Gaza, just came to the
United States last week. And Ali Abunimah joining us in Chicago, cofounder
of the online publication Electronic Intifada. Describe what it is like to
live in Gaza right now and what you understand to be happening, Laila.

LAILA EL-HADDAD: Well, as you mentioned, I was just there. I just came back
last Friday. The day I was trying to leave -- it took me several days to
leave because the Rafah crossing of course, which is still controlled by
Israel, and the only outlet for Gazans to the outside world, is open less
than a quarter of the time and is extremely difficult for people to pass. As
I was leaving, we were hearing reports of activity and things happening in
the southern Rafa, in the southern Gaza Strip. The beginning of this latest
bout of fighting. Of course, when I was there a month -- or a few weeks ago,
rather, the most recent state of fighting had begun. And then it was sort of
quelled and died down. For a few days it was extremely terrifying in our
apartment in central Gaza city. We were penned in there for about four days.
We couldn't leave. It was very unpredictable. The situation was very
volatile. There were snipers that had taken position on various high-rise
towers throughout the city and masked gunmen throughout the streets. What we
had seen was a new phenomenon we had not seen before, was these stopping of
cars and random abductions and targeting journalists, very specifically. So,
journalists were not going out on the streets. And again it was by masked
gunmen, nobody knew who was who and who was doing what. So it was best just
to stay indoors until that had passed. So it sounds very similar to what has
happened. Maybe this was in greater intensity in the past few days.

AMY GOODMAN: Ali Abunimah, can you describe who is arming both sides, Fatah
and Hamas?

ALI ABUNIMAH: Yes. What we've seen is really a direct result of the Bush
doctrine. Since January 2006 when Hamas won the legislative election fair
and square, the United States refused the election result and it has been
arming several Palestinian militias, particularly those controlled by the
Gaza warlord, Mohammed Declan. This is a repeat strategy of the contras.
These are Palestinian contras. And the architect of this policy is none
other than Elliott Abrams, the deputy national security advisor, who was
convicted for lying to congress in the Iran-contra scandal. And Alvaro de
Soto, the UN Reporter that you mentioned in the introduction, Amy, confirms
in detail the extent of the conspiracy that the United States has been
undertaking to overthrow the election result and destroy Hamas. And just a
few days before this round of fighting started on June 7, Haaretz, the
Israeli newspaper reported that senior Fatah commanders in the Gaza Strip
had asked Israel for millions of rounds of ammunition, RPG's, hand grenades
and armored cars to use against Hamas. So I think what we've seen is Hamas
taking a last resort move to put an end to what it describes as a coup
intended to overthrow the election result. It's a major blow for the United
States and for the Bush doctrine, although it's very hard to see how it
helps Palestinians very much considering that Israel and the United States
are likely to tighten the siege of Gaza and to continue to fund the
militias. We've already seen Condoleezza Rice throwing her support behind
Abbas and no sign of a letup in US interference and armed intervention in
Palestinian affairs.

AMY GOODMAN: How did the weapons get to both sides? And does that aid that
Condoleezza Rice is talking about include weapons?

ALI ABUNIMAH: Yes. The weapons that have been delivered to the Fatah
militias to the Palestinian contras of Mohammed Declan, come via Egypt and
are delivered with the direct coordination of Israel. The Fatah commanders
make requests to Israel and Israel coordinates the delivery of the weapons
to Egypt. Hamas gets its weapons. There are reports that Hamas receives
funding from Iran. Hamas also gets weapons from Egypt. What's notable is
that many of the weapons that Israel delivers to Fatah for use against Hamas
are then sold on by corrupt Fatah commanders to the highest bidders, so
recently Israel has been actually turning down Fatah requests for weapons
because they say to the Fatah commanders you just turn around and sell the
weapons to Hamas. So Gaza is absolutely awash with weapons and nobody seems
to have any difficulty getting hold of them.

AMY GOODMAN: Ali Abunimah, you've written a book, One Country: A Bold
Proposal to End the Israeli-Palestinian Impasse. Now there's discussion of
three countries, not even a two-state solution. Gaza, West Bank, Israel.
Your response?

ALI ABUNIMAH: I wouldn't put too much stock in that because the Israeli
policy of cutting Gaza off from the West Bank is longstanding. It's been for
more than a decade, that Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank can't travel
from one place to the other. What I think we are seeing is the collapse of
the two-state solution. Alvaro de Soto acknowledged that in his leaked
confidential report. And today in the The Washington Post Edward Abington,
the former US Counsel general in Jerusalem and now a lobbyist for the
Palestinian authority was quoted saying that these events signal the death
of the two-state solution. I think we have to recognize that the Israeli
policy of trying to create Palestinian ghettos [inaudible] is failing before
our very eyes. Palestinians are the majority population in Israeli-ruled
territory between Jordan and the Mediterranean Sea. And it's only a matter
of time before the world wakes up to this reality.

AMY GOODMAN: Laila El-Haddad, what does this separation mean? And would you
say it's been effectively a separation between West Bank and Gaza for a long
time or life on the ground every day as you write your blog, "Raising Your
Child in Gaza"?

LAILA EL-HADDAD: Yeah. I was just actually going to say initially when you
were commenting -- and not just you. Many people saying Gaza and the West
Bank has split now two different authorities. It's always been the case for
over a decade now that Israel has effectively separated Gaza from the West
Bank and in the recent two years hermetically sealed the Gaza Strip, as a
mentioned, opening the crossing less than a quarter of a time for a million
and a half people, the only passage for a million and a half people. So to
me I see this as the way it's being described in the separation as part of
the sort of larger plan. And what's taken place, of course in Gaza, while a
terribly tragic to watch as a Palestinian, for me signals the failure of the
Bush policy over the past two years of starving Gaza's population, of trying
to fund and arm Hamas [correction: Fatah] with something of $84 million.
I've
seen these brigades they're trying to arm in Jordan and train in Jerico and
Egypt. As I was leaving they stalled the Rafah crossing as they allowed in
several hundred and thousand of these troops last Thursday.

AMY GOODMAN: You interviewed one of the men who was recently executed.

LAILA EL-HADDAD: That's right. I interviewed [name], who was [name] sort of
the right-hand man in the northern Gaza Strip and the head of what's known
as the Fatah death squads. I interviewed him in December for an article I
was writing about the infighting, the beginning of the infighting. It was
called "An Eye for an Eye in Gaza." I interviewed members of the Hamas
executive force and then [name]. I had asked him about the situation and
where he thinks it will go, where it will lead to, and who he gets his
orders from. I specifically asked him if he gets his orders from [name]. He
said everybody gets their orders from somewhere. And I said what do you
anticipate will happen? He said, well, it's going to get to a point where
we're not going to hold back anymore and we're going to take that extra step
and just attack. We're just waiting for the right time. So this was in
December, but I think he knew that his days were limited from this talk at
least

AMY GOODMAN: You have also been writing about the underground economy. How
does that work?

LAILA EL-HADDAD: Right. My colleague and I, [name] were working on a film
called, "Gaza's Underground Economy" which is about the tunnel trade in Gaza
that evolved over the past decade and a half or so as a direct result of
Gaza's economic and political isolation. This is a trade that takes place
under the Egyptian-Gaza border in southern Gaza Strip of Rafah. While
certainly there are basic weaponry like [name] bullets that are traded it
also involves something much more complex and is a means of substance for
families there. It involves everything from food processors to even car
parts and often heart medicines and even people who lack ID Cards that can't
come into Gaza are often smuggled through these tunnels. That trade has
evolved over the past few years as Gaza's isolation has increased.

AMY GOODMAN: We're very much reporting on this as Hamas-Fatah internal
fight, a civil war. Where does Israel fit into this?

LAILA EL-HADDAD: >> Plays a huge part. Every time this discussion comes up I
like to remind people this is not something that's happening in isolation,
it's not as though things just erupt. Certainly the factors were there --
the environment was ripe for this to happen, but this was the result of
years and years of siege and most recently a US-led global siege and an
Israeli siege and aggressive violent occupation of the Gaza Strip that has
completely isolated it from the West Bank, from Palestinians, from their
counterparts in Jerusalem, the West Bank and the outside world, of course.
In addition to the Israeli continued-- American, rather, training and
funding of Fatah. Something that is not unambiguous in any terms. As Ali
mentioned just last week they were asking and actually received training and
funding in Jericho. Israel allowed them passage to train in Jericho.

AMY GOODMAN: You talked about the just retired UN Coordinator for the Middle
East has warned international hostility to the Palestinian Hamas movement
could have grave consequences by persuading millions of Muslims that
democratic methods don't work. He said, "Hamas is in its effervesce and can
potentially evolve in a pragmatic direction that would allow for a two-state
solution, but only if handled right. Your response to this?

ALI ABUNIMAH: I think Alvaro de Soto's 53-page report is very revealing.
It's on the internet in p.d.f. form. It was leaked. It is a savage
indictment of US, Israeli and European Union policy. I think any objective
observer would agree with Alvaro de Soto and would agree that from the
moment it won the elections Hamas had tried to be pragmatic and flexible. It
had observed the unilateral truce with Israel. It had given up suicide
attacks against Palestinian civilians. And there was no response to that. On
the contrary. The United States, Israel, the European Union and some Arab
states decided to launch a war against Hamas by trying to deny Hamas its
fair share. And Hamas offer less than its fair share. It is the one that
immediately asked the election offered in national unity government by
denying it its fair share they have assured that Hamas has taken the whole
pie. It's time for them to radically change their approach, stop treating
the Palestinians like puppets and toys who could be manipulated, and start
treating them like human beings who deserve at least their full human rights
and freedom just like any other people.

AMY GOODMAN: You said Palestinian -- suicide attacks against Palestinians.
You mean Israeli civilians?

ALI ABUNIMAH: Of course. That's exactly what I meant. Hamas had effectively
suspended that tactic and had observed the unilateral truce with Israel -- I
mean just, Amy, in 2006 Isreal killed 700 Palestinians, half of whom were
civilians, and 141 of whom were children. In the same period Palestinians
killed 23 Israelis. And the world is demanding that Palestinians renounce
violence? It's time to start treating the Palestinians fairly and end this
dirty war that the United States and Israel are waging against the
Palestinians just as the United States and Elliott Abrams waged such a dirty
war for so long against people in central America. It's time for it to end.

AMY GOODMAN: How does this relate to these two other crises now? You've got
Iraq. You've got what's happening in the occupied territories and its
relation to Israel, and you've got Lebanon.

ALI ABUNIMAH: It relates directly because the wider US Strategy now is to
install or support puppet regimes and client militias throughout the region
in Afghanistan, Iraq, Lebanon and Palestine in order to fight proxy wars
against the United States, against this phantom enemy of an Islamic
caliphate that George Bush and his friends have dreamed up. And everywhere
it's failing. In Afghanistan the Taliban are resurgent. Iraq has new reports
every day. The US Can't even trust the Iraqi militias and the Iraqi army
that it set up. And we see the total failure of the surge as violence
intensifies. In Lebanon the United States has been arming and funding the
Lebanese army, hoping that it will be a counter weight for Hezballah. And
we've seen the Lebanese army performing very poorly against a few militants,
foreign fighters in the [name] refugee camp. Although they've caused
devastation to the refugee camp itself. And now we see the US-backed
Palestinian contras being routed in Gaza. Also, Amy, a final point. I
wouldn't overestimate the strength of Fatah or underestimate the strength of
Hamas in the West Bank because Hamas has considerable resources in the West
Bank. The thing I fear, though, is that the United States and its allies in
the Palestinian authority will be foolish enough to try to do in the West
Bank what they've just failed to do in Gaza. And that would bring increased
disaster and chaos for Palestinians throughout the West Bank as well.

AMY GOODMAN: Laila El-Haddad, you write the blog, A Mother from Gaza. How do
you live every day? Talk about your son. How do people wake up in the
morning? Where do you go? How do you take shelter?

LAILA EL-HADDAD: Obviously it's a very complicated situation to explain to a
3-year-old. I mean in terms of actually entering Gaza, of living in Gaza, in
terms of explaining what is Gaza and who is in control of Gaza. As we go
through the crossing he says, you know, "who's not allowing us through?" And
we're stuck in the crossing, And trying to explain to him who that is. Then
he sees, of course, on one side Egyptians and on the other Palestinians and
European monitors. Yet it's an outside force, meaning he Israelis ultimately
closing the crossing. Then, of course, going into Gaza and being subject to
periods of time these bits of infighting and him having to deal with the gun
fire so forth. Children are extremely adaptable. But, of course, he has
become terrified by the loud sound of the gunfire on the one hand or the
Israeli shelling on the other and just has taken to closing his ears. So I
just told him there was a lot of popcorn being made outside. And when the
gunfire subsided, he said, oh, I think the popcorn is done. Can we go and
see it? So he managed that fairly well at least for those few days. But it's
certainly very troubling, setting an environment to raising a child in for
any Palestinian, certainly. Whether your dealing with the occupation on one
hand or the infighting on the other.

AMY GOODMAN: And the level of hunger, of malnutrition?

LAILA EL-HADDAD: Hunger, people like to focus and certainly with cause on
the hunger and on the malnutrition. And that is a major concern, especially
seeing as how it's been so methodical. But I like to point out that it's not
just mere hunger that is the problem here. You're starving a people of their
basic freedoms and their rights. I think ultimately that's been the grand
scheme. Of course it becomes very significant and important.

AMY GOODMAN: I want to thank you both for being with us. We'll certainly
continue to follow this situation. Laila el-Haddad is a Palestinian
journalist, a mother living in Gaza, writing Raising Youssef: a diary of a
mother under occupation." ali abunimah, speaking to us from Chicago,
cofounder of the online publication The Electronic Intifada. his book is
called "one country: a bold proposal to end the Israeli-Palestinian
impasse." published by metropolitan books last year Democracy Now!,

To purchase an audio or video copy of this entire program, click here for
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