Kelakuan orang2 Islam yg tipikal bisa dilihat dr kelakuan orang2 Palestina
dan orang2 Arab lainnya. Mau enaknya sendiri, tukang ngibul, tukang bunuh,
tukang nyampurin urusan orang lain, tukang bikin onar, ga kenal malu dll.


http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/3847/egypt-punishes-palestinians

Egypt Punishes the Palestinians

* by Khaled Abu
Toameh<http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/author/Khaled+Abu+Toameh>
July 12, 2013 at 5:00 am*



Egypt is allowed to strangle the entire Gaza Strip and deny its people food
and fuel, especially on the eve of the holy fasting month of Ramadan, but
one hardly hears about these anti-Palestinian measures: they are being
carried out by an Arab country, not by Israel.

The Palestinians often complain that Israel, the US and other countries
keep intervening in their internal affairs. These complaints often draw
much attention from the Western media and many in the international
community.

But when the Palestinians meddle in the internal affairs of Arab countries,
sometimes triggering acts of violence and instability, the international
media and public opinion tend to look the other way.

And when the Arab countries retaliate by punishing the Palestinians, as is
happening these days between the Palestinians and Egypt, the international
community and human rights organizations rush to bury their heads in the
sand.

Egypt is allowed to strangle the entire Gaza Strip and deny its people food
and fuel, especially on the eve of the holy fasting month of Ramadan, but
the media and human rights groups are missing in action. This, by the way,
is happening at a time when Israel has announced a series of gestures
toward the Palestinians on the occasion of Ramadan.

Each time they are punished for poking their nose into other people's
business, the Palestinians start whining and crying, accusing the Arab
countries of turning against them.

Today, it is Egypt's turn to punish the Palestinians for meddling in that
country's internal affairs.

Following the military coup that ended President Mohamed Morsi's Muslim
Brotherhood regime, the first decision the new rulers of Egypt took was to
ban Palestinians from entering their country without prior permission from
Egypt's security authorities.

As these security forces rarely issue permits to Palestinians to enter
Egypt, this decision means that thousands of Palestinians will not be able
to continue their studies, receive medical treatment or visit relatives
there.

The Palestinians have a long history of meddling in the internal affairs of
Arab countries, even if that always proves to be counterproductive and
harmful to Palestinian interests. Now, the new rulers of Egypt are
extremely angry with the Palestinians, especially Hamas, for supporting
Morsi and the Muslim Brotherhood.

But instead of punishing Hamas and its leaders, the Egyptian authorities
have resorted to collective punishment against the Palestinians,
particularly those living in the Gaza Strip.

One hardly hears and reads about these anti-Palestinian measures: they are
being carried out by an Arab country, not by Israel.

The Rafah border crossing between Egypt and Gaza, January 2009. (Source:
International Transport Workers' Federation)
 Since the ouster of Morsi, the Egyptians have closed down the Rafah border
crossing along their shared border with the Gaza Strip, leaving thousands
of passengers stranded on both sides of the border.

About 2,000 Palestinian pilgrims who were in Mecca have not been able to
return home because of the closure of the Rafah terminal.

In addition, hundreds of Palestinian university students and patients have
not been permitted to leave the Gaza Strip.

Thousands of Palestinians living in various countries, who were planning to
spend the summer vacation with their relatives, have also been deprived of
entering the Gaza Strip.

The closure of the border crossing has also been accompanied by an Egyptian
military offensive to destroy dozens of smuggling tunnels along the border
between the Gaza Strip and Egypt. This offensive, which began last week,
has resulted in a severe shortage of basic goods, fuel and gas inside the
Gaza Strip.

The Palestinians are now paying a heavy price for Hamas's and others'
intervention in the internal affairs of Egypt.

Further, Hamas's rivals in Fatah and the Palestinian Authority are now
repeating the same mistake by supporting the military coup against Morsi
and the Muslim Brotherhood.

If and when the Muslim Brotherhood returns to power, they will do to Fatah
and the Palestinian Authority what the Egyptian authorities are doing now
to Hamas and Palestinian supporters of Morsi.

Sadly, the Palestinians have not learned the lesson from previous mistakes
they made when they pushed their noses into other people's business. Each
time the Palestinians get involved in internal conflicts in the Arab world,
they always end up being the biggest losers

Hundreds of thousands of Palestinians have been killed, injured and
displaced in Syria over the past two years. Again, because some
Palestinians have either joined the "rebels" or the pro-Assad forces, this
is a self-inflicted tragedy.

In the past, the Palestinians paid a very heavy price for meddling in the
internal affairs of Iraq, Lebanon, Jordan and other Arab countries, but
this price has not deterred them.

That meddling is also the reason most Arab countries have long despised the
Palestinians, subjecting them to Apartheid laws and other punitive
measures, including travel bans and deprivation of financial aid.

For earning the enmity and contempt of their Arab brethren, the
Palestinians have only themselves to blame: they shoot themselves in the
foot and then blame others for their misery. They would be better served if
instead they would start directing their energies toward solving their own
problems and improving their living conditions -- exactly what the
Palestinian Authority and the Hamas governments are *not* doing.


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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