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Hamas Routs Fatah in Gaza
mosaicnews
June 17, 2007
1:15 PM PDT
More on this in this article:

Denied Legitimacy by Vote, Hamas Wins it by Force

New America Media, News Analysis/Commentary, Jamal Dajani, Posted: Jun 15, 2007

“We are now like a group of wild cats that once were spoiled and dignified but now caged in and starved. On the political level, our leaders look like small players while the big ones are living somewhere else, like Washington, Tel Aviv and Tehran,” wrote Dr. Eyad El Sarraj in an email to friends living in the outside world on the current crisis in the Gaza Strip.

Two years ago, Sarraj invited me to his home in Gaza for tea and sweets. He had just returned from a swim in the Mediterranean.

“The sea is my only escape…of course I can only do that when the Israelis are not shelling us,” he said while drying his hair. At that time I interviewed Sarraj for a documentary I was working on. He spoke to me in detail about the effects of the occupation on the mental health of Palestinian children, an area of expertise that he developed while running the only mental health clinic in the Gaza Strip.

The situation in Gaza has changed since. The fighting is now between Fatah and Hamas; brothers from the same family have turned their guns on each other.

What happened in Gaza has been attributed to the result of a coup d'etat, the spread of radical Islam in the Middle East and, by some, to Al-Qaeda. But none of these theories is correct.

So what went wrong in Gaza?

Though Hamas won elections in January 2006, its efforts to govern have been stymied by international sanctions against the Palestinian government and a crippling Israeli siege. Fatah, instead of responding to its electoral loss by bringing in new leadership and weaning itself away from corruption, has spent its time conspiring to overthrow Hamas.

Denied the legitimate victory it won in the elections, Hamas was not allowed to govern. Now it has won a military victory -- with bullets. Yet what led to this was a prolonged Israeli occupation and siege, the international community’s indifference to a starving Palestinian population, and the systematic weakening of the Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas.

When Israel unilaterally withdrew from Gaza last year, it left almost 80 percent of the population dependent on foreign aid agencies and the United Nations. Since the election of Hamas, the United States, the European Union and most Arab countries have abandoned the 1.4 million inhabitants in Gaza, driving many of the young population to take up arms. Gaza has become nothing but a large jail with dilapidated neighborhoods and external forces pitting different groups against one another and playing on their fears. The situation is not that different from the creation of the Crips and Bloods in East Los Angeles.

Back in 2005, when I was traveling between different neighborhoods I was able to recognize who was in control by the flags and the different insignias: Fatah, Hamas, PFLP, Islamic Jihad and so on. Kids my son’s age -- who was then in the 11th grade -- were toting guns on their shoulders instead of being in classrooms. The writing was on the wall.

Interestingly, since the battles with Fatah, Hamas has been careful not to provoke the Israelis. Rocket attacks in southern Israel have almost ceased; Hamas has also ordered the militias that kidnapped BBC correspondent Alan Johnston to hand him over, a possible first step towards his release. Meanwhile, there are talks that Hamas has been negotiating with the Israelis about freeing its kidnapped soldier, Gilad Shalit. Israeli pragmatists in the country's intelligence circles have started to propose the unspeakable: that Israel may have no choice but to deal with the new lords of Gaza.

Today, the Palestinian territories are effectively split in two. Gaza is now controlled by Hamas, which has close ties to Syria and Iran. The West Bank is dominated by Fatah, which has ties to Israel and the West. For the past several years, we have been hearing about George W. Bush’s vision of a “two-state solution,” an Israel and a Palestinian state living side-by-side. The new reality on the ground is that we have three states on historic Palestine, a Hamas-run state in Gaza, a Fatah-run state in the West Bank, and Israel in between.
http://news.newamericamedia.org/news/
Samb1
June 16, 2007
7:12 AM PDT
What is going on in Gaza is terrible but the Israelis have transformed this place into a prison. The US and the rest of the world have abandoned it as mentioned in the mosaic intelligence report. No authority, no food, no clean water, no employment in the most crowded place in the world. What do you expect?
debois
June 15, 2007
10:18 PM PDT
It is too bad that the Palestinians fell into the old colonial trap, "divide and rule." I hope that they'll find a way out.
Thuxra
June 15, 2007
5:52 PM PDT
This is shaping up to be another bloody and awful summer in the middle east. Fatah will cling to whatever power it can in the West Bank, while Hamas will most likely feel emboldened by their 'victory' in Gaza to completely take over the government. Fighting will drag on while the civilians caught in the middle will bear the brunt of the destruction. The only real wild card will be Israel, as Olmert has recently announced Ehud Barak as his new Defense Minister. They certainly won't stand idle if Hamas continues to take ground and drive Fatah out, but to what degree, politically or militarily, they will get involved in the crisis I think depends upon how events unfold. Nothing good will come of this if things continue the way they are now.

By the way, I'd like to thank all the people that put Mosaic together everyday, I find it an extremely valuable source of news and perspectives that I would otherwise be unable to access. Thank you for making such an awesome program.
Grassroots
June 15, 2007
4:47 PM PDT
It breaks my heart to see the political'vultures'circling!
Ask the 'big boys' in Iran,America,Syria,Saudi,Persian Gulf,Egypt,Israel etc etc.
what their 'agendas' are? Because,it seems that the last thing on their minds,as usual,are the rights of the ordinary people!
The Palestinians,Lebanese,Israelis etc,have been around long enough to show us what they REALLY want.I just hope that freedom,a pluralistic society and THEIR type of Democracy will still be an option, and Resolution 242, not just a dream of the past!
As they say,"Ma'asalaam,Inshallah" (not bad for an "infidel" who shares the same God,huh?) I will hang on,to a hope,for dialogue,sanity and reason!
mosaicnews
June 15, 2007
3:11 PM PDT
The armed wing of Hamas announced early on Friday that it had assumed control over all Fatah positions in the Gaza Strip, including the presidency.Abbas in return sacked his prime minister Ismail Hanniyeh and replaced him with his finance minister.Will the crisis spill over to the West Bank? and how will Israel and neighboring countries deal with Hamas?