from Haaretz
Missing the government of thieves
By Amira Hass
Slogans shouted at rallies sound better when they rhyme. "Not Ismail, not
Haniyeh, we want back the government of haramiyeh." Haramiyeh means thieves, and
the protesters in Ramallah - Palestinian Authority workers who have not received
their salaries for the last seven months - shouted what can be heard in
conversations in the streets of the West Bank and Gaza Strip: Hamas may be
clean, but the Fatah thieves are preferable. After all, the reasoning goes, when
Fatah was in power, our salaries were assured.
The continued strike at PA offices, the rallies of the clerks and the demands
for a unity government - all call on the Hamas-led government to recognize the
negative balance of its brief tenure. There is justification for the complaints:
A government is supposed to make sure that civil servants get their salaries, as
part of fulfilling its obligation to protect the welfare of the population. A
government - even one as lacking in powers as a Palestinian government under
Israeli occupation - is supposed to weigh its political and ideological platform
against its ability to meet its civil and economic obligations. But under Hamas,
the backbone of society collapsed when the civil servants' livelihood - as basic
and modest as it was - was no longer assured, as it had been during 12 years of
chronic instability.
The Fatah governments bequeathed to the Hamas government a dependence on the
funds of donor nations, whether they were used for development or to cover the
annual budget (including covering the funds that Israel plunders from the
Palestinian people in broad daylight, in the form of the taxes it levies on
Palestinian transactions, without transferring it to the Palestinian treasury.)
But the fixed global donations to the PA are not made without recompense, which
was a process of political negotiations, as faltering as it was, including the
Palestine Liberation Organization's recognition of the occupying State of Israel
and the State of Israel's recognition of the PLO as the representative of the
Palestinian people.
This year, the donor states decided that they would not let the Hamas movement
get the best of both worlds: refraining from recognizing agreements that
formally made the establishment of a "government" possible, while receiving the
fixed donations. That is logical. The Fatah movement, which is having a hard
time digesting its removal from office, is relying on the logic of the
international position and is acting in its way to topple the elected
government. Fatah is behind the strikers (in the Arafat era, those who led
struggles for fair wages were persecuted by the security services and placed in
jail.)
But while Fatah is demanding that Hamas recognize the negative balance of its
brief tenure, the Fatah movement and its leaders - from PA Chairman Mahmoud
Abbas on down - are refusing to draw the relevant personal and political
conclusions from the negative balance of their extensive time in power when it
comes to the extremely important issue of the struggle for independence and
liberation from Israeli occupation. On the basis of these promises, most of the
Palestinian public supported the Oslo process. But the logic of "the gradual
liberation from occupation," on which the Oslo Accords were based, has utterly
failed.
Before the Oslo Accords, the West Bank and Gaza were occupied territory. Before
the Oslo Accords, most of the Israeli public took for granted that "there is no
peace with settlements," as the slogan had it. Under the Oslo Accords, 60
percent of the territory (including the settlements) which was classified Area
C, meaning under Israeli security and civil control, essentially became disputed
territory, with the world allowing Israel to use its military, economic and
diplomatic supremacy to annex significant portions of it in the framework of the
final-status agreement.
In this period, the borders of the Palestinian enclaves (Area A and Area B) were
fixed, creating isolated islands that were the only areas Israel allowed the PA
to develop. During the Oslo period, it was proved to Israelis that "peace is
possible even with settlements." The settlements expanded and developed without
end, while the elected Palestinian leadership negotiated with the Israeli
government, and was unable to prevent the construction of even one settlement
house.
Before the decade of negotiations began - the Madrid Conference in 1991 and then
the Oslo process - Israel respected the Palestinian right to freedom of
movement. The regime of limiting movement, which began in 1991, only intensified
after 1994. The Fatah government will be remembered as one that collaborated
with the severe and comprehensive damage to the basic right of freedom of
movement. The Palestinian leadership and PLO leaders accepted a system whereby
they and their business, personal and political associates were granted the
freedom of movement that the rest of the population did not enjoy. They owe
their personal financial standing, their relative comfort and their feeling of
"freedom" to a privilege that the Israeli occupation regime granted them. Under
those circumstances, they could not lead a political struggle against the severe
and highly destructive Israeli method of control over the Palestinians' time and
freedom of movement.
However, the negative balance of one movement does not cancel out that of its
competitor. Apparently both movements are now competing for power and are
forgetting that their job is to shorten the days of foreign - Israeli - rule
over their people.