Political and fiscal crises have engulfed the Hamas-led
Palestinian government since it took office in March, while harsh
Israeli attacks have battered the overcrowded Gaza Strip, a
stronghold for Hamas.
Political and fiscal crises
For the Palestinians, the most significant event in 2006 was the
startling victory of the Islamic Resistance Movement (Hamas) in the
second legislative elections after it defeated the long-dominant
Fatah movement in January.
But the victory of Hamas, bent on resisting Israel's occupation
and rejecting signed peace agreements with Israel, did not save the
Palestinians from sufferings.
The Hamas-led cabinet had to face a grave fiscal crisis after
key donors cut off all direct aid due to Hamas' refusal to meet
their demands of recognizing Israel, honoring previous peace
accords and renouncing violence.
Three months after the Hamas government took office, its
spokesman Ghazi Hamad said that the government "does nothing except
working on securing money."
Failing to pay salaries for almost 165,000 public servants, the
government also bore a daily loss of about US$1.1 million and
witnessed a high unemployment rate of 50 percent.
Most of governmental projects have stopped due to Israel's
closure of Gaza commercial and passenger crossing points, lack of
raw materials and suspension of international aid since Hamas took
office, the Ministry of National Economy said.
Since the beginning of a Palestinian uprising in late 2000,
direct and indirect losses due to Israeli siege have exceeded US$15
billions, according to figures released by the ministry.
"Improving the economic situation is also linked to lifting of
Israeli blockade and release of withheld tax revenues that have
exceeded US$600 million," Minister of National Economy Alaa
al-A'raj told Xinhua.
The economic hardship facing the Hamas-led government
undoubtedly led to a deteriorating political plight when the labor
union has been going on general strike since September to claim
overdue wages of government employees.
"There has been internal pressure because the people have
starved and lost security and disagreement has grown," said
Abdullah al-Hurrani, an intellectual.
Al-Hurrani, who is also a member of the Palestinian National
Council, or the parliament, said that Hamas lost much of its
popularity due to the lack of money and siege imposed by the West
on the Palestinians.
"I voted for Hamas in the elections because they promised to
reform and change our situation, but month after month, I found out
that Hamas did not fulfill what it promised to voters," said Khamis
Abdel Sallam, a teacher in Gaza.
Political analyst Talal Oukal said, "I think the Hamas-led
government is in a political impasse."
"The cabinet's experience in governing is hard, though it is
aware that being in opposition is different from being in office,"
he said.
In order to tackle the standoff, Hamas and Fatah have for months
been discussing the idea of forming a national unity government,
hoping that such a coalition government would meet international
demands for the sake of lifting blockade.
But inter-Palestinian talks over the issue reached an impasse
despite cautious optimism that a new coalition is imminent.
On Dec. 1, President Mahmoud Abbas convened a Palestine
Liberation Organization Executive Committee meeting in the West
Bank city of Ramallah and decided to freeze dialogue with Hamas on
forming a new unity government.
Al-Hurrani said that there would be no new government "if Hamas
keeps its stance."
Counting on their power in the parliament, Hamas insists on
nominating a new prime minister and having the highest number of
portfolios than any other parties.
"As President Abbas is tending to approve Hamas' candidate
Muhammad Shubair as the prime minister to head the new government,
the ruling Hamas movement should be content with this and leave the
authority for Abbas to oversee the process of forming the
coalition," said al-Hurrani.
Israeli attacks
Misfortunes never come singly. On June 25, three Palestinian
militant groups, headed by the armed wing of Hamas, kidnapped an
Israeli soldier and killed two others in a cross-border attack,
sparking an Israeli military offensive against the Gaza Strip three
days later.
Aiming to rescue captive soldier Gilad Shalit and halt rocket
firing by Palestinian militants, Israel launched the "Summer Rains"
operation against the Gaza Strip, the first since Israel withdrew
from the coastal strip in September 2005.
The fierce offensive targeted every Hamas-linked body, including
buildings of the cabinet and several ministries, and even destroyed
Gaza's only power plant.
According to local human rights centers, up to 500 Palestinians
have been killed in the Gaza Strip since capture of Shalit.
At the beginning of November, Israel unleashed a raging
operation dubbed "Autumn Clouds" against northern Gaza Strip in
response to an increasing rocket attack and failure to reach a deal
on prisoners' swap.
"Autumn Clouds," the deadliest in years, claimed lives of more
than 200 Palestinians.
"2006 was the most difficult year for the Palestinians and the
political process," al-Hurrani said.
Following months of mutual accusations and feud between Hamas
and rival Fatah of President Abbas, the Israeli offensive has
somewhat united militants who eventually agreed on a truce with
Israel.
A Palestinian-Israeli ceasefire went into effect on Nov. 26,
ending five-month Israeli offensives on the strip.
To sustain the fresh but fragile truce, Israeli Prime Minister
Ehud Olmert offered to reduce checkpoints, release frozen fund and
free Palestinian prisoners in exchange for Shalit, raising hopes
that the truce would lead to new peace efforts.
(Xinhua News Agency December 5, 2006)