Truth and Justice

Truth and Justice throughout the world

Within the article below, there are strong indications that those who voted for Hamas, not because they supported the ideology of Hamas, but as a protest against Fatah's corruption now have a negative view of Hamas. It also seems that a good percentage of the Hamas vote came from this latter group.
-----------
Opportunities Fade Amid Sense of Isolation in Gaza
By ETHAN BRONNER

GAZA — The bank executive sits in a suit and tie behind his broad empty desk with plenty of time to talk. Almost no loans are being issued or corporate plans made. The Texas-trained engineer closed his firm because nothing is being built. The business student who dreamed of attending an American university — filling a computer file with meticulous hopes and plans — has stopped dreaming. He goes from school to a part-time job to home, where he joins his merchant father who sits unemployed.

Ten months after the Israeli military said it invaded this Palestinian coastal strip to stop the daily rocket fire of its Islamist rulers, there are many ways to measure the misery of Gaza.

Bits of rubble are being cleared, but nothing is going up. Several thousand homes remain destroyed. Several dozen families still live in United Nations tents strung amid their ruined houses. A three-year-old embargo on Hamas imposed by Israel and Egypt keeps nearly all factories shut and supplies away. Eighty percent of the population gets some form of assistance.

But the misery of the educated and professional class has a particular poignancy. Many abroad view Gaza as a large slum, yet there is near universal literacy here and infant mortality is low by regional standards. Midsize glass towers gleam. Many thousands have advanced degrees. Half a dozen stylish restaurants fill each day with young women — a few with heads uncovered — carrying laptop computers, and with the underemployed, who smoke hookahs and lament their future.

“We are entering very dark years,” remarked Slama Bissiso, vice chairman of the Palestinian Bar Association, slowly exhaling scented tobacco smoke on the balcony of the Deira Hotel overlooking the Mediterranean. He said that the embargo on Gaza and the divide between the Hamas government here and the Fatah-dominated Palestinian Authority in the West Bank were driving Gaza into deeper isolation every month.

Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian president, announced on Friday that elections would be held in January. But it was effectively an announcement that Fatah and Hamas had failed to reconcile their differences despite Egyptian mediation. There will be no election here without the agreement of Hamas, and it has no intention of granting it now. If that means a vote will be held in the West Bank only, the horizons of Gaza will retreat even further.

Hamas’s control of Gaza feels solidly unchallenged. Its security forces patrol the streets. Pictures of President Abbas with big X’s across his face line the main avenue, sadly known as Unity Street. A new sign on the Gaza side of the Israeli border bars even foreigners from bringing in alcohol.

Left out of the banking system, Hamas affiliates opened their own bank recently. In keeping with Muslim strictures, it does not charge interest or offer loans, making money by buying cars or homes the customer wants, then reselling them at a higher price.

Israel allows about 100 trucks a day to pass into Gaza bearing food, medicine and other humanitarian goods. But it has closed off commerce in the hope of alienating the population here from their rulers. That seems to be happening. Yet if no election occurs, it is hard to see how the alienation can be expressed or government changed.

Israel wants to isolate Hamas because the group rejects Israel’s existence. As Ayman Taha, a Hamas movement spokesman, said in an interview, “Our long-term strategy is the liberation of all of Palestine, but we would agree to a temporary solution involving a state in the 1967 borders with a truce of about 10 years, depending on the conditions of the truce.”

Egypt rejects Hamas because of its affiliation with the Cairo-based Muslim Brotherhood. Both Egypt and Israel worry about Iranian arming of the group as well.

The increasing isolation of Gaza is taking its toll. Opportunities for training and education abroad or for outsiders to come here, for example, are scarce. The children’s library in the center of the city could not persuade either Israeli or Egyptian officials to let anyone in to help set up new programs or carry out quality control.

Executives at Jawwal, the Palestinian cellphone company, sat last week at their work stations in blue jeans — as at the end of every work week it was Casual Thursday — and said their jobs were getting harder because spare parts and training were unavailable. Their senior managers, who used to travel abroad once a month, now cannot travel at all.

While 1,100 students admitted to programs abroad did get through the crossing into Egypt over the past few months — and another 50 were granted permission through Israel — more than 800 others who had spots waiting for them were unable to leave, according to Gisha, an Israeli human rights group.

Many of the professionals here reject Hamas’s ideology, although some voted for the party in 2006 out of rage over the corruption in Fatah.

“Hamas won by a slim margin, and it was because of people like me,” said Mohamed, who comes from a Fatah family and works for a charity. “I regret voting for them. I wanted to punish Fatah.”

Like nearly all in Gaza who spoke about politics, he asked that his identity be hidden for fear of what the government might do. The rules of political dissent remain fuzzy.

The Texas-trained engineer also voted for Hamas in 2006 and wishes he had not.

“Israel is saying, ‘Because you elected Hamas, you should have no life,’ ” he said. “Yet people elected Hamas because of Fatah corruption. I believe in peace with Israel, but I wanted desperately to get away from the corruption. I didn’t expect Hamas to win. Next time, I won’t vote at all.”

While the legitimate economy here depends on foreign aid that provides salaries for tens of thousands to do little, the black market for high-priced goods smuggled in from Egypt through hundreds of tunnels is thriving, leading to the growth of a tunnel mafia.

Professionals here are frustrated that their political options are Fatah, which they still consider corrupt, and Hamas, whose ideology poses problems for them and for many foreign governments.

Some said the rejection of Hamas by the world meant it made no sense for it to stay in power, but they had no idea how to effect a change.

“I’d like to see the creation of a political alternative with businesspeople instead of Hamas and Fatah,” said Rami Alagha, 39, manager of the Jawwal cellphone company. “The United States and the Europeans could get behind such a program. Otherwise we have no future.”

Taghreed El-Khodary contributed reporting.
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/10/27/world/middleeast/27gaza.html?ref=...

Tags: gaza, hamas

Share

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

As long as the dose if the shot for the flu. I agree. That is the one thing that Clinton did while in office. He changed the welfare two years is what you get hten you had better get off the sofa and get a job. But that was then and things are moving back. to the far left. If the money that is sent to these countries was spent on the people and roads and general infrastructuer then fine but it is not most of the time it goes to line the pokets of the rulers.

But as you say that the way of it.

Reply to This

Frank

Two days have passed and I have not been called an ogre or a delusional rightist. Do you think that my message is getting through?

Reply to This

Anything is possible, jsut maybe someone took a couple of days off
What you people miss here is that Hamas actually lost the popular vote, as Bush did to Gore, but won because of the system Arafat set up thinking it would guarantee Fatah victory.

When it won, Hamas immediately took steps to close down terrorist attacks, form a unity government with Fatah and offered a long term truce to Israel. Even a decade of peace is a great offer because lots can happen in a decade.

But the reality is, even though you people all removed from Israel and blinded by the romance, those largely Ahkenazi thugs who rule Israel want nothing less than total capitulation by, and removal of, Palestinians.

Reply to This

Luc,

1) In the historic viewpoint of the Islamic world, a ."long term truce" is offered only when the Islamic forces are weak and has been historically used as a preparation period for future war. So a truce is meaningless.

2) The Palestinians have not yet understood that Israel, a state of the Jewish people, is a reality that cannot be eliminated from the Middle East.

3) Your view of internal Israeli politics drips of your own racist viewpoint, which is typical of your fellow western propagandists for the Palestinians.

Reply to This

Luc

The Balestinians (Neverlanders) will never get a state in Historic Eretz Israel other than in that rat infested territory called Gaza. The Sewer dwelling Rats called Hamas will have to slither back into their holes, no matter your antisemitic , racist rantings.

WE do not need a truce with Hamas, we need the Palestinians to simply mesh in with their "brothers and sisters" in Jordan or Gaza or Egypt and call themselves whatever they can pronounce.

Reply to This

Luc, Gore lost the election so get over it, he has and is out making millions. They recounted and recounted and recounted again and always the same result Gore came up short. Say on task.

Reply to This

To add to Frank's statement. The US constitution states that the winner of the Presidential election must have 51% of the electoral vote. The popular vote does not matter, Al Gore was not the only candidate in US history who had a majority of the popular vote, but lacked the votes in the electoral college

Reply to This

RSS

Latest Activity

GastonCamacho is now a member of Truth and Justice
11 hours ago
You are right (below) America is a reactive society not a proactive one. Have your college start the program if you think it is the best way to go. However, the Homeland sec. said everything worked like clock work. National Security advisor said yes…
yesterday
Don't wast you time or typeing skills she don't understand that companies do not pay taxes but that the consumer pays the tax for the company, and pays all other taxes. It just came out this morning that the so called middle class 100, 000 and down…
yesterday
Yes you have post how great their system is. And as I have said they do not operate under the same laws that we do currently. We can not profile anyone, if TSA was to pull a nervous Arab out of line the ACLU would be all over them in a heart beat. T…
yesterday
John Obama and his advisors don't think terrorism is anything to be concerned about. They treat these treerotist like common street thugs. They want them read their right when captuered on the battlefild and brought to trail he in the US. He is seen…
yesterday
When was the last really cold winter you spent in Beijing or England or even up state New York? These record cold temps in places that noraly are not that cold is not a result og Global warming or the Gulf Stream. You need to stick that you somethin…
yesterday
John forget it, she don't understand about R&D in the market palce or in manufactureing companies. Only engineers trained today can develope things for tomorrow. All the engineers that are in thse R&D companies are just wasting time until a new crop…
yesterday
it is called polar shift not golbal warming. Golbal warming is nothing more then a ponzi scheme. Elaine go back several weeks on this and you will see where I told you about the Gulf stream. Put your head back in the sand girl.
yesterday
I know that Eline I was using that as an example. Every year new car designs come out everyday new designs for the futuere are drawn up proto types made. The auto companies do not wait for some college to come up with a program to train engineers to…
yesterday
Elaine the batteries used in cars today are not even manufactured by the car companies. There is an industry that manufactures batteries and that will continue to occur. The free market will be better served if the market is allowed to research and…
yesterday
Obama may think Terrorism is a 4 letter word but I think Obama believes work is a 4 letter word. People complained about Bush spending too much time "on Vacation" at the ranch. Obama has spent more time away from the White House in his first year in…
yesterday
The attempted bombing of Northwest Airlines Flight 253 was more than just al Qaeda's latest attempt to bring death and destruction to American shores. It was also, in its still-unfolding political aftermath, a head-on collision between Barack Obama'…
yesterday
Please enlighten us Islander because I was raised in Honolulu, Dover, some time in Vermont, England St Louis, and Boston. Since I left home I lived in Abilene Texas, Adana Turkey, Ft Walton Beach Florida, Dallas Ft Worth, and other cities of varying…
yesterday
Frank added a discussion
America is losing the free world By Gideon Rachman Published: January 4 2010 20:11 | Last updated: January 4 2010 20:11 Ever since 1945, the US has regarded itself as the leader of the “free world”. But the Obama administration is facing an unex…
on Monday
Elaine if you want to pay more taxes there is a place on the form for you to do that. There is no point in going any further with you on this point as you don't that the top 5% of earns in this country pay over 85 % of the tax. They pay there fair s…
on Monday
It does not matter what the US does at home airports, the new rules have to be carried out in Europe and other countires right now that is not being done; By GREGORY KATZ sponsored links Voice Your Opinion - Take today's My Way Poll, featuring a new…
on Monday
Here is another example of Golbal warming; Residents of Miami donned heavy coats and wool mufflers Monday to face down the coldest weather to hit the usually balmy city nearly in a decade. This subtropical city's fabled beaches, normally thronging w…
on Monday
There are other mean to produce electricty. But Elaine this time you are on the right track. Coper is the conductor, we need the coper to run from the plant to the home then through out the home. Unless everyone goes off the grid and supplies their…
on Monday
Let the colleges train new people no problem you missed the point yet again. Give money to the companies that build the batteries they have research and delvelopemnt section they need to get to work on this yesterday. If the people how can engerneer…
on Monday
I don't think that to many people disagree here Elaine, it is the politcal correctness that we live under, we can't hurt anyones feelings, Israel does not have the ACLU that will sue the govt. or anyone at the drop of a hat over the things that Isra…
on Monday

© 2010   Created by John Fisher on Ning.   Create a Ning Network!

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Privacy  |  Terms of Service

Sign in to chat!