Khaled Abu Toameh September 27, 2014
Summary
As the past few
weeks have, shown, hundreds, if not thousands, of Palestinians would rather
risk their lives at sea than live under Palestinian governments and leaders
whose only goal is to enrich their bank accounts.
Instead of creating job
opportunities for young men and women, Hamas and the Palestinian Authority have
spent the past seven years fighting over money and power. They are now busy
planning how to lay their hands on the millions of dollars that are supposed to
go to the reconstruction of the Gaza Strip. Hamas wants to use the
Palestinian Authority as a tool through which the international community
channels funds to he Gaza Strip — a move that would ultimately empower
Hamas to tighten its grip over the Palestinian population there.
They said that Hamas officials are
providing the emigrants with forged visas and travel documents to to enable
them to enter Europe.
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Over
the past few weeks, dozens of Palestinian immigrants from the Gaza Strip have
been killed or injured while trying to reach Europe by sea.
At
least 500 Palestinians have gone missing after the boats carrying them sank in
the sea. Some reports have suggested that rival gangs deliberately sunk the
boats. The gangs are fighting for the cash the Palestinians are prepared to pay
to leave the Gaza Strip. Palestinians refer to the situation as
their "Death Boats" scandal.
The
Palestinian immigrants are said to have paid thousands of dollars to Hamas
officials and Egyptian smugglers to facilitate the exodus from the Gaza Strip. Palestinian
Authority Foreign Minister Riad al-Malki claimed that each Palestinian paid
$1,000 to Hamas personnel at the Rafah border crossing with Egypt. Others
are believed to have paid $5,000 each to
leave the Gaza Strip.
Malki
said that preliminary investigations have revealed that the Palestinians in the
Gaza Strip have fallen victim to Hamas and Egyptian gangsters who managed to
lure them with false promises.
According
to various reports, some 13,000 Palestinians have already fled the Gaza Strip
to Europe with the help of the gangsters. Most left through Hamas's smuggling
tunnels or by bribing its security officials at the Rafah terminal. Another
25,000 Palestinians from the Gaza Strip have applied to various European countries for
immigration.
Although
Hamas has denied any connection to the mass exodus, Palestinians in the Gaza
Strip revealed that the Islamist movement had set up special offices to
register those wishing to start a new life in Europe. They said that Hamas
officials are providing the emigrants with forged visas and travel documents to
enable them to enter Europe.
A
Palestinian journalist in Gaza City said that at one of the mosques in the
southern Gaza Strip, a leading Hamas preacher told
worshippers: "Those who are not happy can always emigrate to Europe.
We do not force anyone to stay here."
Most
of the immigrants left the Gaza Strip through a two-kilometer tunnel belonging
to a senior Hamas operative. Survivors told a Palestinian Authority Commission
of Inquiry that when they reached the Egyptian side of the border, Egyptian
gangsters intercepted them and robbed them of their money.
"Hamas
gangsters worked in cooperation with gangsters on the Egyptian side of the
border," said a senior Palestinian Authority official involved with the
inquiry commission. "They operated like a real mafia, exploiting the
predicament of the people, especially young men who were hoping to find jobs
and better lives in Italy and other European countries."
Palestinians
say that the emigration began long before the last military confrontation
between Hamas and Israel. But the trend has witnessed a dramatic increase since
the end of the fighting in late August.
"Hamas
has failed to help the Palestinians ever since it came to power in 2007,"
said Ahmed Bader, whose son managed to leave the Gaza Strip through a tunnel
one week after the end of the fighting. "There is nothing for the young
people to do in the Gaza Strip: no jobs, no entertainment and no security.
Young men who graduate from universities cannot find work if they are not
members of Hamas."
Both
Hamas and the Palestinian Authority bear responsibility for the tragedy of the
Palestinian immigrants. The two rival parties have failed to improve the living
conditions of their people in the Gaza Strip. Instead of
creating job opportunities for young men and women, Hamas and the Palestinian
Authority have spent the past seven years fighting over money and power.
Hamas says that Palestinians are fleeing the
Gaza Strip because their leader (Mahmoud Abbas) is a helpless 80-year-old man
"who suffers from half the diseases of the universe." The Palestinian
Authority, for its part, says that the Palestinians are fleeing the "hell
of Hamas.". Hamas and the Palestinian Authority are trading allegations
and abuses while their people are being exploited emotionally and financially,
then robbed, drowned and fed to sharks.
Hamas and
the Palestinian Authority are now busy planning how to lay their hands on the
millions of dollars that are supposed to go to the reconstruction of the Gaza
Strip.
At
last week's "reconciliation" talks between the two sides in Cairo,
they completely ignored the tragedy of the Palestinian immigrants. Once again,
Hamas and Fatah officials exchanged kisses and hugs as they announced yet
another agreement to implement a previous agreement.
In fact, this is what
Hamas and Fatah have been doing since 2006 – signing one reconciliation
agreement after the other without tangible results. Needless to say, so far
none of these agreements has been implemented. Skeptics say the most recent
agreement between Hamas and Fatah is also likely to remain ink on paper due to
the wide gap between the two parties.
Hamas
appears to be willing to bring the Palestinian Authority back to the Gaza Strip
not because it has changed its ideology. Rather, Hamas wants to use the
Palestinian Authority as a tool through which the international community
channels funds to the Gaza Strip – a move that would ultimately empower Hamas
to tighten its grip over the Palestinian population there.
But
many Palestinians in the Gaza Strip have obviously lost their confidence in
both Abbas and Hamas. As the past few weeks have shown, hundreds, if
not thousands, of Palestinians would rather risk their lives at sea than live
under Palestinian governments and leaders whose only goal is to enrich their
bank accounts.
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