Khaled Abu Toameh
December 1, 2014 at 5:00 am
This is precisely what
Egypt and the Arab counties want: to turn the Gaza Strip into an Israeli, and
not an Arab, problem.
There is good reason to
believe that the Arabs are not going to change their attitudes toward the
Palestinians once a Palestinian state is established. The future Palestinian
state will have to continue relying on Israeli and Western aid in order to
survive.
And if Israel and the
West do not come to their assistance, the Palestinians will find themselves
begging at the doorsteps of Iran, the Muslim Brotherhood and the Islamic State.
Then, the Palestinian state will be anything but a source of stability in the
Middle East.
The
Palestinians know very well that if and when they have a state of their own,
they will never be able to rely on their Arab brethren.
The Arab
countries have a long record of turning their backs on the Palestinians, not
only with regard to financial aid promises, but even when it comes to basic
needs such as medical treatment.
But what
will happen after the creation of a Palestinian state? Palestinians say they do
not have high expectations that the Arab countries will help them build their
state.
Today,
it is much easier for Palestinians to receive medical treatment in Israel,
Turkey and Germany than in most of the Arab countries.
The
tragic case of
Razan al-Halkawi, an 11-year-old girl from the Gaza Strip, serves as another
reminder of the Arab "betrayal" of the Palestinians.
Al-Halkawi,
who has been ill for the past few months, died this week after Egyptian
authorities refused to allow her to enter their country for medical treatment.
She and
hundreds of Palestinian patients have been unable to leave the Gaza Strip due
to the continued closure of the Rafah border crossing. The Egyptian authorities
closed the terminal about a month ago after a terror attack in Sinai that
claimed the lives of 30 soldiers.
One day
after the girl from the Gaza Strip passed away, the Egyptians finally reopened the border crossing for only two days to allow stranded
Palestinians on the Egyptian side to return home. Thousands of Palestinians
have been waiting for the past four months for the Egyptians to reopen the
terminal so that they could enter the Gaza Strip.
Speaking
to reporters upon their return to the Gaza Strip, some of the Palestinians
voiced outrage over their mistreatment at the hands of the Egyptians.
"The
rockets that were falling on us were easier for us than the treatment of the
Egyptians," one woman said.
Another
woman, Hind Shaheen, said she left the Gaza Strip several months ago to receive
medical treatment for cancer. She had been forced to wait for the past 40 days
at the Egyptians side of the border before returning home. During this time,
she was deprived of the medical treatment she needs for her cancer.
Shaheen
said that the stranded Palestinians were left by the Egyptians without food,
money or water.
"The
situation there is very serious," she added, referring to the Egyptian
aide of the border. "People were more afraid there than they were during
the last war in the Gaza Strip. The Egyptians want the Palestinians to
die."
Others
said they were subjected to strict restrictions, including night curfews.
"The Egyptians treated each one of us as if we were terrorists," said an elderly man who was among the lucky
ones allowed to cross the border back into the Gaza Strip.
But for
the little girl from the Gaza Strip who passed way this week, the partial
reopening of the Rafah border crossing came too late.
Her
relatives say that tensions between Hamas and Fatah also denied her the chance
to receive medical treatment in an Israeli hospital. They claim that the
Palestinian Authority in Ramallah turned down a request from Hamas to intervene
with Israeli authorities to issue a permit for al-Halkawi to be admitted to an
Israeli hospital.
Many
other cancer patients from the Gaza Strip are likely to meet the same fate as
the little girl due to Egypt's continued closure of the Rafah border crossing
and ongoing tensions between Mahmoud Abbas's Fatah faction and Hamas. They are
also victims of long-term emotional detachment and apathy of the Arabs toward
their Palestinian brethren.
While
the Egyptians continue to seal off their border with the Gaza Strip, Israel has
become the only hope for the 1.7 million Palestinians living there.
In the
period between November 18 and 23, some 2,966 crossed the Erez border crossing with Israel in both directions,
according to the Israeli Ministry of Defense's Coordination of Government
Activities in the Territories.
In
addition, some 1,490 trucks carrying thousands of tons of goods entered the
Gaza Strip through the Kerem Shalom terminal along the border with Israel
during the same period. The goods consisted of food, construction materials,
input for agriculture and medicine products.
How many
Arab trucks loaded with goods entered the Gaza Strip over the past month? None.
This is
precisely what Egypt and the rest of the Arab countries want: to turn the Gaza
Strip into an Israeli, and not Arab, problem.
There is
good reason to believe that the Arabs are not going to change their attitude
toward the Palestinians once a Palestinian state is established. The future
Palestinian state will have to continue relying on Israeli and Western aid in
order to survive.
And if
Israel and the West do not come to their assistance, the Palestinians will find
themselves begging at the doorsteps of Iran, the Muslim Brotherhood and Islamic
State. Then, the future Palestinian state will be anything but a source of
stability in the Middle East.
No comments:
Post a Comment