JVP News Roundup July 6

Here is your weekly JVP news roundup for July 6, 2007. Click on the highlighted links for news articles that expand on the summary here.
In addition to the articles linked below, you might be interested in checking out the recent article in Middle East Report on the "Israel Lobby." Click here for the article
by Mitchell Plitnick and Chris Toensing.

JVP News Roundup, July 6, 2007

Little changed in the political and diplomatic landscape this week in Israel and the Occupied Territories despite an Israeli raid in Gaza that left 11 Palestinians dead. Yet this report on the fighting also touches upon the growing split between Gaza and the West Bank, as it mentions the different work weeks decreed in each region. It seems a small matter, which two days are designated as weekends. Yet it's the sort of day-to-day detail in people's lives that mark differences between groups. It is also not coincidental that the West Bank weekend includes Saturday, the Jewish Sabbath, leaving open the possibility of a work week compatible with Israel, while Gaza's includes only Thursday and Friday.

While virtually the entire world, including the US, Israel, the EU and the vast majority of Arab countries have lined up behind Fatah in the West Bank, the Arab leadership seems to prefer trying to restore Palestinian unity, a goal certainly shared by the majority of Palestinians, to whom national unity remains a fundamental principle. But for now, their efforts at mediation are on hold as detailed here. No doubt, this is due to Mahmoud Abbas' zeal for pursuing Hamas in the West Bank as discussed in this article.

Meanwhile, the situation in Gaza remains desperate, though in some ways it has seen some stabilization. This report discusses Hamas' attempts to establish law and order in the Strip and the obstacles they are facing in doing so. But the struggle between Fatah and Hamas remains, as detailed in this report. Both groups have been matching each other in their tactics and behavior, a fact which has not gone unnoticed by the Palestinian populace, as we reported last week.

Israel has permitted a significant increase in traffic for humanitarian aid into the Strip, and this has raised the capacity for such aid to meet the basic needs of the population there from 21% to 70%. Yet that same UN OCHA report also emphasizes the ongoing closures and the impact that has in the long term on Gaza's economy. Indeed, as reported by the Israeli human rights organization, Gisha, the already crippled infrastructure of Gaza is being systematically "erased."

Again, we need to notice the strategy being employed. It's a very dangerous one. One Israeli columnist senses the problem, in that ignoring Hamas is not going to make them go away. The danger, however is greater than that; if Hamas is seen as a failure, that segment of Palestinian society is likely to seek a more radical alternative, not a more moderate one.

This is especially so because the efforts to "bolster Abbas" are already having the opposite effect. France has urged Israel to make more concrete bolstering moves. Israel is certainly not going to be willing, in the current atmosphere and given the pressures on and general disposition of Ehud Olmert, to offer Abbas what he would need to legitimize himself in Palestinian eyes--significant release of prisoners who are seen as leaders in the resistance, significant removal of settlement outposts and plans to remove larger settlements and some indication of a willingness to talk about sharing Jerusalem. This, admittedly somewhat reactionary, account from al-Ahram in Egypt illustrates the ineffectiveness of Abbas' current strategy.

Finally, Human Rights Watch this week struck a blow against those who accuse the human rights organizations of "anti-Israel bias" by releasing two reports that detail violations of international law by all parties. Whether on the matter of illegally held prisoners or on indiscriminate firing by both sides we see that international law is held outside of this conflict by both sides, other than when it serves their purposes.

More articles of interest:

Hamas fires two rockets at Israel

Report: PM envoy says progress in Hezbollah talks

Israel Planning Fence on Egypt Border

Report: Settlers use just 9% of state-allocated West Bank land

Journalism watchdog groups condemn shooting of Palestinian cameraman in clash with Israeli troops

 

The latest on the blogs

Muzzlewatch

Harvard Middle East expert Sara Roy: "I have never experienced such…blatant..censorship."

All about Philip Weiss: why he left the Observer, why he's an "Israel-hater"

Finkelstein/Larudee: Chicago Tribune rejects ad, DePaul charged with violating own standards

Democractic National Committee "urged to sack Jimmy Carter"

Stunning moment at screening of Jolie film about Daniel Pearl


The Third Way

"The Israel Lobby" in Perspective

Being Realistic About Peace

UN Sec. General Makes a Statement for Fairness

The Fall of Gaza: Can Disaster Be Avoided?

A Dearth of Leadership: The International Community Must Get Involved

"Never Again" Means For Everyone


 




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