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By
Sami Moubayed, Special to
Gulf News
I don't usually write to the dead; that's not my
business. I look around in Palestine today, however,
and find that not a single Palestinian in power is
worth addressing. All of them are doing great
injustice to their cause, our cause and yours.
Forgive me for disturbing your peaceful slumber Mr
President. I have bad news from Palestine. The
mini-state that you proudly created in 1993 is
finished. It's gone.
You left us in 2004 dreaming of the creation of the
State of Palestine, with its capital in Occupied
Jerusalem. More than ever, this seems unattainable
today, because of the Palestinians, more so than the
Israelis.
The man who succeeded you as president, your long
time comrade Mahmoud Abbas, has led the Palestinians
towards disaster and chaos.
Hamas, the party that troubled
you, and was once fighting the Israelis, is now
killing fellow Palestinians. There is civil war in
Gaza and it is heading for the West Bank. These are
not the same Palestinians who you constantly
described as: "the superman people".
Thirty Palestinians have been killed in
inter-Palestinian fighting, and 130 have been
wounded.
You were besieged at your compound in Ramallah from
2001 until 2004, and not a single Arab or Western
leader objected, or lifted a finger to help you.
An Israeli soldier named Gilad Shalit has been
kidnapped by the Palestinians since June 2006 and
the entire world Arab leaderships included is
calling for his release.
Saddam Hussain, the man whom you
defended and supported in 1991, is now dead. The
last words he heard were "go to hell" by Shiite
onlookers who danced around his corpse.
Hamas won the elections of 2006
but due to a US-backed international boycott, has
been unable to deliver food or salaries to the
Palestinians.
I still remember how in the midst of your final
hours, on November 1, 2004, you gave instructions
from your deathbed in Paris to the ministry of
finance in Ramallah to pay wages on time to the
Palestinians.
That was a priority for you but Hamas does not share
in your pragmatism or dedication to the
Palestinians. Had they softened their tone towards
Israel, the way you did when the time was not right
to speak revolution and accepted Oslo, then none of
this would have happened.
True, they might be dedicated to the liberation of
Palestine, but what worth is a liberated Palestine
with no Palestinians?
The livelihood of the Palestinian citizens should
have been a priority on the agenda of Hamas, rather
than warfare with Israel.
Because of their terrible conditions, the
Palestinians have been restless for the past few
months, demanding either a cabinet change or a
change of policy by Hamas. Both have been refused by
the Hamas-led government.
Voted into power
The Islamic resistance after all
did not win the elections of 2006 because they
promised to eradicate Israel. They were voted into
power because they promised to bring security, fight
corruption and improve the lives of the
Palestinians. None of these promises have been
achieved.
Equally unwise to Hamas, Mr
President, were the leaders of your very own Fatah.
This month they celebrate 42 years of the "war of
liberation" that you started on January 1, 1965.
At a massive rally in Gaza, your former protégé
Mohammad Al Dahlan accused Hamas leaders of being
murderers. He was responding to chants from the
masses: "Shiite! Shiite! Shiite!" in reference to
Hamas's ties with Iran. Dahlan said, "They are not
Shiites. They are murderers."
Rather than act as godfather to
the Palestinians all the Palestinians Abbas has even
taken sides, claiming that Hamas's militias is
illegal.
When members of Fatah asked Abbas to dismiss Dahlan
on charges of instigating internal violence, the
Palestinian president refused. Dahlan's words are
not bravado Mr President, nor are they
statesmanship. They are pure political suicide.
Is this the Palestine you wanted
Mr President?
Only solution
The only solution is for all of
them to collectively resign. They have failed to
lead post-Arafat Palestine.
Abbas should either live up to
his duties as president and call for early elections
or leave office to someone who is more competent.
By all accounts, his prime minister Esmail Haniya
should go. Another solution to the present
confrontation would be to give Hamas the benefit of
the doubt, to give them what had Israel allowed
Hamas to take over government, with its full
responsibilities, this would have been a win-win
scenario for everyone.
Everyone, that is, except for Fatah. The
Palestinians would have been ruled by the leaders
for whom they voted.
Hamas would have been firmly in
control of government and Israel would have tamed
one of its deadliest enemies. By letting it share
power, treating it as a partner, showing it respect
and giving it real duties, Israel could have forced
Hamas to share responsibility. Hamas would have been
unable to continue its war on Israel.
Sad is the situation in
Palestine, Mr President. It would have been better
if finer leaders were around, such as Farouk Al
Qaddumi, who remains in Tunis and is at odds end
with Abu Mazen, or Marwan Al Barghouti, who remains
in an Israeli jail. Sadly for all their sacrifices,
the Palestinians got nothing better than Mahmoud
Abbas, Mohammad Al Dahlan and Esmail Haniya. Rest in
peace Abu Ammar. It's good that you are not alive to
see the circus in Palestine.
Sami Moubayed is a Syrian
political analyst. |