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A disturbing dispatch from a no go Area
By Donald Macintyre in Gaza City - Published
in "The Independent" on 21 April 2007
Gaza: a disturbing dispatch from a
no-go area as the BBC's Alan Johnston remains missing
after 40 days, the descent into lawlessness in the
Palestinian territory has ominousundercurrents .
Foreigners are mainly staying away from Gaza
these days. Only a handful of international
UN staff are based there now, their movements heavily restricted by the use of armoured
convoys and armed Palestinian security escorts. Which
is not surprising, since gunmen fired 11 shots into the side of an armoured car carrying the United
Nations Relief and Works Agency field director John Ging
on the main north-south highway after their kidnap attempt was thwarted by the locked doors . Lauren Aarons, a courageous 24-year-old
Londoner, took the very job at the Al Mezan human rights office in Gaza that her fellow Briton
Kate Burton was forced to leave after her own
kidnap in December 2005 .
Ordered out a few days after the kidnap of the BBC correspondent
Alan Johnston, Ms Aarons was provided with
a small, armed Palestinian escort last week to return, pack her belongings and bid a sad farewell
to the Palestinian family who had rented her an
apartment since late September .
She lived through both the "terrifying" Israeli missile attacks
near her home, and through the lethal
Fatah-Hamas warfare which reached its peak just before the Saudi-brokered ceasefire in Mecca in February.
But she says of the underlying insecurity
of which Mr Johnston's kidnap remains a symbol: "I am shocked how fast things have deteriorated in the past
seven months. Everything seems so normal but a
lot more sinister things are
happening below the surface." Ms Aarons is right .
By the standards of a Gaza City inured to many kinds of violence
over the past seven years, the incident
outside Roots restaurant was hardly news. Around noon, the gold-coloured Honda saloon belonging to the
restaurant's part-owner Muna Al-Ghalayini was
wrecked by a loud explosion audible at least a kilometre
away. Fortunately at the time Ms Al-Ghalayini was in the
elegant - but of course alcohol-free -
restaurant. She was reluctant to speculate about the perpetrators, saying only: "I don't know who did this but
the police areinvestigating it
." Yes she was a little afraid as a result of
the explosion. According to onetheory, Ms Al-Ghalayini
had recently stopped a young man entering on one of therestaurant's family-only nights, saying that he could only
come in if he was with his sister, and that he had
promised revenge. According to another, Roots ,
a favoured haunt for middle-class couples and their children eager to
escape from the relentless pressures of life
in the Strip, did not fit the requirements of extreme
socially conservative elements in Gaza .
Either way, the incident, however minor, appears to fit an
ominously growing undercurrent of lawlessness which a
new national unity government and its drafting of a new security plan has so far failed to
arrest .
Eight days ago, Al Ataa, a
popular culture centre in the northern Gaza town of
Beit Hanoun, was broken into and set on fire by an unknown group of assailants. The ttackers completely destroyed the
computer room of the centre , which aims especially
to serve local women and children, runs workshops in non-violence among its many activities and wasoriginally sponsored in co-ordination with the World Bank by the Welfare
Association - one of the charities in The
Independent's Christmas appeal . At the same time they destroyed one of the centre's libraries, containing about
5,000 books. Ibtisam El-Za'anin, who heads
the society's board of directors, estimated the cost of
the lost equipment at around $80,000 (£40,000) and the
damage to the building at $40,000. She, too, said
she had no idea who had carried out the attack, but assumed that they "wanted to stop our work. Perhaps they
don't want girls and women to have chances
and goals for the future and think we should go back to a
situation where women stay at home
."
She added: "I am very sad, but we insist that we will go on with
our work. We will not yield." Then in the early hours of last Sunday, an
explosive device was detonated at the entrance to the Christian Bible Society's store in the
heart of Gaza City . The society - among much else -
provides language and computer training courses to
Muslims as well as Christians .
After
travelling to Gaza to inspect the extensive damage to the entrance andwindows, Labib Madanat, the society's Palestinian
director, also declared that its work would continue
in Gaza, adding: "It's a tragedy. The Bible Society exists to serve the whole population of Gaza
."
Why did Mr Madanat think it had happened? "I think it's a mixture
of the failure of diplomacy, of politics,
because of years of deferred justice, and Islamic fundamentalism, an extreme form of Islam or
religion. But the other reason is a chaos in
Gaza that leaves room for everything ."
There are few Gazans with whom that last point will not strike a
chord. For Gaza may now be near what David
Shearer, the head of the UN's Office of
Co-ordination of Humanitarian Affairs calls the "tipping point" – the
moment that will decide whether the new
national unity government brokered in Saudi Arabia can assert a grip on internal security - and get
the international help it needs to do so, or
whether it descends headlong into a full-scale version of
what the former Fatah cabinet minister Sufian Abu Zaida -
who was himself briefly kidnapped by Hamas gunmen in
December - already calls the "Somali-isation" of the
Strip .
The Foreign Press Association warned this week that the kidnapping
of Mr Johnston, who disappeared more than
five weeks ago, had helped to make Gaza "effectively a no-go zone" for foreign journalists. Even
in the days immediately after the kidnapping,
you could travel the length of Gaza, to the southern border crossing of Rafah - and linger there talking to
Palestinians coming back from Egypt - without
incident or visible threat .
Since then, the
John Ging kidnap attempt, the reports of gunmen
entering the TV production offices in central Gaza City saying they were looking for more
foreign journalists to kidnap, the sheer
length of Mr Johnston's ordeal, have made the threat seem much
more real. All of which underlines the brutal
destructiveness of the kidnap to the Palestinian cause,
just when it most needs support. And moving round Gaza
City with even one vehicle containing armed Palestinian
security men, as The Independent was
persuaded to do this week, does not make for much productive
journalism .
On the surface, Gaza City seems more peaceful than many times in
the past three years. True the mounds of
rubbish in the streets are growing because of a week-old strike by municipal refuse men who have hardly
been paid in the past six months .
But an hour or so after the explosion at Roots on Wednesday,
the keffiyah-clad workmen taking a break
from building a new mosque close to the Egyptian embassy and not far from where Mr Johnston was
kidnapped were a picture of tranquillity. The
drivers jostling with donkey carts and honking their horns
in irritation at the worshippers thronging the fruit and
vegetable stalls could not have been more
normal .
Many of the most worrying trends
however, including those of murder, are below the surface. Despite the real reduction caused by
the ceasefire there continue to be almost
daily ugly - and often fatal - incidents, both between
Fatah and Hamas adherents and clans.
After reporting on each violent incident, the Palestinian Centre
for Human Rights, which has been as painstaking
in chronicling inter-Palestinian killings as
it was the deaths of Gazans under Israeli fire, concludes by urging the Palestinian Authority and Attorney General to investigate
it and bring the perpetrators to justice. This has
barely happened in the past two years. "Such crimes not only demonstrate how diminished is the
Palestinian Authority'sability to enact
security," says the Gaza business consultant Sami Abdel Shafi
, "but they also uncover an alarming trend of resorting to
such violent and uncivil means of stating opinions or
resolving grievances ".
Whether this can even begin to be contained now depends on an
untested new Interior Minister and the new
National Security Council, which is supposed to be the joint law enforcement arm of the Fatah-Hamas
coalition .
At a minimum that will require support from the international
community for the new coalition. So far the US and
Israel seem to be focusing only on beefing up
forces directly answerable to Mahmoud Abbas. But in the absence of any real chance for the economy, the new PA will require serious
aid if it is to prevent civil war and have any
chance of reimposing the security that most Gazans crave .
Johnston's kidnapping is longest ordeal for two years Alan
Johnston was seized from his car by gunmen as he
drove home on 12 March. His ordeal has been by
far the longest of any of the foreigners kidnapped over the past two years . Many thousands have appealed for his release, from BBC
listeners and viewers to Palestinian journalists
in Gaza .
There
has been speculation in Gaza that he was seized by a criminal or
mercenary family. One such family, Dogmush, was blamed for
the kidnap of two Fox TV employees in the
summer, but the BBC has had no confirmation they were involved. Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian President, said
on Thursday that he had information that Mr
Johnston is alive .
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