Hamas’ New Order Exacts Toll on Gazans, “living in gloom and disease”

Washington Post - September 17, 2007

Hamas’s New Order Exacts Toll On Gazans Party Cements Grip With Harsh Tactics

By Scott Wilson Washington Post Foreign Service

GAZA CITY — For years, the seaside Flower of the Cities resort was
that rare place in the Gaza Strip where the dress code did not rule
out bikinis. Now, with some of its cinder-block cabanas turned into
prayer rooms, the beach club shows how Hamas is consolidating its
hold here three months after seizing power.

Bushy beards and black head-to-toe cloaks for women have become
common at the club, which the armed Islamic movement torched in June
after routing the secular Fatah party on the streets. The facility
has been rebranded the al-Aqsa Resort, with a new logo featuring the
revered mosque complex in Jerusalem next to a beach umbrella. Hamas
followers collect the $2.50 entrance fee.

Like the party it supported, the bikini crowd has disappeared,
leaving the trash-flecked beach and murky swimming pool to Bassem al- Khodori and a half-dozen other Hamas supporters, who now have jobs at
the resort.

“Before,” said Khodori, 32, a cafeteria worker, “only the others were
allowed.”

Facing money shortages, a shrinking private sector and growing
political resistance, Hamas leaders are increasingly imposing harsh
interpretations of Islamic law and using brute force to bolster their
isolated administration, which remains illegitimate in the view of
Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas of Fatah and his U.S.- backed government in the West Bank.

Reconciliation between the two largest Palestinian parties — now
running parallel governments in what had been envisioned as the two
territories of a Palestinian state with a single government –
appears as distant as when Abbas dissolved the Hamas-led power- sharing government after the fighting in June.

Many of Gaza’s almost 1.5 million residents, who celebrated Israel’s
withdrawal two years ago only to fall into civil war soon after, have
seen their lives improve in some ways and suffer in others as the
result of the political split within the Palestinian Authority and
Hamas’s brand of rule here.

While Hamas has imposed order on Gaza’s lawless streets, gunmen from
its Executive Force, a 5,000-member paramilitary unit, have employed
repressive tactics against Fatah supporters and local journalists.

International aid is again funding Palestinian government salaries,
helping revive parts of Gaza’s economy. But the closure of the cargo
crossings from Israel for all but emergency aid is depriving Gaza’s
small manufacturers of raw materials. An estimated 85 percent of the
territory’s manufacturing sector has been shut down since June and
more than 35,000 workers have been laid off, according to the U.N.
Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs

“We blame Hamas, the reason for all of this,” said Hamdi Badr, 49,
who two months ago shut down the clothing factory his family has
owned since 1969. “But we don’t really know what to do.”

The steel shutters of storefront factories along Badr’s street are
closed, and the only sign of life is dogs sniffing through pyramids
of trash. Abbas’s government in the West Bank has cut off municipal
funds that Gaza once used for garbage collection.

Badr flipped on fluorescent lights over rows of empty sewing
machines, ceiling fans suddenly stirring the musty air. He employed
50 people when he closed his doors, and earned $4,000 a month. Now
the people and profits are gone.

“It’s always the citizens, people like me and the ones who worked
here, who pay for these political disputes,” he said.

Gaza’s streets have taken on an increasingly Islamic cast in recent
months. The improved everyday security has brought people back to the
markets, beaches and parks, many of them women wearing for the first
time the full black gown, gloves and face covering favored by the
most conservative Muslims.

Gunmen from the Executive Force are posted along the main avenues and
at intersections. In Friday sermons, imams appointed by the Hamas-run
administration accuse Abbas of collaborating with Israel and the Bush
administration.

The Hamas administration, led by deposed prime minister Ismail
Haniyeh, is funding itself through utility, licensing and other
taxes. Abbas has urged Gazans not to pay those bills to deprive Hamas
of the money.

The taxes are generating enough to pay some of the roughly 30,000
government employees Abbas cut from the payroll because they were
hired under the Hamas-led government. Many work for the Executive
Force, now the main security branch in Gaza.

“We, for the first time, are operating a real security and justice
system here,” said Mahmoud al-Zahar, a Hamas hard-liner whose
influence has grown since the June takeover. “Under the Fatah
security forces, it was, A to Z, deeply corrupt.”

Zahar, a surgeon who served as foreign minister in Hamas’s first
government, said the movement is unrepentant about routing Fatah in
Gaza. He favors “military trials” for the former Fatah security
officials who once persecuted Hamas followers in the strip, calling
them “American-Israeli collaborators.”

The Hamas-run television channel has popularized that
characterization. One children’s cartoon it aired recently depicted
Fatah gunmen as mice, throwing dollars in the air, shooting children
with U.S.-made weapons, unveiling Muslim women and firing at mosques
before the Hamas “lion” comes to the rescue.

Zahar said Abbas’s appointed government is “illegitimate,” calling
illegal the president’s decision to withhold some funds from Gaza and
his recent decree effectively banning Hamas from future elections.
The Islamic movement, classified as a terrorist organization by
Israel and the Bush administration, defeated Fatah in January 2006
parliamentary elections.

“How will he impose any of this in Gaza?” Zahar said. “He’s a man
that has lost all his credibility.”

After Friday prayers in recent weeks, Fatah supporters have marched
through Gaza’s streets in protest against the Hamas administration.
“Shia! Shia!” the demonstrators shouted, an insulting reference to
the Sunni Muslim movement’s inflexible Islamic character and
financial support from the Shiite government of Iran.

Their numbers have swelled into the thousands, and Hamas’s patience
appears exhausted. The Palestinian Scholars League, an Islamic
council dominated by Hamas clerics, issued a fatwa early this month
prohibiting outdoor prayer.

The decree came days after members of the Executive Force beat and
detained dozens of demonstrators, some of whom had tossed homemade
noise grenades and stones at Hamas security compounds.

“All the mosques are controlled now by Hamas, so we said we would not
pray in them but only outside,” said Mohammed Yassin, 19, a Fatah
supporter who works in a barbershop.

After he threw a noise grenade at Hamas forces one Friday last month,
Yassin recalled, he ran away and hid near his house. But he said his
neighbors told the Hamas men where he was hiding, and he was beaten
with sticks and rifle butts. After being treated in the hospital, he
was taken to jail.

“They told me, ‘If you go to any more demonstrations, you are going
to pay,’ ” Yassin said.

On the bulletin board in the Health Ministry’s lobby hangs another
recent fatwa, this one declaring that a partial strike by medical
staff at Shifa Hospital runs counter to Islamic teachings.

For weeks, doctors at Gaza’s largest hospital have been working only
three hours each morning, leaving in limbo scores of patients needing
post-surgery checkups, medications, examinations or signed permission
to leave Gaza for treatment in Israel. Abbas has urged the doctors to
stay off the job.

The dispute stems from the recent firing of the hospital’s director
and its longtime public relations officer because, the doctors say,
they supported Fatah.

“They told me that if I stayed a bullet might enter my head,” said
Jumah al-Saqa, 49, the former spokesman, who was removed from his
office by Hamas gunmen last month after two decades in the post.
“They want Hamas in all those jobs.”

But Bassem Naim, the Hamas health minister, said the argument is
about which government — the one in Gaza or the one in the West Bank
– has the right to appoint senior ministry officials. He said the
decision to strike was made as medicine shortages loom and “hundreds
of patients” are being prevented from continuing regular treatments
in Israel.

“It is a political strike, but it has nothing to do with whether one
man is Fatah and one man is Hamas,” Naim said. “This situation is
dangerous, though, especially since the strike is supported by the
government” in the West Bank.

Just before 11 a.m. one recent morning, scores of men, women and
children waited outside numbered rooms, bloody bandages lashed around
fingers, makeshift slings on tiny arms, X-rays clutched in old hands.
The doctors left minutes later, leaving Thamam al-Bes outside Room 23
with no one to conduct her follow-up exam after last month’s open- heart surgery.

“I’m waiting for a doctor, and now there are none,” said Bes, 54, who
had traveled from her home in a refugee camp in central Gaza. “We
just live in gloom and disease.”

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