Jihad Watch : Bassem Eid is a Palestinian analyst and human-rights campaigner who
chooses to live in Jerusalem, under Israeli rule, rather than in those
parts of the West Bank where Mahmoud Abbas and the Palestinian Authority
hold sway.
Heās not fond either of the PA, or of Hamas, and heās
horrified that those claiming to champion the Palestinians fail to
realize how cruelly treated they are by their own corrupt leaders.
Bassem Eidās scolding of the Squad ā Ilhan Omar, Rashida Tlaib,
Alexandra Ocasio-Cortez, and Ayanna Pressley ā is here: āPalestinian
Activist: Itās Time Ilhan Omar and āThe Squadā Learned the Truth About
Israel and Hamas,ā by Bassem Eid, Algemeiner, July 1, 2021:
US Representative Ilhan Omar (D-MN) appeared on CNNās
State of the Union on Tuesday, and was asked by host Jake Tapper about
her long record of virulently anti-Israel comments (which included her
comparison earlier this month of Israel to Hamas) and why some of her
Jewish Congressional colleagues had called her out for again issuing
antisemitic tropesā¦.
āIāve welcomed any time my colleagues asked to have a conversation to
learn from them [and] for them to learn from me,ā she said. āI think
itās really important for these members to realize that they havenāt
been partners in justice.ā
Bassem Eid had ready his reply:
Iām a Palestinian who grew up in a UNWRA refugee camp
outside of Jerusalem, and have been a human rights activist all my life.
Let me say this as directly as I can: Rep. Omar does not know what she is talking aboutā¦.
Politicians like Omar, Rashida Tlaib (D-MI), and Alexandria
Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) spend a considerable amount of time attacking
Israel for the supposed harm it inflicts on Palestinians.
But if they truly care about the well-being of Palestinians,
they ought to focus their attention elsewhere. These days, the vast
majority of suffering Palestinians experience is the direct result of
the corruption of the Palestinian Authority and the influence of the
terrorist group Hamas.
Corruption affects every aspect of life for Palestinians. It
cripples our economy, which in turn makes government jobs among the most
highly prized. However, those jobs are awarded based on connections
rather than qualifications, which perpetuates the cycle of corruption.
No announcements are posted for new government jobs. This lack of
transparency is pervasive throughout the West Bank and Gaza.
When there is massive corruption that buys the support of those in
the government who determine everything from building and zoning rules,
to property taxes, to health-and-safety regulations, to licenses to
conduct certain kinds of professions and businesses, it is often too
risky to start or maintain oneās own business. The only occupations that
are secure are those in the government itself. These are also among the
best paid jobs, both in Gaza and in the PA-controlled parts of the West
Bank, and with the greatest degree of job security.
And since they are
so highly sought after, the rich and the well-connected manage to
reserve such jobs for themselves, their relatives, and their friends.
Most of the government jobs are not even advertised; any vacancies will
be filled by those with the right connections, the right influence, and
the right bribes. This is the reality that the Palestinians must endure,
inflicted by their own rulers in Hamas and the PA.
The vaccine distribution process is one recent
example of this corruption. A number of Palestinian human rights and
civil society groups recently alleged that wealthy government officials
were taking vaccines intended for medical workers.
The Palestinian Health Ministry eventually admitted that many
of the doses it received were administered to government ministersā¦.
Vaccines in the PA were given first not to front-line medical
workers, but to wealthy government officials; when it became impossible
to hide this ā those medical workers who were not receiving the vaccines
were the ones inoculating the rich officials ā the Palestinian Health
Ministry stopped trying to hide it, but suggested that it was
āessentialā that the government function and therefore, that those
officials be inoculated first. This infuriated many Palestinians who
could, however, do nothing.
Hamas rules Gaza and has a tremendous following
among West Bank residents, especially after instigating the recent
bloody conflict with Israel and showing off its relative competence
compared to the pathetically inept Palestinian Authority.
Furthermore, Hamas continues to recruit and use child soldiers.
According to The Jerusalem Post, more than 30 Palestinian
children and teens were enlisted in stabbing attacks against Israelis
from 2015-2016, another 30 Palestinian children have been successfully
used as suicide bombers (many more unsuccessfully attempted it), and
more than 17,000 Palestinian children were recruited into Hamas child
militia programs in 2019.
At least one of the children that authorities claimed had
been killed during the recent war in Gaza was a Hamas member. The use of
child soldiers is always abhorrent and unethical.
Hamas will continue to make life worse for Palestinians, as the US
media and politicians continue to focus only on criticizing Israel.
Does the Squad really not know about Hamasā use of child soldiers,
dozens of whom engage each year in stabbing attacks of Israelis, having
been incited to do this on childrenās television programs, and taught
the proper techniques in child militia camps?
Dozens of children have
also been persuaded by Hamas to become suicide bombers; curiously, none
of the children of Hamas leaders ever engage in this terrorism
themselves. Why has the Squad remained silent about Hamasā use of child
soldiers? Are its members so full of hatred for Israel that they are
determined to say nothing bad about Hamas, lest it help the Jewish
state?
Calling for boycotts, sanctions, and the destruction of Israel does not create real positive change for Palestinians.
Where successful, the BDS movement tends to have unintended
consequences. For example, the Israeli company Sodastream had its
manufacturing plant in the West Bank, where it employed both Jewish and
Arab workers. BDS wanted to make an example of the company, for being
based on the West Bank. Its boycott campaign was beginning to bite, when
Sodastream simply picked up and moved from the West Bank to what is
indisputably Israel. The result: 400 Palestinian workers at the West
Bank plant lost their jobs. Sodastream did not suffer, but the families
of those 400 workers certainly did.
There are some brave leaders, like Mansour Abbas,
who are working for real positive change. Abbas is Palestinian Arab by
culture and heritage, and an Israeli by citizenship. He is a devout
Muslim. He also recently joined the new Israeli government as a deputy
minister and secured an impressive list of benefits for his
constituents.
Abbasā Raāam Party is the first exclusively Arab political
party to fully join an Israeli government. He has said that he will work
to negotiate large increases in government spending and improve social
services in Arab communities. The coalition agreement already includes
the allocation of over 53 billion shekels ($16 billion) to combat
violent crime and improve infrastructure in Arab towns. This is how you
improve the lives of the Palestinian people ā not through violence,
corruption, and terrorism.
Mansour
Abbas has decided heās had enough of focusing on Palestinian ānational
rightsā ā a long term, and perhaps impossible project ā and prefers to
stick with the bread-and-butter issues that most of his Arab
constituents would like addressed. Heās an Arab Tip OāNeill, trying to
improve roads, and schools, and provide more and better-paid jobs for
the Israeli Arabs he represents. Heās already parlayed his power as the
head of the Raāam Party, which is. a critical component of Bennettās
coalition, into a promise of a colossal increase ā some $16 billion ā in
spending on infrastructure in Arab cities and towns, and in allocating
more resources to deal with violent crime within the Arab community,
which means more funding for, and proper training of, an enlarged
Arab-Israeli police force , as well as more vocational and educational
programs for salvageable juveniles.
In this same spirit of willingness to come together, I
invite Representatives Ilhan Omar, Rashida Tlaib, and Alexandria
Ocasio-Cortez to meet with me, a Palestinian living in the West Bank, to
discuss the problems of the Palestinians and the best solutions to
address them. These Congresswomen say they are willing to listen and
learn, Well, if they really are, hereās their chance.
Bassem Eid has thrown down the gauntlet, but none of the Squadās
members is going to pick it up, and engage ā even from long distance ā
in a discussion with him. And they certainly wonāt be visiting him in
the West Bank to see how the PA governs, or going to Gaza to take in how
Hamas stays in power. The Squad knows ā donāt confuse its members with
facts ā that Israel alone is responsible for whatever woe which the
Palestinians must endure.
Bassem Eid did not have the space to provide a complete bill of
particulars against Hamas and the PA, but we can mention just a few of
those things here. When he speaks of ācorruptionā he doesnāt provide the
truly staggering amounts that are involved. The PLO crime boss Yassir
Arafat managed to divert during his lifetime between $1 billion and $3
billion for himself from the aid money foreign donors provided. Just two
leaders of Hamas, Khaled Meshaal and Mousa Abu Marzouk, managed amass
fortunes of at least $2.5 billion apiece.
Mahmoud Abbas, though not yet
in their category (why do you think he is still holding onto power at
85, if not to deposit still more in his Swiss bank accounts?), has at
least $400 million. And then there are those who, just below the top
rung, nonetheless have become multimillionaires. There are 600 āHamas
millionairesā living in villas in Gaza. Among the PAās upper echelon,
which includes such people as the late Saeb Erekat and Hanaf Ashrawi,
Mahmoud Abbas has allowed them to help themselves to a few million
dollars apiece.
He might also have wanted to detail how Hamas and the PA leaders stay
in power. In Gaza, Hamas expelled or killed hundreds of members of its
rival Fatah in 2007; since then it retains its iron grip by controlling
all of the press, radio, and television in Gaza; whenever there are
brief protests about economic conditions, these are quickly and
violently suppressed.
It is no different with the PAās rule in the territories it controls
in the West Bank. The press and other media are under strict control; PA
goons will threaten, beat, and sometimes kill ā as we see from the
murder of Nazir Banat ā those who criticize the government and,
especially, accuse Mahmoud Abbas of corruption. As for ādemocratic
ideals,ā there hasnāt been an election in Gaza since 2005.
The
President-For-Life Mahmoud Abbas is entering the sixteenth-year of his
four-year term; earlier this year, it looked as if he might actually
hold parliamentary and presidential elections, but two months after
announcing them ā and realizing he would lose badly ā he cancelled the
elections, claiming that it was the result of Israel refusing to allow
Palestinians living in east Jerusalem from taking part. Israel pointed
out that it had not objected to those Palestinians voting, but only to
their voting inside the city limits of Jerusalem; they could vote in a
suburb just outside.
There is so much that Bassem Eid could show the Squadās members about
the daily misery of Palestinian life under the PA in the West Bank, and
Hamas in Gaza. The fantastic wealth of the rulers ā just three of whom
(Meshal, Marzouk, Abbas) ā stole about $6 billion from the money meant
for those they ruled over; the brutal suppression of dissent; the
pathological hatred of Israel, expressed by both the Slow Jihadists of
the PA and the Fast Jihadists of Hamas.
But the Squadlettes, each of
whom is the Worldās Foremost Authority, donāt need to listen to the
likes of Bassem Eid. He was born and raised in an UNRWA camp just
outside Jerusalem. What can he possibly know about the lives of
Palestinians that the Squadlettes donāt already know?