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Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Hamas foreign minister carries $20 mln into Gaza
2006-06-15
GAZA - Palestinian Foreign Minister Mahmoud Al Zahar on Wednesday brought suitcases stuffed with $20 million in cash into the Gaza Strip through its border with Egypt, Palestinian officials said.
Now that's what I call a productive trip.
Zahar, returning from a fundraising trip for the cash-starved Hamas-led government, was at least the third known Hamas official to make the crossing carrying large sums of cash.

The Rafah border crossing with Egypt is controlled by Palestinian guards nominally loyal to President Mahmoud Abbas of Fatah. Security sources said Zahar had 12 suitcases with him and refused to let anyone open them.
"What's in the bags, Minister?"
"Socks. Dirty socks. Don't open that, you'll be sorry."
Egyptian border officials informed Abbas’s office that Zahar was carrying $20 million in cash. “We do not have a law that sets a ceiling for the amount of money that can enter the country. We don’t know where that money is going to go,” an Abbas aide said.
The Widows Ammunition Fund, where else?
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India-Pakistan
Perv blows off Paleo begging for bucks
2006-06-08
ISLAMABAD - Pakistan on Wednesday announced financial assistance worth three million dollars for the Palestinians and reiterated full support for the Palestinian cause of achieving an independent homeland.
A whole three million? Why that will cover about ... one day's salaries vigorish. Wotta guy.
The announcement came as the visiting Palestinian Foreign Minister Dr. Mahmoud Al Zahar met his Pakistani counterpart Khurshid Mehmud Kasuri in Islamabad. Pakistan is the third country after Iran and Russia to have announced financial assistance for the Palestinians.
They're up to about six days worth of help, assuming the banks will transfer the money, which they won't.
Al Zarar arrived in Islamabad on Wednesday on a two-day visit following the formation of the Hamas government in the Palestinian territories. An official statement issued after the meeting quoted Kasuri as expressing Pakistan’s complete solidarity with the Palestinians in their quest for “statehood.”
"As long as it doesn't cost us anything. We have our own problems, y'know."
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Arabs advise Hamas to adopt Arab peace initiative
2006-04-16
CAIRO: Arab states urged the Hamas-led Palestinian Authority on Saturday to accept an Arab initiative which offers Israel peace in return for land Israel has occupied since 1967. But Palestinian Foreign Minister Mahmoud Al Zahar, on an Arab tour in urgent search of funds, made no commitment to the initiative, which conflicts with the Hamas movement's goal of a single Islamic state throughout historic Palestine. Zahar told a news conference at the Arab League he was confident that Arab governments would provide money for the authority, which has lost mainly European aid because it refuses to recognise Israel's right to exist. "All the interventions spoke about the Arab initiative and its importance to Palestinians," Zahar said.
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Hamas facing funding woes after one week in power
2006-04-05
JERUSALEM - The Hamas-led Palestinian government is running into financial problems one week after taking office and could face crippling shortfalls as early as next month, Western diplomats and Palestinian officials said.
As Fred says, that's the chili talking.
A top official in the Hamas government said it had yet to secure promised funds from some donors needed to pay March salaries on time to 140,000 Palestinian Authority workers. Western diplomats and Israeli officials said the Palestinian Authority also did not appear to have any foreign reserves to pay April salaries next month in the face of a campaign by Washington to isolate the Islamic militant group.
There's a word for this.
Officials said one of the few options left open to Hamas would be to try to tap a key investment fund that was initially set up to combat corruption within the Palestinian Authority. The Palestine Investment Fund, which President Mahmoud Abbas’s office took control of after Hamas’s election victory, had an estimated value of $1.3 billion at the end of 2005.

But Palestinian officials said it may now be worth closer to $1 billion and only a fraction of that -- between $200 million and $400 million -- could be used to help pay salaries, enough for one-and-a-half to three months. “For all intents and purposes, this is the bottom of the barrel,” a senior Palestinian official said.
Maybe Suha could float them a loan.
The financial problems started long before Hamas, whose charter calls for Israel’s destruction, won January elections and major Western powers threatened to cut off direct support.

When Hamas ministers were sworn in last week, they inherited an Authority whose budget was already nearly $80 million in the red for the month of March alone. A few days before the handover, funds transferred to the Palestinians totaling more than $26 million from the United Arab Emirates and Oman were taken by the Amman-based Arab Bank to repay earlier loans, diplomatic sources said. Another $10 million promised by Russia was delayed.

To limit the risk that other foreign funds will be frozen, the Palestinian Authority has tried in recent days to shift its main accounts from the Arab Bank to a local Palestinian bank, Palestinian officials and diplomats said.
A Paleo banker will be so-o-o-o much more pliable, especially if he has the muzzle of an AK-47 up his nose.
Mazen Sonnoqrot, who stepped down as Palestinian economy minister this week, said Hamas’s big challenge would be raising money for April salaries, due early next month. “They have taken empty buckets,” Sonnoqrot said of the Palestinian Authority’s bank accounts. “There is no money in the bank. There are only deficits.”

The cash crunch stems in large part to Israel’s decision to freeze the transfer of tax revenues to the Palestinians.
Israelis out-foxed them again.
It is unclear how much of the more than $1 billion a year that the Palestinians get in foreign aid will be withheld now that Hamas has taken control of the Palestinian Authority. Foreign Minister and senior Hamas leader Mahmoud Al Zahar brushed aside US pressure, saying “we have several other legitimate means to get support”.
"That's right! We don't need stinking American dollars!
Mahmoud, quick, go kidnap someone and get a ransom note out there."
But even if Iran and other Muslim allies come through with promised aid, Western diplomats said it was unclear how the money would get to the Palestinian Authority. “We have the legal means which can prevent the flow of money to terrorists, and Hamas is a terrorist organisation,” said Israel’s Foreign Ministry spokesman Mark Regev.

Diplomatic sources said major regional banks were also wary of working with the new government. Many of them have branches and other businesses in the United States, where dealing with Hamas is illegal.
And they do like their business with the Great Satan.
The new Palestinian Finance Minister Omar Abdel-Razeq told Al Ayam newspaper he expected to be able to pay March salaries, which had been scheduled to be paid this week, by April 15.

Like Hamas, US officials have been eyeing the Palestine Investment Fund as a way to keep the Palestinian Authority afloat through June or July. But both have run into resistance from officials at the fund who say an asset sale would bring in no more than $200 million and undercut long-term development goals. Nearly two-thirds of the fund has been pledged against prior Palestinian loans.
So they've already raided the rainy-day fund.
“Whether it’s one month or two months, what comes after that?” asked a Palestinian official who is involved in the fund.
They'll try and start a war, of course.
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Israel-Palestine
Rantissi: A day in the (increasingly nervous) life
2004-03-28
Long article, edited for evidence of looking over one’s shoulder. Calibrate your sympathy meters...
Two years ago, when I wanted to interview Abdel Aziz Rantissi, I would go to his house in Gaza City. But when I was assigned to find him or Mahmoud Al Zahar on Tuesday, the day after Sheikh Yassin was killed in an Israeli air strike, I did not go to his house. I knew he would not be there. In the two years since I had interviewed Rantissi, his lifestyle has changed dramatically.

Now, Rantissi lives on the move, in secret. He doesn’t answer a phone for fear the Israeli Air Force can use the telephone signal to track and kill him. Rantissi still appear[s] in public, but only where there is a thick crowd, as he knows that while Israel is after him, the country does not want to be held accountable for firing into a crowd. So, when he stands in a sea of Palestinians, the people Rantissi claims to represent become his human shields.

Rantissi travels on foot these days because, as he knows better than most, cars make good targets for missile strikes. There was a brief moment of tension at the mourning tent when a couple of fixed-wing aircraft were spotted flying overhead. Everyone knew they were Israeli; the only aircraft that fly over the Gaza Strip are Israeli. My best guess was that they were drone aircraft keeping an eye on the Hamas leadership. Apparently, Israel was not backing off its promise to assassinate the leaders of Hamas and Islamic Jihad and tracked them down here.

When Rantissi and his security detail arrived [at the author’s office, for this interview], they skipped the elevator and walked up fourteen floors to the office. For some reason, Rantissi doesn’t like elevators. Rantissi’s security aide vetoed that location because it was next to a window. He was afraid Israeli aircraft could target his employer and new leader through a window. In fact, at one point he made Abed close a door two rooms away, because he spotted a window. The next night, Rantissi was back in a crowd of militants who had put down their differences to support their new leader.
This article also has intersting commentary on Rantissi’s state of mind and thought on the future of Palestine.
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Middle East
Hamas calls for reform, may participate in elections
2002-05-22
The leaders of the radical Hamas movement called Wednesday on the Palestinian National Authority to begin internal reforms as soon as possible and hinted that they would be willing to participate in municipal elections. Senior Hamas member Mahmoud Al Zahar told a Gaza conference that it is time to set up a preparatory popular committee to work in the framework of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) and prepare for reforms. "[Hamas'] program is not to elect another Palestinian Authority that would last for another three years. We want to put an everlasting program on how to run the conflict [with Israel] and build up a united Palestinian society," said Al Zahar.

Al Zahar called for the establishment of a committee to work under the PLO, hinting that Hamas may agree to participate in the elections. "We must activate municipal and local elections into institutions and student councils," said Al Zahar. "Going into such a process might help us to a great extent to get out of this national impasse."

The conference, arranged by the Palestinian Council for Foreign Affairs, which is headed by Palestinian lawmaker Zeya Abu Amer, also included representatives of the PNA as well as other PLO factions.

Jamil Al Majdalawi, a member of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), told the conference that all of those Palestinian factions and groups who are calling for reforms should take responsibility to achieve success in the coming period. He said that change and reform in the PNA and Palestinian society must be carried out for the sake of the battle for freedom and independence.
I suppose this is a start, but they see reforms as a method of consolidation and being able to wage a more efficient war against the Israelis.
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Terror Networks
53 injured in today's suicide blast: Jerusalem
2002-01-27
  • Fifty-three people were injured and several were believed to have been killed in a suicide bombing in west Jerusalem. There was no immediate confirmation of any Israeli deaths. Three of the injured were in serious condition. The blast gutted the Freimann and Bein shoe shop, just metres from the Sbarro pizzeria on Jaffa Road where 15 people were killed plus the bomber in a Hamas suicide bombing on August 9. Shop-fronts were shattered, their glass and metal framework blown down the street as rescue workers rushed in to evacuate the injured, many of them covered in blood.
    The Palestinians do seem to be trying to get up to one a day. It also looks like they had one of those "we've got to get our numbers up" meetings. Keeping Israel provoked keeps the Arab yokels stirred up. It's reached the point now where it's out of Arafat's hands - he's become "irrelevant" to his own.

  • Hezbollah's television station Al Manar said that the suicide bomber responsible for the attack was 20-year-old Shinaz Amuri, a female student from Nablus. The dead Israeli was identified as 81-year-old Pinchus Toktaly, a tour guide. This was first suicide attack carried out by a woman. She studied at the A-Najach University in Nablus, defined as a "hothouse for suicide bomber" by the Shin Bet security services. At least six of the 120 suicide bombers who have carried out attacks against Israeli targets were students at the university, which is also considered a Hamas stronghold. No group took immediate responsibility for the blast, and Hamas leader in Gaza, Mahmoud Al Zahar, refused to say whether his organization was behind the bombing. Of the wounded, two were in serious condition, four sustained moderate wounds and the rest light injuries.
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