Warning: Undefined array key "rbname" in /data/rantburg.com/www/pgrecentorg.php on line 14
Hello !
Recent Appearances... Rantburg

Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Hamas MP arrested for refusing to leave Jerusalem
2010-07-01
JERUSALEM - Israeli police on Wednesday arrested a recently freed Hamas MP for refusing to follow an order expelling him from Jerusalem, police said. Mohammed Abu Teir was one of four senior Hamas officials Israel has been trying to expel in recent weeks, sparking concern among Arabs in Jerusalem worried about their rights as residents.

"We arrested him; he has broken the law and stayed within the borders of the state of Israel," said Jerusalem police spokesman Shmulik Ben-Ruby. "He has been detained and taken for questioning."

Israel had sought to strip Jerusalem IDs from Abu Teir, Khaled Abu Arafeh, a former minister for Jerusalem affairs, and MPs Ahmad Atoun and Mohammed Totah, a step that would likely result in their expulsion to the West Bank or the Hamas-run Gaza Strip.

The men have appealed the decision, with a final ruling expected in September. In the meantime, they have been ordered to remain in the West Bank.
So they're not quite fearless enough to live with their comrades in Gaza? Enjoying the fleshpots of Ramallah and East Jerusalem instead?
Many Palestinians fear their expulsion could set a precedent for the removal of more of the nearly 270,000 Palestinians living in east Jerusalem, which Israel occupied in 1967 and annexed in a move not recognized internationally.

Palestinians living in east Jerusalem hold Israeli-issued IDs that allow them to travel freely in Israel and the West Bank, collect government benefits and vote in local but not national elections.
Link


Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Some Palestinian worried by Hamas's theocratic leanings
2006-01-30
For more than 40 years, Michel Tabash has made a living selling whiskey, beer, vodka and wine at his small family restaurant nestled in this Christian town between olive groves and a Palestinian refugee camp.

The restaurant has survived war, Israeli occupation and the economy-draining Palestinian intifada, or uprising, which forced the family to shutter its doors for nearly four years. Now, 18 months after reopening, Tabash is worried that he may be forced out of business again - this time by the new Hamas-dominated government.

After decades of secular leadership under the late Yasser Arafat, many Palestinians are bracing for a seismic social shift as Hamas' new legislators propose imposing conservative interpretations of traditional Muslim values, including no alcohol, separation of the sexes and veils for women.

"I'm worried, and I'm not the only one," Tabash said Sunday as he smoked cigarettes in his nearly empty cafe. "I have nothing but this restaurant."

Some young Palestinians say they are considering leaving the territories in light of the prospects.

"I call this the first true intifada," said Mohammad Al Hamaidi, a Muslim father of six and program manager for a U.S.-run development group in the West Bank. "If they impose strict Islamic laws as we have heard about in Iran or Afghanistan, it won't work here. No way."

Just how far Hamas will be able to push its social values is unclear. The Palestinian election authority announced official results Sunday showing that the group won 74 of the 132 seats in the new Palestinian Legislative Council, a 56 percent majority. But new laws still must be approved by Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, a moderate and Arafat's immediate successor.

The group also is likely to be consumed by more pressing problems, including a near-bankrupt government and threats of international isolation.

Even so, the group's leaders aren't doing much to assuage concerns that they will push a conservative social agenda.

One of the group's incoming lawmakers wants to see the legislature consider a bill that would require all women to wear modest head-coverings. Another said Sunday that Hamas will press ahead with plans to separate girls and boys in Palestinian schools.

"Why do we have immorality in the West?" said Sheikh Mohammed Abu Teir, who was second on Hamas' list of candidates in last week's election. "Isn't it because of co-education? Our society is conservative and when we separate, we bring these children up in such a way that we keep our society clean. The highest levels of sexual perversion are found in the West."

Another top Hamas leader, Mahmoud Zahar, also blasted secular society.

"Do you think the secular system is serving any nation?" Zahar told CNN's "Late Edition with Wolf Blitzer" on Sunday. "Secular system allows homosexuality, allows corruption, allows the spread of the lot of natural immunity, like AIDS."

Sitting in the back of Tabash's restaurant drinking beer on Sunday with his family, Palestinian pollster Nader Said, a Birzeit University professor, said Hamas recognizes that most Palestinians in the West Bank wouldn't support such moves.

"This is not Afghanistan. This is not Pakistan. This is a very different place," he said.

But the Christian owners of what they call the world's first Palestinian brewery aren't taking anything for granted. With Hamas preparing to take over, the Taybeh brewery is gearing up to introduce a new non-alcoholic beer whose label, not entirely coincidentally, will be green - Hamas' color.

"We believe green will be a good match for the new government," said brewery owner Nadim Khoury, who personally blocked angry rioters from burning down his factory last year.

In its 11-year-history, the Taybeh Brewing Co. has faced an endless series of challenges in the largely Muslim area.

The company was pushed out of the Gaza Strip five years ago after Hamas supporters blocked Taybeh from selling its beer and torched the home of one of its local dealers. Last summer, an angry mob tried to burn down the brewery after a Muslim woman from a nearby village was allegedly killed by her parents for having an affair with a man from the Christian community.

Still, Khoury hopes that the new responsibilities of government will transform Hamas into a more moderate group.

"I think they're smart and they will change," said Khoury. "We have a saying in Arabic: Only the good ones change."
Link


Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Hamas' first new law: shari'a, of course
2006-01-30
JERUSALEM -- The incoming Hamas government will move quickly to make Islamic sharia "a source" of law in the West Bank and Gaza Strip and will overhaul the Palestinian education system to separate boys and girls and introduce a more Islamic curriculum, a senior official in the movement said yesterday.

Spelling out the domestic agenda of Hamas for the first time since the group's stunning victory in a legislative election this week, Sheik Mohammed Abu Teir also said Hamas would not go to foreign donors on bended knee if they withdrew aid to the Palestinian Authority.
That's okay, bended knee wouldn't work anyways.
Mr. Abu Teir, who was No. 2 on the Hamas list of candidates for Wednesday's election, said introducing sharia -- a controversial moral and legal code based on the Koran -- would be the first act of the new Hamas-controlled Palestinian Legislative Council. "The No. 1 thing we will do is take sharia as a source for legislation. Sharia has a soul in it and is good for all occasions," Mr. Abu Teir said in an interview with The Globe and Mail over a lunch of traditional Palestinian dishes supplemented with Coca-Cola. The table was set under photographs of Sheik Ahmed Yassin and Abdel Aziz Rantisi, past Hamas leaders who were assassinated in Israeli air strikes.
Which didn't seem to educate anyone present.
The current Palestinian legal system is based on Western-style jurisprudence and a hodgepodge of Jordanian, Egyptian and Ottoman laws. It's questionable whether Hamas could push through legislation introducing sharia as the basic law, since any such bill would have to be signed by Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas, a social moderate.
Well, not as long as he's alive.
However, having won 76 of the 132 legislative seats in what observers billed the best-run election the Arab world has seen, Hamas -- which campaigned on the slogan "Islam is the solution" -- can argue that it has more popular support for its program than Mr. Abbas does for his.

Abu Teir was quick to clarify that the introduction of sharia didn't mean that alcohol would be banned, or that it would be made mandatory for women to cover their heads when outdoors, two fears raised by the group's liberal opponents.
Not this week, anyway.
Mr. Abu Teir's wording -- that sharia would be "a source" of law -- mirrors the language adopted in the new Iraqi constitution. Iran and Saudi Arabia use a strict interpretation of sharia as the only source of law and employ religious police to enforce it. That's not what Hamas has in mind, the sheik said. "We are centrists, we are against any kind of extremism. The motto that we operate on is that in religion, you cannot force people."
"Until we have total control and all the Jooos are dead. Then watch us."
Palestinian Christians, many of whom have expressed concerns about being ruled by Islamists, have nothing to fear, he added.
"As long as they behave themselves, pay their higher taxes and let us have our way with them, they will be fine," he noted.
The sheik, a resident of the Um Tuba neighbourhood of East Jerusalem, did say that he believes the consumption of alcohol is wrong, and that the Koran indicates women should dress modestly. He said Hamas hoped to lead by example and thus persuade people to change their ways and follow the teachings of Islam more closely. "We will not force a woman to wear the hijab [Islamic head scarf]; we hope that decision will come from inside her. I don't care to have women put on the hijab and then take it off when no one is looking," he said.

He made it clear that one way Hamas planned to encourage the next generation to follow sharia was to revamp the Palestinian education system, separating girls' and boys' classes and introducing a more Islamic curriculum. "We will take such measures because we look at examples in the West, like Sweden. They have the highest level of co-education and the highest level of suicides," he said. "We would like our children to have a protected environment. We don't want any distractions for our boys or our girls."
"And that way we can make the girls wear the hajib."
On external affairs, Mr. Abu Teir gave no hint that Hamas would adjust its hard-line stand of refusing to recognize, or negotiate with, Israel. He said that instead of pressuring Hamas to disarm, the West should be demanding that Israel leave the West Bank, release all Palestinian prisoners and allow the return of the 4.1 million Palestinian refugees.
If they all want to live in Gaza, no problem. It can look like the south Bronx used to look.
Mr. Abu Teir expressed dismay at how news of Hamas's victory was received in the West, saying he didn't understand why the West, after years of giving money to a Palestinian Authority run by the corrupt Fatah movement, was now considering withholding aid. "Why is the West worried? We're not thieves. Had that money been given to us, it would have found many good uses."
"I mean, we're careful stewards with money, look at all the guns and ammo we've bought. We're shrewd bargainers when it comes to rockets, not like those Fatah guys who can't even get a rocket to land in Israel."
However, he said Hamas would not go begging if aid were slashed. "Our people would rather live in poverty than live in humiliation with Israeli and Western aid."
Right now you have both poverty and humiliation.
Palestinian political analysts said Mr. Abu Teir's remarks reveal the political immaturity of Hamas. The responsibilities and realities of being in power, several have predicted, would require them to abandon much of their ideological rhetoric. "When Hamas starts doing these things, they will get into all kinds of trouble. Politically, socially, economically, they will not be able to do the kinds of things they are talking about," said Basem Ezbidi, a political scientist at Birzeit University in Ramallah. "Many people are truly worried right now."
Especially the ones standing next to Teir.
He said it is "insanity" for Hamas to say that it would not talk to Israel or that it does not need foreign aid. Palestinians regularly use Israeli hospitals, roads and the Israeli electricity grid, and the Palestinian Authority relies on Israel to collect sales taxes on its behalf.
Link



Warning: Undefined property: stdClass::$T in /data/rantburg.com/www/pgrecentorg.php on line 132
-3 More