ARAB
MEDIA WATCH
Excerpts: Hamas militants
kidnapped. Rafa border mess.
THE DAILY STAR (Lebanon) 8 Oct.'05:"Unknown group kidnaps three top
Hamas militants" Agence France Presse (AFP). QUOTES FROM TEXT: " 'Its
our first retort to Hamas' dealings and its disregard for Palestinian
law' "... "An umbrella group representing the main Palestinian
factions on
Wednesday criticized Hamas for its 'armed aggression' "
FULL
TEXT:
JERUSALEM: A hitherto unknown group claimed to have kidnapped three
top Hamas militants in the West Bank overnight. Riad Ras, Hassan Safi
and Bassem Obeido were seized at gunpoint in the towns of Tulkarem,
Bethlehem and Hebron, respectively. Ras, a lecturer at Al-Najah
university in the northern West Bank town of Nablus, was
released several hours after he was kidnapped late Thursday. In a
statement sent to Palestinian media, the previously unheard of Omar
bin al-Khattab Brigades claimed to have kidnapped the three men.
"It's our first retort to Hamas' dealings and its disregard for
Palestinian law," said the group, named after one of the first Muslim
caliphs and a companion of the Prophet Mohammad. Mushir al-Masri,
a Hamas spokesman, accused "certain circles in the Palestinian
Authority" of having a hand in the kidnappings and talked about
a "component extolling the eradication" of the radical group. He said
Hamas had "several options" to free its members provided they were not
first released. Long-standing tensions between Hamas and the Fatah
party have been exacerbated by Israel's historic pullout from the Gaza
Strip, with militants refusing calls from Palestinian leader Mahmoud
Abbas to disarm. On September 23, 16 people were killed in an
explosion at a Hamas rally. The movement blamed Israel, which denied
any involvement, before firing a slew of rockets into the Jewish
state. Those attacks were met with Israeli air strikes that killed
four Palestinian militants, including two Hamas activists. A
Palestinian investigation published on Monday concluded what a
majority of Palestinians suspected, the explosion was caused by
a Hamas missile. On Sunday, three people were killed, including a
policeman, in the first deadly internecine strife in Gaza since
Israel's pullout, as Hamas gunmen clashed with security forces. An
umbrella group representing the main Palestinian factions on Wednesday
criticized Hamas for its "armed aggression" during the clashes. - AFP
AL-AHRAM WEEKLY 6-12 Oct.'05:"Bittersweet frontiers".
HEADING:"Palestinians and Egyptians at the Rafah border tell Serene
Assir about politics, money and their own different yet
inextricably-linked predicaments"
QUOTES FROM TEXT: "a place where questions about Egypt's poor and
Palestine's refugees come up with particular force"... 'Don't talk to
the Palestinians' a taxi driver ... counselled as we approached the
gate. All they do is lie to you'. The dituation is dire, things have
been handles disasterously. The vast majority of Gazans now in Egypt
entered while the border was not properly controlled, and they have
neither papers nor stamped passports. While official statements
celebrated the Palestinians' newfound freedom of movement, in
other words the authorities failed to treat them humanely once they
crossed the border. Many complained of beatings, of Egyptian officials
withholding any information on developments."
EXCERPTS: Well into September, the heat in North Sinai was still
scorching. It seemed even more so as the frontier guard appeared,
blocking the way into Gaza at Rafah. Though crossing back to Gaza had
been allowed temporarily at various points in the week, for the
benefit of Gazans who had crossed into Egypt for the first time in 38
years after the Israeli withdrawal, hundreds of Palestinians were
still stranded on the wrong side of the border, unpredictably for them
and for the Egyptian population of Rafah and Al-Arish. Shortly before
the next brief reopening, indeed, there was little in the surrounding
imagery to suggest that this was an international border; the sight
evoked West Bank roadside checkpoints more readily, with cigarette
vendors lining the way to the large, beige gate and little boys
handing out soft drinks. Families had set up pistachio and almond
stalls, while taxis waited for homebound Palestinians who, having
lined up for long enough, would eventually give up. ... this and
other facts were a constant reminder that, not only were we at an
international border with the usual rules, regulations and no-go areas
but one that carries uniquely important implications for world
politics today: the point of convergence of Egypt, Palestine and
Israel; and a place where questions about Egypt's poor and Palestine's
refugees come up with particular force. Egyptian- Palestinian
debates about who is to blame for whose plight become more heated the
closer one gets to Gaza. "Don't talk to the Palestinians," a taxi
driver ... counselled as we approached the gate. "All they'll do is
lie to you." Which is not to say that most Egyptians were
unsympathetic. Those who originate in Al-Arish, especially -- the Gaza
Strip, which borders the latter, was once Egyptian territory -- had an
entirely different story to tell...a taxi driver from Gaza now working
in Al-Arish, said, "Egyptians and Palestinians get along just fine on
a personal level. The trouble begins when there is government
intervention or relevant economic changes...The inflow of over 100,000
Gazans within the brief period during which the border was practically
unguarded, a fortnight before, followed by closure of the border, was
one such occasion. With a low population density, the economy of Rafah
and Al-Arish normally functions within a low price range --
affordable to a majority of low-income inhabitants. The sudden rise in
demand caused prices to soar, sparing neither economic level nor
nationality of resident. "It's shocking when you see the cost of
everyday goods and services going up by a factor of 10 or even 20,
within 48 hours." Thus Samir, an Egyptian from Al-Arish says "Don't
get me wrong, I do sympathise with the Palestinians. I just don't see
how the situation could have eluded the control of the authorities
enough for everyone to be quite so badly stung." "You want the truth?"
Atef Haggag, president of Al-Arish city council, asked. "The situation
is dire, things have been handled disastrously. This is no temporary
price rise that lifts in a day or two: demand was so enormously
multiplied that even Cairo suppliers are raising their prices.
This means that we are faced with a situation in which, however fast
the Palestinians leave, we will be stuck with the inflation for a long
time to come. For their part the Palestinians, impatiently waiting,
had a range of stories to tell. Of those who had entered Egypt
legally, many cannot now go back in the same way. Events developed too
rapidly for an adequate entry-exit system to be devised, following the
Israeli withdrawal -- which means that they have to wait. "I can only
get more bored as I sit here," Hassan, a businessman from Gaza, told
the Weekly in downtown Al-Arish. "I've outstayed my one-month visa to
Egypt, I've finished all the work I came here to do, but I don't want
to go up to the border and pretend that I don't have my papers just so
that I can get on a bus and go home with fellow Gazans. The others
came here while no one was guarding the border. No one can prove
they're here now. I, on the other hand, have a stamp on my passport
showing that I entered Egypt. If I don't go back using the official
channels, then I can imagine travelling in future will be even harder
for me than it already is.... There are hundreds in the same situation
-- and not just here. You'll find them in Cairo and Alexandria: people
who came here on short business or family trips in the summer. Exit
into Egypt via Rafah by default requires re-entry via Rafah. There's
no other way to get home." Speaking on condition of anonymity last
week, an Egyptian Ministry of Foreign Affairs official dealing with
issues pertaining to Palestinians had told the Weekly, "Our priority
right now is to solve the problem of the 40 people who are in Egypt
legally." Hassan insisted on refuting the figure the official had
cited, however, insisting that "there are many, many more" than 40.The
vast majority of Gazans now in Egypt entered while the border was not
properly controlled, and they have neither papers nor stamped
passports. "In fact," a young Gazan student told the Weekly while he
waited in line, "you'll find that many of us here haven't even brought
our IDs with us; some don't even have an ID. They're not asking for
them on the buses. All you need to do is say you're Gazan -- you're
on." Indeed, surveying the crowds by the gate, most were men
aged 18-45 ... By Saturday official statements from both the Egyptian
and the Palestinian authorities promised that they would be able to
return. ... conditions in which they found themselves in Egypt were
far from accommodating. Al-Arish, for example, were strictly forbidden
from renting out rooms to Palestinians who had entered Egypt
illegally. "... Egyptian authorities did not foresee or deal promptly
with a situation of such gravity. Haggag told the Weekly, and yet, as
soon as the situation emerged, they decided to impose grave measures
to limit its consequences -- immediately." While official statements
celebrated the Palestinians' newfound freedom of movement, in other
words, the authorities failed to treat them humanely once they crossed
the border. Many were obliged to sleep out in the open as they waited
for the gate to reopen, and consequent problems included lack of
sanitation or adequate services. "It's marvellous how the Egyptian
people have welcomed us," Abdullah, from Khan Younis, told the Weekly.
"They are very generous people. But I have to say that, here at
the border, while we have been waiting, the authorities have not been
good to us." Many complained of beatings, of Egyptian officials
withholding any information on developments. The situation was thus
further complicated by uncertainty as to whether one should wait at
the border or seek food and shelter in the town proper or in Al-Arish.
The men grew impatient waiting in the sun, and fights broke out among
them, only to be broken up by Egyptian police armed with batons. And
as security came increasingly under the authorities' control, Rafah
began to resemble a military zone excluding journalists even as the
politically sensitive location called for constant reporting. "The
situation we're in here must be publicised," Zainab told the
Weekly as she sat by the road leading up to the border. "We've been
waiting in the heat for days, and no one is providing us with any kind
help."
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