Mahmoud Abbas continues to transform the PA into a sinister dictatorship

And this is the the guy who Obama is encouraging Arab leaders to support. Let’s read what Abbas’s friends in Israel have to say about how any dissent is crushed. Leaving aside the surpression of pro-Hamas sentiment, Abbas is also quashing voices that call for an end to corruption and for greater democracy.

Palestinian Affairs: Clamping down on critics | Front Lines - the week that was | Jerusalem Post

It’s no secret that several Palestinian Authority and Fatah officials in the West Bank would have liked to see Operation Cast Lead end with the removal of Hamas from power in the Gaza Strip.

Of course, these officials are still not prepared to go on the record to express their displeasure over the failure of the IDF offensive to get rid of the Hamas regime. However, in private conversations over the past few days, many of them voiced “deep disappointment” over the fact that Israel ended the war without having totally crushed Hamas.

One of these officials, a close associate of Mahmoud Abbas’s, went as far as saying in a closed meeting that Israel made a “big mistake” by not finishing the job and keeping Hamas in power.

While Operation Cast Lead may have caused heavy damage to Hamas’s military capabilities, it has also left the PA leadership in the West Bank in a state of bewilderment and insecurity. Alarmed by the increased sympathy for Hamas in the aftermath of the war, Abbas and his prime minister, Salaam Fayad, have instructed their various security forces to step up their crackdown on the Islamic movement in the West Bank.

In the past three weeks, more than 135 Hamas supporters and members have been rounded up. Among the detainees are journalists, university professors and students and preachers. In some cases, Hamas supporters who were released by the IDF were arrested hours later by the PA security forces.

**The crackdown has also included intimidation of reporters and critics. Several Palestinian reporters have been “advised” by Abbas’s top aides not to report on the massive anti-Hamas crackdown. Samir Khawireh, a journalist from Nablus, found himself in a prison cell earlier this week for reporting about the torching of a car belonging to Prof. Abdel Sattar Kassam, a long-time outspoken critic of financial corruption in the PA.

Kassam has blamed Fatah militiamen of being behind the torching of his car. A Fatah leaflet distributed in the city later took credit for the attack. Kassam was recently arrested by PA policemen in Nablus on charges of “incitement” against the PA leadership.**

Another reporter, Khaled Amayreh of Hebron, was arrested for 55 hours by PA security agents shortly after he appeared on a TV talk show where he allegedly expressed sympathy with Hamas.

**In the past two weeks, the PA leadership organized two pro-Abbas rallies, one in Ramallah and the second in Jenin, in what was seen by many Palestinians as a desperate attempt to show the world that the PA continues to enjoy the backing of the “street.”

But journalists were quick to point out that most of the demonstrators were, in fact, civil servants or members of the security forces dressed in civilian clothes. As one journalist explained, “These organized demonstrations remind us of the rallies that were held by [former Iraqi president] Saddam Hussein and other Arab dictators.”**

ACCORDING TO a number of top Fatah operatives in the West Bank, the latest clampdown is the result of growing pressure from the United States and Israel on the PA leadership. Scenes of policemen beating demonstrators and journalists on the streets of Ramallah and Tulkarm are causing heavy damage to the PA leadership’s credibility, they argue.

“We are now being branded traitors in the Arab world,” a Fatah legislator complained this week. “The Americans and Israelis are pushing us to commit suicide.”

Indeed, many Arabs and Muslims appear to believe allegations by Hamas about the PA leadership’s purported involvement in the war. The Arab media is still full of reports suggesting that Israel launched the operation in coordination with Abbas’s men, who allegedly also chose targets that were attacked by the IDF.

ON THE streets of Ramallah, Hebron, Bethlehem and Jenin, it was not hard this week to find “ordinary” Palestinians who felt that the sole purpose of the war was to bring Abbas and Fatah back to the Gaza Strip. But the majority of these people is afraid to express its views in public, so as not to be targeted by the much-feared Preventative Security Service or the General Intelligence Apparatus.

Such is the degree of this fear that a veteran Fatah operative has stopped talking to the media, since being threatened that his salary would be cut off. The operative, who works as an “adviser” to Fayad’s government, said he received “warnings” from PA security commanders and government officials that he would lose his salary if he continued to publicly demand reforms and democracy./

“Abbas and Fayad are very nervous,” the Fatah official said. “There is no doubt that they are the biggest losers of this war, because they have been discredited among their own people.”

IN A bid to contain, or at least minimize, the damage, the PA leadership has gone on the offensive by launching a propaganda campaign aimed at undermining Hamas. In a series of press conferences, PA ministers and Abbas aides have accused Hamas of stealing aid convoys that were sent to Gaza. Moreover, they have accused Hamas of waging a bloody, kneecapping campaign against Fatah members in the Strip.

As part of the media offensive, Abbas this week appointed top PLO official Yasser Abed Rabbo as the man in charge of the Fatah-run media outlets, including TV and radio stations in the West Bank. Abed Rabbo’s main mission is to ensure that the media in general, and the Fatah-controlled news organizations in particular, are completely mobilized in favor of Abbas and Fatah.

BUT THE media campaign and tough security measures are unlikely to boost Abbas’s standing among the Palestinians. On the contrary, the harder Abbas presses, the more points Hamas scores among the Palestinians, especially those living in the West Bank. The main problem is that many Palestinians don’t see Abbas and Fatah as a better alternative to Hamas, largely because of their failure to reform and their open alliance with Israel and the US.

Sad to see Palestinians have only two choices.

Secular leaders who are corrupt and do not lob rockets
Religious Jihadi leaders who are corrupt and lob rockets.

What a pity. No wonder ordinary Palestinians have been in the big mess for the last 60 years.

How come religious or secular leader in Israel who are equally corrupt, lob cluster bomb attack but ironically still thrive?

No doubt integrity of the character on the part of the leader is essential to build a nation but is that all Palestinians lack? one honest statesman and they are out of fix?

Is that what you are trying to say?

Its neither, if you had educated yourself a little you would see the state of ISRAEL sitting in between the two disrupting the peace. But then again, not much expected from you.

with just three posts you know BPS a lot

Every thread is full of his opinion based posts, its not that hard to go and read the posts in all other threads.

My number of posts on this forum has nothing to do with BP's posts. How does that even work out?

Makes no sense to point that out, but thank you anyways.

Re: Mahmoud Abbas continues to transform the PA into a sinister dictatorship

The Zionist seem to think that they can install their own puppet leader in PA and can offer the Palestinians whatever little it wants and their puppet will go along with the idea and sign the agreement, and then the Zionists can have their long-term peace as well as being able to keep all the land that they want. Hamas is the only thing that is standing in the way of the Zionists plan.

We are discussing Palestinian leadership (or lack thereof). And their Nargis is weeping for 1000+ years and still there is no deedawar.

The problem with Pakistani lackeys of Arabs is simple. They do not study the pathetic history of Middle East. And still pretend to be "educated".

FYI. When Palestinian leader Mufti-e-Azam was sucking Hitler's thumb, there was no Israel. So quit blaming others for the faults of Palestinian leadership.

These leaders are adult human beings and not some 2 years old kids (or Robots) that are being pushed around by Israel.

Lack of knowledge generates frustration, and that is evident from the sentence above.