Palestinians feel the pinch. Thanks to Hamas!

Cooperating with international bodies is so hard for tribals around the world. Hamas is no exception.

Wish Hamas would work for the betterment of Palestinians. Afterall wasn’t that the reason they got elected in the first place?

**
Palestinians feel the pinch
** By Alan Johnston
BBC News, Gaza

**Like all of Gaza's tens-of-thousands of government employees, Hassan Sallah is worried about money. Nobody can tell him when his next pay cheque will arrive. **

The new Hamas government has walked into a major financial crisis.
Its refusal to renounce violence and recognise Israel has led to the halting of large amounts of European and American economic support. And Israel itself has withheld payments of tens of millions of dollars that it owes the Palestinians.
Mr Sallah works as a nurse in the accident and emergency department of the Kamal Adwan hospital, in northern Gaza. But during a cigarette break, he reflected on what Hamas’s troubles meant for him.

     **We will struggle to be as we are - Palestinian **

Samah Ahmad
Palestinian woman
He struggles to support seven children on about $450 a month.
Four of the boys are grown up, but there is no steady work for them in Gaza’s wrecked economy. Mr Sallah still helps them when he can - but it is not easy.
Like many, many people in Gaza, when his pay runs out he gets by on credit from shops, the odd loan from a friend or relative - and he owes many thousands of shekels in unpaid water and electricity bills.
**‘Empty pockets’ **
And now the government is so short of cash that the health ministry says it cannot pay him this month’s salary yet.
But he desperately hopes that the neighbours will come to Hamas’s aid and make up for the missing Western budget support.
“We are depending on the Arab and Islamic countries,” he says. “They are our brothers and they are obliged to help according to Islam.”
“I’ve got empty pockets,” says Mr Sallah. “In the end we will rely on God.”
Gulf countries have promised some $80m, and Iran has pledged to give $50m. But it is not clear how much of this cash will actually materialise, and when it will come.
And the longer term future is very uncertain. Hamas says that it will need $115m every month to pay wages alone.
At the interior ministry there was a mood of defiance in the face of the Western pressure.
Workers were angry that Europe and the Americans were siding with Israel, rather than the Palestinian victims of Israel’s occupation.
A young woman called Samah Ahmad said there should be no buckling to foreign demands.
“We will never say, ’ That’s it. We will now be under Israeli or American or European orders’. No. We will struggle to be as we are - Palestinian.”
**Strategy needed **
It was put to her that Yasser Arafat - on behalf of the Palestinian people - had accepted Israel’s right to exist, and that Europe’s argument was that it could not support a Palestinian government that reneged on that key understanding.
But Ms Ahmad said the election of Hamas was an expression of Palestinian democratic will, and that the West had to respect that.
And another health ministry employee, Talal Hasoona, who has eight children and lives in a Gaza City refugee camp, said that he, too, was standing by the new government. He said that it should be given a chance.

     **The government cannot perform on a month-to-month   basis. It has to have a long term strategy **

Yassir Abu Mayiliq
Palestinian man
Mr Hasoona said he worried about where the money would come from, but that life was always tough in Gaza. And he pointed out that even under the previous government run by the Fatah party, salaries were regularly paid weeks late.
But a translator at the information ministry, Yassir Abu Mayiliq was in a darker mood.
He said that some of his colleagues had talked of striking if there was no pay or no promise of it.
And he was unimpressed with the promises of support from the Arab world.
“Talk is cheap,” he said. "We want to see facts. And if they can give this month who can guarantee that they will give for next month.
“The government cannot perform on a month-to-month basis. It has to have a long-term strategy.”
Mr Abu Mayiliq said he could even imagine his ministry eventually grinding to a halt:
“If there is no money there will be no salaries, then there will be no paper, no stationery - no maintenance for the electronics. No utilities being paid. This would paralyse the government’s work.”
[FONT=&quot]Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/middle_east/4918280.stm

Published: 2006/04/18 11:01:19 GMT

Re: Palestinians feel the pinch. Thanks to Hamas!

Question could this be because Israel has not handed over revenue the PLO deserves since 1997 - as per the Oslo Peace Accord?

Re: Palestinians feel the pinch. Thanks to Hamas!

Oslo Peace accord is dead.

Hamas says it wants to destroy Israel

Its has allied it self with Iran, who wants to wipe Israel off the map.

And you are talking about the Oslo peace accord, what kind of a demented world are you living in???

Re: Palestinians feel the pinch. Thanks to Hamas!

These brain washed Westerners will never accept that

Hama's has done more to help the average Palestinian than any previous PLA administration

Re: Palestinians feel the pinch. Thanks to Hamas!

He is talking about the funds that were previously to be paid, that could have been used to this day, and the future

Re: Palestinians feel the pinch. Thanks to Hamas!

Well since those funds instead of building schools, hospitals, roads could be used to build Qassam3 rockets, give money to suicide bombers...

Let me see if Pakistan was in the same position, what would it do

Re: Palestinians feel the pinch. Thanks to Hamas!

^ yeah its better not to give any money to any Muslim country, they might build some bombs, they should all be starved to death… wah mercenary wah :clap:

Re: Palestinians feel the pinch. Thanks to Hamas!

Noop Baboo Sahib! This is because EU, and US stopped sending handout to Hamas.

Simple equation! You work for me, I'll give you money.

OTOH, You work against me? Then the last thing you should expect is that I'd send $$ your way.

Re: Palestinians feel the pinch. Thanks to Hamas!

antiobl, in future do not use the word "baboo".

Re: Palestinians feel the pinch. Thanks to Hamas!

If they act responsibly then sure they can get money.

When Yasser Arafat renounced terrorism, he got accepted by the world community.

When Libya gave up its WMD, it got accepted by the world community.

When Argentina, Brazil and South Africa stopped thier programs to make nuclear weapons, they got accepted by the world community…

Its like sending aid to Nazi Germany, Imperial Japan or Facist Italy during World War II.

Nice try though…

Re: Palestinians feel the pinch. Thanks to Hamas!

comparing Palestininans to the Nazis :rolleyes:

At least your not brainwashed to the Western point of view:rolleyes:

Re: Palestinians feel the pinch. Thanks to Hamas!

Not exactly a comparison but an analogy.

When the Nazis threatened to destroy the Jewish people, Hamas is pledging to do the same to Israel.

Then why should USA send money to this government.

Its its doctrine call for the destruction of Israel

Why should USA support this type of government with that mantra?

Hamas should act responsibly and do whats best and realistic for its people and not give them g*****ose hopes which will never come to fruition

Re: Palestinians feel the pinch. Thanks to Hamas!

What mer and anti-OBL are saying is that democracy means nothing. It depends if you are still a colonial stooge. Like Iraq and Afghanistan if you bow before the white man you will get your money when you are elected.

If you are elected in a free and fair election but do what your people wish and it is against the views of the "white" masters you won' get what you rightly deserve.

The desi Uncle tom syndorme.

Re: Palestinians feel the pinch. Thanks to Hamas!

No.

Again you fail utterly to understand.

Look at Turkey. A muslim country and a democracy and in 2003, 95% of the people were against the war in Iraq in Turkey.

And so the US 4th Infantry division was not given permission to use Turkey as a place to launch an attack on Iraq.

Thats democracy, responsible democracy.

Sending suicide bombers, pledging to destroy Israel when you cannot achieve that militarily, making terrorist type statments, making statements like the holocaust is a myth...

That is not responsible democracy, being a responsible government...

Re: Palestinians feel the pinch. Thanks to Hamas!

and it was very nice of you to include Pakistan in your comments, right? VERY Repsonsible :k:

Re: Palestinians feel the pinch. Thanks to Hamas!

Well with Pakistan.

It needs to be throughlly cleansed.

Corruption is everywhere. Only the Army has the bravado to set things straight.

So, it might take a while, but Pakistan is on the up and up.

Our economy grew 10% last couple of years, highest growth rate in Asia.

Our biggest problem is the trade deficit.

We need to export more than we import and must do it soon to be truly independent of global shocks

Re: Palestinians feel the pinch. Thanks to Hamas!

You being serious?! Been to Pakistan lately?....from your comments it doesn't seem like you have.

Army officers are making millions and billions. This Army govt have put the most the corrupt people in charge, Chaudry Shujaat, Arbab Rahim, etc.

Before 9/11, Pak economy was going nowhere. When US is done using Pakistan and Musharraf, it will be back to the same situation, no matter who is in govt.

Re: Palestinians feel the pinch. Thanks to Hamas!

:hehe: shows how much you know about Army and ground realities.

Re: Palestinians feel the pinch. Thanks to Hamas!

Wow. How old are you? I seriously need to know that. Because if you are older than 25 and say this, I must say Mark Twain was right. Your learning stopped when your education started.

Re: Palestinians feel the pinch. Thanks to Hamas!

Well LOL.

Let me clarify.

Musharraf is the only person reliable enough to cleanse Pakistan from corruption.

Look I know that the Pakistani Generals are the most corrupt SOB's on the planet.

But who else than a military person is gonna fix this problem?

I dont see any civilians strong enough to do something about it.

Nawaz Sharif came with a lot of bravado, but even he fell to the ways of corruption and dont even let me get started on the Bhutto and her 10% husband.

So, like I was saying, if a Military man is good enough, corruption from Pakistan can be fixed.

And so far, Musharraf looks Ok.

So I hope for the best for Pakistan