by Avi Issacharoff
There are dozens of Hamza Abu al-Hijas in the refugee camps of the West Bank, ready to fight the PA and Israel, to kill and be killed
But
unfortunately for the Palestinians, in the twilight of the Arab Spring,
the incident was pushed to the margins of the news — if it was reported
on at all.
Al Jazeera on Saturday morning reported in
depth on pro-Muslim Brotherhood protests in Egypt. It covered the
battles near Homs, in central Syria, in which 20 soldiers were killed.
And it dealt with the ongoing Ukrainian crisis. But the Palestinian
issue, and specifically this latest violent incident, apparently don’t
really exist.
The nature of the fatal confrontation Saturday
morning between elite Israeli police personnel and the wanted
22-year-old Hamas operative, Hamza Abu al-Hija, underlined a central
aspect of the new reality in the refugee camps of the West Bank:
Palestinian Authority security forces generally stay out of the camps,
and especially those in Jenin and Nablus. PA forces did try to arrest
Abu al-Hija a few months ago, an incident that prompted intense
Palestinian public criticism of the PA. Lesson learned, PA security
personnel have since stayed away. Israel, as Saturday’s events showed,
however, has not.
Hamza Abu al-Hija is from his family’s second
generation of wanted Hamas operatives, the son of one of the icons of
the Islamist group in the West Bank, Jamal Abu al-Hija, who’s been in
prison in Israel since 2002. The father, who lost an eye and a hand in
an explosion at the beginning of the Second Intifada, is serving nine
life terms for involvement in at least six bombings, including the Meron
Junction attack that killed nine Israelis in 2002 and the Jerusalem
Sbarro pizzeria bombing that killed 15 in 2001.
Israel had
tried in December to arrest Abu al-Hija the younger, but he escaped, and
fierce clashes ensued between IDF troops and hundreds of Palestinians
at the time.
On Friday night, Israel Police and army forces
succeeded in surrounding the building in which Abu al-Hija was holed
up. They called on him to surrender, but he opened fired on them. Two
members of the police’s elite Yamam unit were injured in the gunfight
that killed him. In the clashes with the Palestinian mob that followed,
two more Palestinians were killed — one a member of Islamic Jihad.
The fact that the Arab media isn’t too
interested, that the PA security forces are staying away, and that
Israeli troops are entering the camps — all these factors are likely to
exacerbate the anger in the camps. Economic conditions are bad, too, and
residents feel neglected by the PA. This is creating an entire
generation ready to fight against both the PA and Israel — ready, that
is, to embark on a third intifada. To kill and be killed, like Hamza Abu
al-Hija.
There are dozens more “Hamzas” in Jenin, in
the Balata and Askar refugee camps (near Nablus), even in Kalandiya
outside Jerusalem. The first intifada began in these places, and it
began among youths of this age group.
Avi Issacharoff
Source: http://www.timesofisrael.com/after-fatal-jenin-face-off-there-could-be-much-worse-to-come/
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
No comments:
Post a Comment