by Daniel Siryoti
Egyptian, Palestinian officials say PA's leader spared no effort to block fuel delivery to the energy-starved coastal enclave.
A fuel tanker bound for the Gaza power plant, Tuesday
Photo: Reuters
Two trucks carrying
some 35,000 liters (9,200 gallons) of fuel entered the Gaza Strip from
the Kerem Shalom border crossing on Tuesday after Qatar, which paid
Israel for the transfer, deposited a check through the United
Nations. They were escorted by U.N. vehicles.
Egyptian and Palestinian officials told
Israel Hayom that Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas had
spared no effort, until the last minute to block the transfer of fuel to the coastal enclave.
A senior Palestinian official told Israel
Hayom that Abbas had spoken with U.N. Middle East envoy Nikolay Mladenov
and accused him of helping to bypass Palestinian leadership. Abbas had
also warned he would instruct the Palestinian Finance Ministry not to
transfer the salaries of those workers with UNRWA, the U.N. agency for
Palestinian refugees, set to receive the tankers in Gaza.
A senior Egyptian official told Israel
Hayom that the PA had warned Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi
and other Arab leaders that through their actions, they were helping
establishment a "Muslim Brotherhood state in Gaza." According to the
official, Abbas is doing everything in his power to ensure the situation
in Gaza escalates and keep Hamas from reaping any diplomatic gains.
Last year, Abbas suspended the PA's payments for the power Gaza receives from Israel, plunging the Strip into a severe energy crisis and leaving Gazans with four to six hours of electricity per day. This, combined with a series of financial sanctions, dilapidated infrastructure and soaring unemployment that has recently crossed 50%, has seen the civil unrest in Gaza grow and with it, security tensions with Israel.
A top United Nations official said earlier
that Qatar was buying fuel to restart the only power plant in the
beleaguered Gaza Strip.
Jamie McGoldrick, the U.N.'s resident
humanitarian coordinator, said this will add a few more hours of
electricity to Gaza's 2 million residents who experience daily blackouts
for up to 16 hours.
He said discussions were underway to find the "most optimal way" to deliver the fuel through Israel.
The territory's terrorist Hamas rulers have accused the West Bank-based Palestinian Authority of hindering the Qatari efforts.
Hamas wrested control of Gaza and ousted the PA in 2007, drawing an Israeli-Egyptian blockade.
Daniel Siryoti
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/2018/10/09/against-abbas-wishes-9000-gallons-of-fuel-enter-gaza-from-israel/
Follow Middle East and Terrorism on Twitter
No comments:
Post a Comment