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Middle East
Mass resignations hit Fatah movement
2004-02-08
Nearly 400 members of Yasser Arafat's ruling Fatah Party resigned Saturday to protest what they call corruption and bad leadership within the group.
Doesn't that come as a surprise?
The mass resignation is the latest example of long-standing friction between the younger members of the Palestinians' main political force and the old guard who accompanied Arafat back to the West Bank and Gaza Strip from exile in the early 1990s. The 400 ex-Fatah members were from the party's lower ranks, and none were prominent officials in the movement.
Nor will they be. They might be its successor, though...
The former members, in a letter to Arafat and other movement leaders, said they were angry over corruption, mismanagement and a lack of direction in how the party handles the Israeli conflict. At the fore of the dispute are elections for the party's governing bodies and charges that leaders have ignored calls to hold a vote for fear of losing power. Party procedure calls for elections every five years, but none has taken place since 1989.
"We have salaries. Why do we need elections?"
While there are hundreds of thousands of Fatah members, the resignation of almost 400 needs to be taken seriously, said Hatem Abdul Khader, a prominent young Fatah lawmaker. "Most of the signatories are unknown, but this document should indicate to the leadership about how much we need reform," he said.
I imagine Yasser will ignore it.
Fatah's current leaders have repeatedly put off holding elections. Fatah's young activists say veteran leaders are merely afraid of losing their privileged positions. "Fatah, as it stands today, is leading us toward tribalism, internal conflict and a bottomless pit," the statement said.
That sounds about right...
Fatah Cabinet minister Qadoura Fares pooh-poohed downplayed the resignations. "The issues that were brought up in the statement are not new," he said.
"And we intend to let them get a lot older..."
Posted by:Fred Pruitt

#7  The last straw was when Yasser cut contributions to their 401Ks in half. They also heard that Islamic Jihad had openings at the top level.
Posted by: Super Hose   2004-2-8 7:47:21 PM  

#6  Nice take mhw, corruptions fine as long as every rat gets his piece of cheese. People aren't getting their cheese.

Also nice take Pappy as to the intifada... death trap! Way cool.
Posted by: Lucky   2004-2-8 1:32:54 AM  

#5  The younger Fatah members see the handwriting on the wall. As it stands now, their corrupt and ineffective group will end up on the short end of things when civil war breaks into the open.

As for the Intifada, that's become a deadly PR campaign for all the groups. Paul's right - things will get interesting when Arafat departs.
Posted by: Pappy   2004-2-8 1:10:45 AM  

#4  Ther're pissed about corruption? Why aint I a millio-nair.
Posted by: Lucky   2004-2-8 12:54:48 AM  

#3  Maybe these people were angry that they hadn't been bribed lately.
Posted by: mhw   2004-2-8 12:26:35 AM  

#2  wanna bet the 400 form the next line of boomers? Now Arafat has plausible deniability...Call me a cynic
Posted by: Frank G   2004-2-8 12:19:16 AM  

#1  They might be against all the corruption in the PA, but they probably also have no problem with coninuing the Intifada either.
Things will get interesting after Arafat finally departs
Posted by: Paul Moloney   2004-2-8 12:17:09 AM  

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