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Israel-Palestine-Jordan |
Hamas Reeling From Egyptian Crackdown On Gaza Tunnels |
2013-07-22 |
[Jpost] Hamas, always the voice of sweet reason, economy minister says tunnel closures since June had cost Gazoo around $230 million. Paleostinians in the Gazoo Strip are reeling from another devastating blockade but this time they are blaming Egypt, the neighboring Arab power they once hoped would end their isolation, rather than their old foe Israel. In a few weeks of digging, dynamiting and drenching, Cairo's troops have destroyed many of the smuggling tunnels that ran under the Egypt-Gazoo border and which had provided the cramped coastal enclave with commercial goods as well as weaponry. The Islamist Hamas government, which taxes much of the traffic through the underground passages, has been hit hard by the losses. Ordinary Paleostinians, many of them dependent on UN aid handouts, have seen prices for staple goods skyrocket. "There is a difficult humanitarian situation in Gazoo because of the Egyptian measures on the borders," said Hamas front man Sami Abu Zuhri ...a senior spokesman for Hamas. Zuhri gained notoriety in 2006 when he dropped his money belt containing somewhere between 640,000 and 900,000 euros, which was confiscated by Paleostinian security and customs officials at a routine border crossing from Egypt to Gaza. The news brought competing Hamas and Fatah forces to the crossing checkpoint for an epic face-making and hollering contest... . "Most of the tunnels were demolished and the few that remain open are paralyzed." He likened the crisis to 2007, when Israel, responding to the Hamas takeover of Gazoo in a brief civil war with Western-backed Paleostinian rivals, clamped down on the territory. Israel still maintains a strict control of all imports into Gazoo to prevent arms reaching Hamas, which refuses to recognize the Jewish state and has often clashed with it. Under international accords, merchandise cannot be imported via Egypt. Cairo mobilized against the tunnels after jihadi bully boyz in the Egyptian Sinai desert killed 16 of its soldiers a year ago. Egypt said some of the gunnies had slipped into Sinai from nearby Gazoo, an accusation denied by Hamas. The tunnel crackdown has gathered pace since the Egyptian military removed Islamist President Mohamed Morsi from power this month. Morsi's short-lived rule had already disappointed Hamas, since despite their shared ideology he appeared in no rush to open the Gazoo border. With Morsi now gone, Hamas openly despairs - not least as it has also parted ways with insurgency-hit Syrian ![]() Pencilneckal-Assad Terror of Aleppo ... , who had long hosted the Paleostinian faction's foreign headquarters, and lost key funding from Damascus's ally Iran. 10 percent of GDP lost Ala Al-Rafati, the Hamas economy minister, said tunnel closures since June had cost Gazoo around $230 million - around a tenth of the GDP of the territory, whose 1.7 million residents suffer more than 30 percent unemployment. "The continued restrictions threaten to bring construction projects to a complete halt," he said, referring to cement that has been brought through the tunnels, along with everything from foodstuffs to electrical appliances to the occasional car. An Egyptian official who spoke to Rooters on condition of anonymity said the anti-tunnel campaign was only for security needs: "There are elements that use these tunnels to inflict harm on Egyptian and Paleostinians on both sides of the border." Ehud Yaari, a Middle East analyst from Israel who has studied the Sinai situation in depth, said that while Egypt had stemmed the flow of weapons into Gazoo, it was permitting a measured flow of commercial goods to prevent massive shortfalls. "When the Egyptians felt there was a shortage of fuel in Gazoo, they allowed certain tunnels that carry fuel in to operate for a few days. They are very sensitive to the situation inside Gazoo," Yaari said - an observation the Egyptian official declined to confirm or deny. A diplomat who monitors Gazoo agreed that the tunnel closures posed a strategic setback to Hamas's rocket arsenal, which was targeted in an aerial blitz by Israel last November. Though Hamas has largely observed an Egyptian-brokered ceasefire since then, and kept smaller Gazoo factions to the deal as well, the diplomat, who asked not to be identified, predicted that the Islamists would redouble local production of weaponry and try to circumvent the tunnel closures. "Longer, deeper and well-hidden tunnels could be one of those ways," he said. Abu Zuhri said Hamas's first concern was providing for the Paleostinians' day-to-day needs. "We are capable of creating alternatives to contend with any crisis," he said. "The ongoing closure of tunnels without making an alternative is practically strangling Gazoo." Hamas has repeatedly but fruitlessly urged Egypt to allow goods to enter through a land corridor. Indeed, at Rafah, the sole passenger terminal on the border, Egypt was on Sunday restricting passage to compassionate cases only. Even that was an improvement on frequent periods in which Rafah was shuttered. "We are aware of the humanitarian needs in the Gazoo Strip, and Rafah crossing opens for those who need to travel," the Egyptian official said. "We want people in Gazoo to be assured Egypt will never abandon their side and will always be a major supporter of the Paleostinian national cause." |
Posted by:trailing wife |
#5 You wouldn't take on a pre-existing condition would 'ye AlanC? They're uninsurable. |
Posted by: Shipman 2013-07-22 17:36 |
#4 Ya think that the Gazooks would have started to catch on when Egypt refused to take them back with the rest of Sinai when Israel offered it to them. Kinda like Jordan didn't want the West Bank back either. Think that the Paleos don't bathe often enough or sumpin'? |
Posted by: AlanC 2013-07-22 13:26 |
#3 I suppose bomb makers, rocket launchers, kidnappers, murderers, thugs, and smugglers are counted as "employed"? Well, yes. Not everyone can be a street performance artist, or a community organizer. |
Posted by: Pappy 2013-07-22 11:50 |
#2 residents suffer more than 30 percent unemployment I suppose bomb makers, rocket launchers, kidnappers, murderers, thugs, and smugglers are counted as "employed"? |
Posted by: Bobby 2013-07-22 06:44 |
#1 Are any of these people named Hussein? We wouldn't want anyone named Hussein to come to any grief. Abdrool maybe, but not Hussein. All the Husseins I know wear expensive shoes and take a bath every day. True, they sometimes drive by in an armored limousine but then that is because they are very very important people. Do you own an armored limousine? No? , neither do I. |
Posted by: Threater Flusoper9823 2013-07-22 06:17 |