Palestinians in Gaza react to Egypt, Tunisia uprisings
                                                        

                                                        Pam Bailey writing from 
the occupied Gaza Strip, Live from Palestine, 29 January 2011
                                                                

                                                                

                                                                                
                                        
                                                                
                                                                        
                                                                                
                                                                        
                                                                
                                                                
                                                                        
                                                                                
Palestinians in Gaza gather in solidarity with Tunisia, 16 January 2011. (Pam 
Bailey)
                                                                        
                                                                
                                                        


As news of the uprisings in a growing number of Arab countries spread 
like wildfire around the world, residents of other countries struggling 
under their own oppressive governments and soaring unemployment were 
celebrating on the streets, on Twitter and on Facebook. The occupied 
Gaza Strip was no exception.



"We, as Palestinians, salute the Tunisian people and any Arab nation 
rising against injustice," said Saber Zanin, coordinator of the Local 
Initiative Committee for Beit Hanoun in the northern Gaza Strip. 
However, perhaps the most excited were the youth of Gaza, who saw the 
uprisings in Tunisia, Egypt, Yemen and Jordan as evidence of the latent 
power of their generation.



"There was much excitement from what happened. I spent the whole day 
just following up with what was going on in Tunisia and I was actually 
very proud with what the people have done," said Sameeha Elwan, a 
23-year-old blogger, shortly after the uprising there. "It gave me some 
hope and I got back the faith I have in people."



Jehan "JeJe" al-Farra, a 20-year-old English literature student, said 
immediately after the Tunisian uprising, "The message I got from the 
Tunisian movement is that the people are the cause of change. If there 
is any change you want you have to do it yourself. If you wait on the 
world, you will have to wait and wait and wait. The only way you can do 
anything is to revolt."



The biggest challenge facing the Arab world today is youth unemployment. 
According to Foreign Policy
 magazine, North Africa and the Middle East now have the highest 
percentage of young people in the world. Sixty percent of the region's' 
people are under the age of 30, twice the rate of North America. And 
with the unemployment rate at 10 percent or more, the area also has the 
highest regional rates of joblessness; for young people, it's four times
 that.



However, it's even worse in Gaza. The Sharek Youth Forum (recently shut 
down by the Hamas government), reported that approximately 60 percent of
 youth between the ages of 15 and 30 were unable to find jobs in 2009 
despite a high university matriculation rate. 



In the West Bank, appointed Ramallah-based Palestinian Authority Prime 
Minister Salam Fayyad immediately saw the parallels between Gaza and 
Tunisia and spent more than two hours on 16 January talking to forty 
Palestinian journalists at his Ramallah office about the economic 
situation and living conditions in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. He 
attempted to reassure the journalists that economic conditions were good
 in spite of reports on the rise in consumer prices and relatively high 
unemployment and poverty figures.



The Gaza-based, Hamas-led Palestinian Authority government, as well as 
Islamic Jihad, organized demonstrations in downtown Gaza City 
celebrating the Tunisian uprising. In a statement to the Ahlul Bayt news
 agency, a Hamas spokesman said the movement "respects the will and 
choice of the Tunisians and assures it will stand by them." Fathi 
Hammad, foreign minister in the Gaza-based government, added, "We are 
with the Tunisians in choosing their leaders, no matter what sacrifices 
it takes." He didn't seem to consider the possibility that the same 
power could be turned against his party which won the last Palestinian 
legislative election to be held, in January 2006.



However, Muayed Elmishal, a leader of the Sora youth group in Gaza, saw a
 similarity between the Tunisians' frustration and that of young 
Palestinians: "The Tunisian people suffered dictatorship for long years,
 and promises of democracy and freedom were never delivered. The 
Palestinian people are experiencing the same thing: After the democratic
 elections in 2006, never repeated until this moment, we have two 
separate governments -- one in the Gaza Strip and the other in the West 
Bank. This has caused deep frustration among the Palestinians and made 
them feel desperate to do something."



The authors of the Gaza Youth Break Out manifesto
 -- which published on Facebook an angry call for help that lashed out 
at Hamas, the United Nations, the United States and Israel -- agreed. 
"There is an uprising coming to Gaza," said one, who asked not to be 
named due to fear of retaliation.



Despite this frustration, nearly everyone in Gaza is in agreement that 
there is one big difference between Tunisia and Palestine: the fact that
 Palestinians are under occupation by Israel, which they view as 
responsible for the majority of their problems.



"The Tunisian people have problems with big corruption in their 
government; that's their main problem," said Ghassan al-Khaldi, a civil 
engineer, shortly after the Tunisian uprising. "We may not like our 
government, but the Palestinian people have one primary enemy -- Israel,
 which takes our lands, our dreams, our sons."



Egypt, however, is a different story. Its government cooperates with 
Israel in keeping the people of Gaza imprisoned within their cramped, 
occupied territory. Opinions about what they want and what will happen 
as a result of the ongoing uprising in Egypt vary within Gaza -- ranging
 from euphoria, to skepticism that Mubarak would actually fall, to 
concern that the alternative to Hosni Mubarak will be an Islamist 
government like Hamas, which has become unpopular among many 
Palestinians in Gaza. 



Wasim Zaher, member of a new youth group called Yala, said "I don't 
think the uprising in Egypt will make Mubarak fall but I hope it will 
make him and the Egyptian government correct their policies for the 
Egyptian people and toward Palestine and Gaza."



Whatever the assessment, there's no doubt people in Gaza are watching closely 
as the people power moves closer to their border.



Pam Bailey is a peace activist and communications professional from 
Maryland who recently received a Community Human Rights Award from the 
UN Association of the National Capitol Area. She can be contacted at 
peacenut57 A T yahoo D O T com.

http://electronicintifada.net/v2/article11761.shtml




      

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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