How
Journalists Allowed the Palestinian Authority to Fool Them
Be the first of your
friends to like this.
In most
cases it is the Palestinian Authority's security forces that are responsible
for the chaos and corruption. A Western journalist who wanted to do an
investigative report into the case was warned that she would be putting her
life at risk. Gangsters and armed clans were among the main reasons the
Palestinian Authority collapsed in 2007, speeding the rise of Hamas to power.
The Palestinian Authority has been boasting
over the past four years of its success in restoring law and order to the West
Bank city of Jenin.
Journalists from all around the world were
invited to Jenin, once notorious for dispatching suicide bombers to Israel, to
report on the Palestinian government's successful efforts.
Palestinian leaders and government officials
told the journalists how their security forces have managed to end the state of
chaos and lawlessness that used to prevail in Jenin.
They talked about how Fatah gangsters and thugs
who used to roam the streets, imposing an atmosphere of intimidation and terror
on the population, have vanished.
Most of the gangsters, the Palestinian
government officials noted, had been recruited to various branches of the
Western-funded Palestinian security forces and were indirectly receiving
salaries from American and European taxpayers' money.
Many Western correspondents rushed to Jenin to
cover the story about the success of the Palestinian Authority in restoring law
and order.
One of the most popular stories was the fact
that Zakaria Zubeidi, the former commander of Fatah's armed militia, Aqsa
Martyrs Brigades, which was behind dozens of terror attacks against Israel, was
now running a local theater and promoting coexistence and peace.
But while the international, and Israeli, media
were breaking the "good news" about Jenin, the journalists failed to
understand what was really going on in Jenin and its surrounding villages. Some
journalists, in fact, chose to turn a blind eye to the grim reality on the
ground.
The murder of Israeli Arab actor and film
producer Julian Mar-Khamis in Jenin last year should have sounded an alarm bell
among the media representatives. His killers have never been caught, sparking a
wave of unconfirmed reports about the involvement of influential Fatah
gangsters and Palestinian security officers in the case.
A Western journalist who wanted to do an
investigative report into the case was warned by senior Palestinian security
officers that she would be putting her life at risk if she insisted on carrying
out this mission.
Last week, the truth about the situation in
Jenin finally exploded in the faces of everyone: the local governor died of a
fatal heart attack following an unsuccessful assassination attempt.
For the Palestinian Authority leadership, the
assassination attempt was what lifted the veil: Palestinian leaders in Ramallah
realized that they could no longer continue to hide the truth about what was
really happening in Jenin.
Palestinian security forces have since arrested
dozens of Fatah "outlaws" and police officers for various crimes --
including murder, extortion, abductions, sexual harassment and armed robberies.
Radi Asideh, the security commander of the
Jenin area, admitted that it was the Palestinian security establishment that
was responsible for the anarchy and lawlessness. "There is a defect inside
the security establishment and officers were responsible for this," he
revealed.
The biggest mistake, Asideh added, was that the
Palestinian leadership had turned its back to the defect, allowing the
situation to deteriorate at the expense of the people's security.
Palestinians say that anarchy and lawlessness
are to be found also in other areas in the West Bank where the Palestinian
Authority claims to have imposed law and order. And, they add, in most cases it
is the Palestinian Authority's security forces that are responsible for the
chaos and corruption.
If the Western journalists and donors continue
to ignore the reality on the ground, the West Bank could soon fall into the
hands of gangsters and armed clans, as has been the case in Jenin -- among the
main reasons the Palestinian Authority collapsed in the Gaza Strip in 2007,
speeding the rise of Hamas to power.
No comments:
Post a Comment