Palestinians Welcome Trump Exit, but are Cautious about Biden

Palestinians wave their national flag in Ramallah in November 2018. (AFP)
Palestinians wave their national flag in Ramallah in November 2018. (AFP)
TT

Palestinians Welcome Trump Exit, but are Cautious about Biden

Palestinians wave their national flag in Ramallah in November 2018. (AFP)
Palestinians wave their national flag in Ramallah in November 2018. (AFP)

The Palestinians have been holding out for a change of US president for three years, hoping for a chance to hit the reset button on relations with Washington.

There was no immediate response from Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas after Joe Biden was declared winner of the US presidential election by major television networks on Saturday, but the first key decision facing Abbas is whether he will resume political contacts with the United States.

Three years ago Abbas cut off contact with President Donald Trump’s White House, accusing it of pro-Israel bias over Trump’s decisions to break with decades of US policy by recognizing Jerusalem as the capital of Israel and moving the US Embassy to the city.

“We don’t expect miraculous transformation, but at least we expect the dangerous destructive policies of Trump to totally stop,” said Hanan Ashrawi, a veteran negotiator and member of the Palestine Liberation Organization’s Executive Committee.

“It is time to change course,” she added. “They should change course and deal with the Palestinian question on the bases of legality, equality and justice and not on the basis of responding to special interests of pro-Israeli lobbies or whatever.”

Other Trump decisions that infuriated the Palestinians were to de-fund the United Nations agency that deals with Palestinian refugees and to shut the Palestinian diplomatic mission in Washington.

Trump also published a Middle East blueprint in January that envisaged Israeli sovereignty over parts of the Israeli-occupied West Bank, territory that Palestinians seek for a state.

“It is a happy day. Trump is gone,” said Um Mohammad, a mother of four in Gaza. “I hope that Biden does not make the same mistakes and that he doesn’t blindly follow Israel.”

Hamas, the movement that controls Gaza and is regarded as a terrorist group by the US and Israel, also welcomed the setback for the current occupant of the White House.

“We are happy at the departure of the criminal Trump and we will judge Biden through the positions he will take in relation to the Palestinian cause,” he said.

Mohammad Dahlan, a former Palestinian security chief and government minister based in Abu Dhabi, said Biden’s win would “open a new horizon for peace that is based on the two-state solution as Biden promised during his election campaign.”

However, Dahlan, who is living in exile and out of favor with Abbas, his party leader, called for internal reforms.

“The removal of Trump’s danger isn’t enough, we have to resolve our internal imbalance by ending the divisions and elect new institutions and legitimate leaders,” he said in a post on his Facebook page.

This was echoed by Salem Barahmeh, executive director of the Palestine Institute for Public Diplomacy, who cautioned that Biden was not going to deliver liberation for Palestinians or the independent statehood that they seek.

“Take this time to look internally to our own people and build unity,” he wrote on Twitter in a post calling for “a representative/inclusive/democratic political system and a viable strategy for liberation that inspires/mobilizes.”



Gaza Officials Say 80 Palestinian Corpses Handed over by Israel

A man checks a body returned by Israel, before burial in a cemetery in Khan Younis, Gaza Strip, Monday, Aug. 5, 2024. (AP)
A man checks a body returned by Israel, before burial in a cemetery in Khan Younis, Gaza Strip, Monday, Aug. 5, 2024. (AP)
TT

Gaza Officials Say 80 Palestinian Corpses Handed over by Israel

A man checks a body returned by Israel, before burial in a cemetery in Khan Younis, Gaza Strip, Monday, Aug. 5, 2024. (AP)
A man checks a body returned by Israel, before burial in a cemetery in Khan Younis, Gaza Strip, Monday, Aug. 5, 2024. (AP)

Gaza's Civil Defense agency said it received the bodies of 80 unidentified Palestinians from Israel on Monday, which it buried in a mass grave.

"We received 80 bodies inside 15 bags, with more than four martyrs in each bag, each wrapped in a single shroud", Civil Defense director Yamen Abu Suleiman told AFP.

Abu Suleiman said Israeli authorities did not provide any information about the bodies, including their names or where they were found or taken from.

"We do not know if they are martyrs (killed in Gaza) or prisoners from (Israel's) jails", he added.

AFP journalists on the scene saw men in hazmat suits inspecting the corpses wrapped in blue plastic sheeting, before unloading them from the shipping container they had arrived in.

The bodies were then laid in a line for burial in a mass grave dug in the sand, with scores of Palestinians watching from the side.

The bodies were later buried at the Turkish cemetery, near Khan Yunis, the main city in the southern part of Gaza, AFP journalists said.

- A mother's search -

"You will ask me the reason why I put all the bodies in a mass grave?" said Tabesh Abu Ata from the Turkish cemetery.

"Because I have no capabilities to bury each one in an individual grave, (there are no) stones or tiles" for that, he said.

Salwa Karaz, a displaced woman from Gaza City in the north, told AFP that she had gone to the cemetery hoping to find her 32-year-old son Marwan, who went missing in January. He left behind an eight-month-old son.

"When we learned that 80 bodies had been handed over, we came to search in hopes of finding him among them", the 59-year-old told AFP.

"As of now, we have not learned anything," she lamented.

"We will try to identify him through his clothes. He was wearing brown pants, a navy blue shirt, a black jacket, and beige boots."

She last saw him leaving on his bicycle from their shelter in Deir al-Balah, central Gaza.

In a statement released Monday, Hamas said Israel's delivery of bodies without identities "exacerbates the suffering of the families of martyrs and the missing, who seek to know the fate of their abducted children or to bury their martyrs in a dignified manner".

The Israeli military did not offer an immediate comment.

In December, Hamas government sources said Israel returned the bodies of 80 Palestinians killed in Gaza after taking them from morgues and graves to check there were no hostages among them.

The bodies were then buried in Gaza, the sources added.

The war in Gaza began when Hamas attacked Israel on October 7, which resulted in the death of 1,197 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official Israeli figures.

Militants also seized 251 hostages, 111 of whom are still held captive in Gaza, including 39 the military says are dead.

Israel's retaliatory air and ground campaign in Gaza has killed at least 39,623 people, according to the health ministry in Hamas-ruled Gaza, which does not give details of civilian and militant deaths.