Tuesday, September 13, 2005

Start Rebuilding

NYT reported Palestinians Told to End Chaos and Start Rebuilding

They wanted a country of their own. Let us see what they can do with the Gaza strip. Will it be an area of chaos, looting, and anarchy, or can they develop an economy that can provide peaceful jobs to the residents. Can they build a country?
Prime Minister Ahmed Qurie urged Palestinians to stop looting and start rebuilding in abandoned Jewish settlements on Tuesday following Israel's military withdrawal from Gaza. A day after Israelis left and wild celebrations erupted, Palestinian security forces began restricting movement into ex-settlements and intercepting scavengers to seize booty carried away from ransacked synagogues and greenhouses.
We know they can scavenge and loot. Can they do anything else?
But chaos reigned along the Gaza-Egypt border for a second day as Palestinians, no longer stymied by an Israeli army buffer strip, scaled walls to stock up on cheap Egyptian cigarettes, livestock and electrical items for use or resale at home. Thousands swarmed back and forth across the frontier with little hindrance from Palestinian or Egyptian security units. The disorder raised questions about Egypt's deal with Israel to maintain security along the boundary after the pullout, particularly against possible arms smuggling to Palestinian militants in Gaza, although there was no sign of that so far. Qurie's appeal reflected a concern to show the world that Palestinians can establish order and good governance in Gaza as a proving ground for a future state comprising the coastal strip as well as the larger West Bank. "The nightmare is over, the occupation has gone and Gaza is now without settlers ... Today we begin the work of rebuilding,"
Good luck, but you may regret that the settlers, who provided jobs in agriculture and small businesses, are gone.
he told Palestinians in Neve Dekalim, the site of what had been Israel's largest settlement in Gaza. He urged the hundreds of people still entering the area to stop stripping synagogues and hothouses of building materials and equipment left behind after 38 years of Israeli occupation.

"You won't profit from a pillar, plastic tubing or pieces of wood that you are taking. Protect them because they are ours." After generally standing by and at times even joining the wild celebrations, security men began controlling entry and exit from settlements and confiscating piping, roof tiles, window frames and other pilfered items. But scavengers, many of whom brought along handy tools like hammers and saws, resented the appeal for restraint. "This is not looting. The Israelis stole this land for 38 years. Now what we can get is ours," said Ayman Soboh, as he and four sons collected plastic irrigation piping in Elei Sinai, a settlement in north Gaza.
Until 1948 the Israelis bought all of the land they occupied. And 38 years ago you invaded a peaceful Israel. In six days they pushed the invading forces back, not just to where they had started, but to the borders following the Six Days War. And you are not taking land, you are looting plastic irrigation piping and copper cables that the Israelis brought in to the area, where it was not 38 years before.
"I have no job and there is nothing to eat in my house. Do you think I like to work like this? But I have make a few shekels (dollars) to feed my kids," said Anas Mahmoud as he piled a cart high with copper cables.

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