• Hamas - whats-really-happening-in-gaza/

    From a425couple@21:1/5 to All on Tue Feb 14 16:12:48 2023
    XPost: soc.history.war.misc, soc.history.war.misc

    from
    https://www.nationalreview.com/2023/01/whats-really-happening-in-gaza/

    By SEAN DURNS
    January 31, 2023 6:30 AM
    Listen to article
    While a member of Congress denounces Israel as an apartheid state,
    Palestinians are beginning to stand up to Hamas.

    Last Wednesday, Representative Rashida Tlaib (D., Mich.) drew attention
    after she chose to fly a flag used by the Palestine Liberation
    Organization (PLO) outside of her office and, not for the first time,
    decried Israel as an “apartheid” state. Yet, Tlaib has remained silent
    amid recent revelations about human-rights abuses perpetrated against Palestinians.

    Palestinians in Gaza are standing up to Hamas. For nearly two decades,
    the terrorist group has maintained an iron grip on its coastal enclave.
    But rumblings of discontent are growing louder, and one American
    organization is doing its utmost to make sure they’re heard.

    The Center for Peace Communications (CPC) is a New York-based nonprofit
    that works to “grow peace between peoples” in the Middle East and North Africa. The NGO has recently launched a project called Whispered in
    Gaza, which seeks to elevate the voices of everyday Gazans living under
    Hamas rule.

    Being a dissident in Gaza is certainly dangerous. In his 2004 book, The
    Case for Democracy, the Soviet dissident turned Israeli politician Natan Sharansky argued that there were two types of societies: a “free
    society” and a “fear society.” He formulated a simple test to discern which category a given society fell into: Can one enter a public square
    and express any opinion without fear of being arrested? And in Gaza, the
    answer is tragically clear.

    Gaza residents who spoke to the CPC for the Whispered in Gaza campaign —
    a multipart series featuring animated interviews, which use animation
    and voice-altering technologies to protect the interviewees’ identities
    — have no illusions about their Hamas rulers. They know the risks of
    speaking out. But as the CPC’s president, Joseph Braude, has said, they “want these stories to be heard.”

    Hamas has ruled Gaza since 2007, when it seized power there after a
    brief but bloody internecine war with Fatah, the movement that dominates
    the Palestinian Authority, which controls the West Bank. Fatah’s
    well-earned reputation for corruption had helped spur many Palestinians
    to vote for Hamas, a Muslim Brotherhood offshoot and Iranian proxy that promised “reform and change,” in the 2006 Palestinian legislative elections. Fatah refused to accept its narrow defeat, leading to a
    conflict in which Hamas successfully seized Gaza, forever changing both Israel’s security calculus and the lives of everyday Gazans.

    Almost immediately after taking control of Gaza, Hamas began launching
    rockets at Israel, which its charter pledges to destroy. The Islamist
    group’s ambitions subsequently led both Israel and Egypt to initiate a security blockade of Gaza and sparked four wars. In each of those
    conflicts, Hamas has used civilians as human shields, storing weaponry, munitions, and operations centers at or near schools, United Nations
    buildings, hospitals, and even international media outlets such as the Associated Press.

    Hamas has also been caught using foreign aid to fund terrorist
    operations. It has even used donated construction equipment and cement
    to build so-called “terror tunnels,” through which Hamas operatives can kidnap and attack Israelis. The network of tunnels, which is estimated
    to cover 300 miles, is intricate. It is also expensive: According to
    Israel Defense Forces estimates, some individual tunnels cost as much as
    $3 million to build.

    And, as Whispered in Gaza makes clear, Hamas’s commitment to Israel’s destruction also comes at the expense of the people living under its
    rule. Hamas, one dissident tells the CPC, didn’t bring the promised “reform and change.” Instead, it “brought looting, theft, oppression, humiliation, nepotism, and unemployment.” Hamas, he notes, is more than
    just a terrorist group. It also operates like a crime syndicate,
    extorting civilians. “There isn’t a small business — even tobacco stands — that they don’t have their hands in,” he says.

    Hamas has also “made a profit out of” the numerous wars that it has initiated, while “the people suffered,” according to one CPC
    interviewee. Another remarks that “only the people bear the burden” of these conflicts.

    Hamas officials are happy to lie low “in their bunkers, their hideouts” while using everyday Gazans as cannon fodder. And at the war’s
    conclusion, “they tell us it’s a victory.”

    Indeed, Hamas’s propaganda is everywhere in Gaza. As one interviewee
    tells the CPC, “Your own thoughts are taken away from you.” Just walking down the street, he describes encountering drawings and paintings
    hailing the terrorist group and its leaders, leaving him to wonder if
    he’s living in “a city or military barracks.” Gaza City has “taken on a vibe of backwardness, inhumanity, and militarism,” he says, and the psychological damage that most Gazans endure due to Hamas rule is “enormous.”

    Gaza is run by a kleptocracy that is as corrupt as it is brutal. Despair characterizes many of the accounts, with one woman, “Fatima,” recounting how her brother, a street vendor who sold vegetables but refused to pay
    Hamas bribes, was forced to flee after members of the group repeatedly
    beat him and imprisoned him on false charges.

    The Times of Israel, which is working with the CPC on the Whispered in
    Gaza campaign, has noted that a 2018 poll found that 48 percent of
    Gazans wanted to emigrate. One can hardly blame them.

    Those interviewed by the CPC shared their stories with the hope that
    others will listen. Yet, many who often claim to be “pro-Palestinian”
    have been noticeably quiet about Hamas’s totalitarian rule.

    The members of the so-called Squad — Representatives Tlaib, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D., N.Y.), Ilhan Omar (D., Minn.), and Cori Bush (D.,
    Mo.) — are all known for their vociferous criticism of the Jewish state, which they claim persecutes Palestinians. Bush, for example, has accused
    Israel of inflicting “violent oppression and trauma” on Palestinians.
    Yet none of them have said a word about the Whispered in Gaza campaign.

    Sadly, such selective outrage isn’t new. When Hamas slaughtered dozens
    of protesters in 2019, the Squad was silent. And the press, like the
    members of Congress that it hypes, has also seemed oddly uninterested in holding the regime that governs Gaza accountable. The Washington Post,
    the New York Times, and other major U.S. news organizations have, thus
    far, been mum about the CPC’s campaign.

    Hopefully this will soon change and the whispers in Gaza will inspire
    strident voices of condemnation, from newsrooms to the halls of power.
    As Tlaib herself once said, silence about human-rights violations is
    tantamount to “complicity.” On this, at least, she is right.

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