Subscribe to Print Edition | Sun., June 15, 2008 Sivan 12, 5768 | | Israel Time: 10:45 (EST+7)
Haaretz israel news English
web haaretz.com
  Back to Homepage
Rosner's Domain
Diplomacy
Defense Jewish World Opinion National
Print Edition
Car Rental
Books Peres Conference Business Real Estate Easy Start Travel Week's End Anglo File
The Prime Minister of the Palestinian Authority, Salam Fayyad. (Asaf Ravitz)
Last update - 07:45 13/06/2008
Palestinian PM reaches out for grass roots support with message of change
By Reuters
Tags: Israel, Abbas, Palestinians 

When he was named to lead a government reeling from civil war in Gaza, those Palestinians who had even heard of Salam Fayyad mostly saw him as an obscure, expatriate technocrat with little feel for their troubles.

Now, a year after President Mahmoud Abbas made Fayyad prime minister in place of a Hamas leader he accused of staging a coup in the Gaza Strip, the former World Bank and IMF official is reaching out for grass roots support with a message of change.

The U.S.-trained economist, who came to power without a popular base and has clashed with some in Abbas's Fatah faction, cuts a very different figure from Palestinian leaders schooled in guerrilla warfare that has so far failed to deliver a state.
Advertisement
His language, too, tends to differ. He is a vocal critic of Israel's occupation and its approach to the new peace process and he acknowledges the handicaps he faces since Hamas Islamists seized Gaza last June 14, dividing the Palestinian territories.

But he says he wants ordinary people to see past the problems to improve lives and "conquer the sense of defeatism".

"Don't just argue or complain. There's a lot to even cry about," he told Reuters in an interview this week. "But we should actually act and create positive facts on the ground".

"My message is we can do things in a way that the whole world can relate to, and with respect, to enhance our cause," he said.

Backed by the United States and its allies, who lifted sanctions when Abbas dismissed a Hamas-led administration elected in 2006, Fayyad has worked closely with aid donors to contribute public finances and promote investment to foster growth.

His use of the term "facts on the ground", long associated with Israeli moves to take land while waiting for negotiations to conclude, is designed to press fellow Palestinians not to wait but to take responsibility for improving themselves.

"Now we're using the term in a different way to create positive facts on the ground in response to our needs to be free," said Fayyad, who has won warm praise from U.S. and other international officials. "Who can take issue with that?" he asked.

In fact, he is not short of critics. Fayyad faces critics both in Israel and at home, within Abbas's Fatah faction among those he is trying to push off the public payroll and those who worry he may seek to run against them in a future presidential election. That is a fear the 56-year-old Fayyad is keen to dispel.

"I'm not running for elections for any position," he said.

Fayyad first entered public life as finance minister in 2001 under late Fatah leader Yasser Arafat. Abbas brought him back as finance minister in a unity government that lasted three months before it collapsed amid the faction fighting in Gaza last June.

NO TO STATUS QUO

Since then, Fayyad says his motto has been "build a state despite the occupation", a policy that nonetheless has seen him loudly demand a lighter touch from Israel to help the economy. "The status quo is about disaster, misery," he said.

Fayyad says he is taking a "bottom-up approach" to getting his message across, touring villages and refugee camps to listen to complaints and to publicize a program of community projects that includes enlarging schools and digging wells.

"When I go and talk to people, what I'm looking for is a change in the mindset of the people away from defeatism. You need to reinforce this shift in the mindset with deliverables and act on it quickly to make a difference," he said.

His efforts to build security forces that can persuade Israel and its allies that Palestinians can keep to any deal to curb violence in return for statehood, have also been marked by a readiness to get to know not only the generals but the troops.

His success thus far has yet to be seen. Popular opinion remains divided on a prime minister many, particularly in Fatah, see as bent on slashing the central subsidies and grants that many Palestinians have come to depend on over the decades.

"There are mixed feelings about what Fayyad is doing," said analyst Abdel-Majid Sweilem. "There are those who see him as the IMF man implementing its directives, and there are those that see him act on his promises and has made a difference."

"But he certainly has a program. He believes that people can confront occupation by making people stay put on their land without political submissiveness, and without using violence," Sweilam said.

The Palestinians' political future remains hazy, with Hamas in control and isolated in Gaza and Abbas dominating the West Bank.

Abbas has proposed bringing forward elections from 2010, though few see that as practical for now. Whenever Palestinians vote, Fayyad and his policies may play a crucial role, though Fayyad himself is adamant he has no personal political ambition.

"I will not run for presidency or for any other position," he said. "Once I leave this position I'll be doing something totally different."
Reuters
Bookmark to del.icio.us  
 
Snoop Dogg in Israel
American rapper Snoop Dogg slated to perform in Ramat Gan.
Late date
Scientists revive 2,000-year-old date seed found at Masada.
  1.   The Palestinians are totally inept 20:21  |  MARK KLEIN, M.D. 12/06/08
  2.   Does this mean that they will 20:41  |  MaryRose 12/06/08
  3.   One State Solution with Equal Rights for All 20:42  |  Klein 12/06/08
  4.   uncharacteristic stupidity....by Reuter 20:56  |  Khalid 12/06/08
  5.   The 2-headed Palestinian monster 21:17  |  Joe Sittizen 12/06/08
  6.   Newsflash 21:53  |  Ofer 12/06/08
  7.   Well well well. 22:24  |  Jane 12/06/08
  8.   When you see that there is 75% illiteracy in Arab states,but 95% 23:08  |  Daoud 12/06/08
  9.   Mixed ops: gang clans will not like him, but workers will 23:26  |  Alain 12/06/08
  10.   This guy is a fraud! There is no growth or Palestinian economy! 23:50  |  lakshmi 12/06/08
  11.   To Klein 23:55  |  Avi 12/06/08
  12.   #2 There`s the little issue of the tax revenue 00:01  |  Outsider 13/06/08
  13.   Hey Klein, it didn`t work the first time! 00:29  |  Scharker Yid 13/06/08
  14.   MARK KLEIN, MD, is there no cure ? 01:10  |  Mark B. 13/06/08
  15.   message of "change" 02:38  |  Shmuelshachor 13/06/08
  16.   1#14 OAKLAND to AMSTERDAM send them to Oaksterdam to seek a cure 02:41  |  DAVID P. 13/06/08
  17.   Klein 02:48  |  Brad 13/06/08
  18.   Fayad Is Right 02:51  |  Brad 13/06/08
  19.   "...create positive facts on the ground". 06:57  |  Akiva P 13/06/08
  20.   A Christian writer ?Reland- chronicling his trip in the land... 08:30  |  Jean Van Daem 13/06/08
  21.   Build Palestine Initiative 18:57  |  S. Dawlabani 13/06/08
  22.   #3 Klein`s pipedream 08:21  |  DesMnsDave 15/06/08
 Read & React
Rice: Settlement building may harm Israel-PA talks
Responses: 66
Gideon levy: Europe's hatred of Muslims makes it back Israel despite occupation
Responses: 3
Olmert aides: Israel and Syria may hold direct talks soon
Responses: 160
Zvi Bar'el: For Gaza quiet, Israel must be willing to work with Fatah-Hamas gov't
Responses: 1
Rosner's Domain
Judaism's swing vote: what to do with Jewish singles?
What to make of the Journals of Rachel Corrie? (WTR)
Poll: When should Israel have elections?
Bobby Kennedy and the history of pro-Israel candidates
NJDC: McCain's advisor soft on Iran (WTR)


More Headlines
10:02 Rice: Settlement building may harm Israel-PA talks
09:55 Olmert aides: Israel and Syria may hold direct talks soon
09:55 Couple, infant daughter killed in Western Galilee car accident
03:23 Sources: Israel agrees in principle to truce with Hamas
03:49 Programming for Arab-Israeli peace
09:33 New museum to show Cologne's Jewish life dates back 1,700 years
01:17 Ramon: Barak ultimatum to Olmert will result in Likud takeover
09:33 IDF activates warning system meant to spot mortars from Gaza
09:13 Children seized after daughter comes to school bearing swastika mark
09:15 More and more people are being denied entry into Israel
16:43 Egypt battles 'sex tourism', bans 92-year-old from marrying teen
Previous Editions
Special Offers
Advertisement
In the heart of Tel-Aviv
The Meier on Rothschild tower
Jerusalem of Gold
Luxury apartments in Jerusalem's finest location
Your vacation starts here
Israel Travel Center Guaranteed Lowest Rates
Istudy
Learn Hebrew in 3 months
The Terraces
Your Ultimate Coastal Address On Nitza Boulevard, North Netanya
Pardes Institute Summer Sessions
http://www.pardes.org.il/
Free the Palestinians from:
Corrupt Kleptocracy, Tyrannical Theocracy, Abysmal Anarchy
Fattal Hotel Chain
Perfectly located hotels on best resorts of Israel.
ISRAEL BONDS Build Israel
Israel bonds - a multi-purpose way to celebrate Israel's 60th
Eldan Rent a Car
Israel's leading car rental company offers you a 20% discount on all online reservations
Junkyard
Junk a car - get free towing nationwide and a tax-deductible receipt
Home | TV | Print Edition | Diplomacy | Opinion | Arts & Leisure | Sports | Jewish World | Underground | Site rules |
Real Estate in Israel | Travel to Israel with Haaretz | Hotels Israel | Restaurants Israel | Tourist attractions Israel | Shops Israel
birthright Israel
Haaretz.com, the online edition of Haaretz Newspaper in Israel, offers real-time breaking news, opinions and analysis from Israel and the Middle East. Haaretz.com provides extensive and in-depth coverage of Israel, the Jewish World and the Middle East, including defense, diplomacy, the Arab-Israeli conflict, the peace process, Israeli politics, Jerusalem affairs, international relations, Iran, Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, the Palestinian Authority, the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, the Israeli business world and Jewish life in Israel and the Diaspora.
© Copyright  Haaretz. All rights reserved