• Published 14:35 28.04.10
  • Latest update 14:35 28.04.10

Hamas detains Palestinian activists who warned of revolt in Gaza

Political activists distributed leaflets urging Hamas to ease up on the people of Gaza or face revolt.

By Reuters Tags: Hamas Gaza Israel news

Security forces of the Islamist group Hamas detained Palestinian political activists overnight for distributing leaflets urging them to ease up on the people of Gaza or face a possibly explosive revolt.

An official of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) told Reuters several members were arrested late on Tuesday and set free on Wednesday.

The PFLP leaflets were the strongest public criticism yet of Hamas, which seized control of the Gaza Strip in 2007 and has been clamping down on any behavior it sees as un-Islamic, while recently levying new taxes on the 1.5 million inhabitants.

"People are under huge pressure but they are also afraid to express themselves and we took the responsibility to voice their concerns," PFLP official Jamil Mezher told Reuters.

The leaflet warned Hamas to beware increasing pressure on the people in a way that could "push the community to rebel against these practices and even to explode in the faces of those responsible."

It urged the territory's Islamist rulers to stop violating freedoms, oppressing political opponents and imposing taxes on small businesses in the enclave, whose borders with Israel and Egypt are tightly controlled.

The price of a pack of cigarettes, most of which are smuggled in via tunnels from Egypt, has been raised to cover a NIS 3 (80 cent) tax which goes to Hamas.

Another group, the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine (DFLP), urged peaceful protests against Hamas taxes.

"The DFLP condemns the increase of taxes and fees ... which have led to an unprecedented rise in prices amid deteriorating economic and social conditions," it said. "We call for popular action and peace protests to stop these measures."

Israel invaded Gaza in a three-week offensive 16 months ago to force an end to rocket fire by Hamas and other groups aimed at towns in southern Israel. But the border remains tense and violent incidents involving troops and militants are frequent.

Local traders say the group is trying to patch up its depleted finances and calculate this tax will yield it about $6 million per month.

The PFLP also noted a new Hamas move to take over uninhabited housing and offer it to their members.

Economists say half the people are jobless in Gaza, which subsists on United Nations aid. They cannot leave the enclave.

PFLP leaders said they had urged Hamas in a face-to-face meeting recently to ease up.

The Hamas administration denied it had imposed any new tax and said it had only "activated a tiny section of the taxation system."

Mezher said the PFLP had plenty of testimony to the contrary from ordinary people. Many government employees said they had not yet been paid for the month of March.

Hamas Islamists are allied with Iran and refuse to recognize Israel, unlike their arch rivals in the Fatah movement, which is dominant in the West Bank and open to a peace treaty that would create a Palestinian state alongside Israel.

Prospects of the two groups reconciling to heal the split in Palestinian ranks are seen as remote.

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  • 9. 0 0
    #6 Lincoln I agree "reality never intrudes"
    • *BEN JABO
    • 29.04.10
    • 18:08

    with your mode of thinking The reality is that each and every one of the factions in Gaza will cut each other's throats as the opportunity arises Arabs aren't unified I'm truly amazed that you write so much without having once stepped foot in the area I put as much credence in your posts as I would in a Doctor tht's never been to medical school, none!!!

  • 8. 0 0
    To shakingazan again
    • Maggie
    • 29.04.10
    • 05:54

    Funny how you emphasised that 'I am an arab'. Think I smell a rat.

  • 7. 0 0
    #2
    • Maggie
    • 29.04.10
    • 05:47

    Sounds like you don't really live in Gaza somehow...jumping on the bandwagon for a bit of anti-European and anti Hamas propoganda???

  • 6. 0 0
    Ben Jabo - I realize reality never intrudes
    • Mark Lincoln
    • 29.04.10
    • 05:20

    The current policy of Hamas is to keep things quiet. The current policy of the PFLP is to attack Israel with intent to provoke action. I realize you do not understand how the PFLP is an enemy of both Israel and Hamas. I bet you don't even understand why you support the PFLP as an organization worthy of being given freedom to attack Israel.

  • 5. 0 0
    I THOUGHT THERE WAS A HOUSINGF CRISIS IN GAZA
    • Ian
    • 28.04.10
    • 20:17

    For months the UN and EU has been throwing insults at Israel because of homelessness in Gaza because of the military campaign and the embargo on building materials. Yet now I read here:'The PFLP also noted a new Hamas move to take over uninhabited housing and offer it to their members.'. Ehhh?!?! I suppose that they could all be lying. THREE CHEERS FOR ISRAEL!!!

  • 4. 0 0
    Life under terrorist rule
    • Chaim Ben Kahan
    • 28.04.10
    • 20:00

    The Arabs of Gaza made their beds and now they must lie in them.

  • 3. 0 0
    Tea Party time!
    • MARK KLEIN, M.D.
    • 28.04.10
    • 17:27

  • 2. 0 0
    Only European leftists love Hamas because their children
    • shakingazan
    • 28.04.10
    • 17:04

    aren't begging for food in teh streets due to the violence of their terroristic overlords. Another reason is leftist European hatred of the Jews. with Gaza, leftists think they have a legal right to be Jew haters. I am an Arab but I know a rat when I smell it. There is a rat, here.

  • 1. 0 0
    I thought EVERYONE in Gaza loved Hamas
    • *BEN JABO
    • 28.04.10
    • 15:53

    and that their main problem was Israel What happened to the "Free Speech" in Gaza that never was and never will be?