Resentment toward Hamas grows among Gaza's budding middle class
While two-thirds of Gaza's 1.6 million people live in poverty and rely on UN food aid, a growing middle class fuels grass roots opposition to Hamas rule.
By The Associated Press Tags: Gaza HamasA budding middle class in the impoverished Gaza Strip is flaunting its wealth, sipping coffee at gleaming new cafes, shopping for shoes at the new tiny shopping malls, and fueling perhaps the most acrimonious grass roots resentment yet toward the ruling Hamas movement.
This middle class, which has become visible at the same time as a mini-construction boom in this blockaded territory, is celebrating its weddings in opulent halls and vacationing in newly built beach bungalows. That level of consumption may be modest by Western standards, but it's in startling contrast to the grinding poverty of most Gazans, who rely on UN food handouts to get by.
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Some of the well-off are Hamas loyalists. That rankles many Gaza residents because the conservative Islamic movement gained popularity by tending to the poor, through charitable aid, education and medical care - along with its armed struggle against Israel.
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Palestinians shopping at the new al-Andulusia mall in Gaza City on August 16, 2011. |
| Photo by: AP |
"Hamas has become rich at the expense of the people," fumed a 22-year-old seamstress, Nisrine, as she stitched decorative applique onto a dress. She wouldn't disclose her family name, not wanting to be seen criticizing the militant group.
Gaza's Hamas government denies its loyalists have gotten wealthy since the group came to power. Corruption "doesn't touch us," said Hamas official Yusef Rizka.
But others - even those close to Hamas - say the militant group must pay attention. "There is a nouveau riche that has followed the rise of the government," said Alaa Araj, a former Gaza economic minister and businessman considered close to Hamas. "We must sound the alarm," he said. "(Resentment) is growing in Gaza."
Gaza residents are also resentful because they feel they have suffered the worst effects of the Israeli and Egyptian blockade that was slapped on the territory when the militant group seized power in 2007. The blockade was a failed attempt to crush Hamas; instead it impoverished already poor Gazans, killed off trade and effectively imprisoned residents inside the territory.
Some two-thirds of Gaza's 1.6 million people live in poverty and rely on UN food aid. About half the work force is unemployed. Many employed Gazans are paid miserly wages, keeping them struggling.
They include the seamstress Nisrine, who is paid 5 dollars a day, money that her family keeps. Baker Sami Awad, 27, earns 9 dollars a day to support his five siblings and his sister's two children. Their father abandoned them years ago; his sister's husband was killed in an Israeli incursion. Their stories are typical.
Hamas has always had a small core of prominently wealthy loyalists. But it appears another small group has seen its fortunes rise since the Hamas came to power, primarily investors and high-level civil servants in Gaza's 24,000-strong bureaucracy.
The territory also has an established middle class of old merchant families, senior aid officials and loyalists of Fatah, a Palestinian group that rivals Hamas. But there's less resentment toward them - perhaps because they are not in power.
The new signs of prosperity are due to a mini-construction boom that can be traced back to Israel's easing of the blockade it imposed on Gaza in 2007.
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Palestinians shopping at the new al-Andulusia mall in Gaza City on August 16, 2011. |
| Photo by: AP |
To circumvent the blockade, Palestinians built hundreds of underground tunnels crisscrossing the Gaza-Egypt border to bring in scarce consumer goods, as well as weapons. But after Israel started letting in more consumer goods a year ago, tunnels were freed up to bring in materials that remained severely restricted - such as raw construction materials.
The prices of raw materials dropped, sparking a flurry of construction. Some 150 of Gaza's estimated 700 tunnels are solely used for raw materials, said two tunnel traders who requested anonymity because they dodge Hamas taxes.
Some 120 tons of raw materials are typically hauled daily through a single tunnel, they said. The rush of new building materials pushed down concrete from a blockade high of 900 dollars a ton to 157 dollars. Gravel was 990 dollars, now it's 28 dollars .
Restrictions on exports and imports make some construction projects, including factories, unfeasible. Investors are instead undertaking projects that target domestic consumers, such as the al-Andulusia mall that opened in July.
The 4 million dollar, three-story shopping center, is a humble operation by global standards. It has a large supermarket and an assortment of clothing and shoe shops. The third floor - a future cinema - hasn't opened yet.
For many Gazans, whose lives have stalled in fighting and the blockade, the novelty is apparent. On a recent visit to the al-Andalusia mall, two women clutched the escalator's rubber grip, giggling and shrieking as they rode up to the second floor. Another woman stared at the escalator in fright, unsure how to get on.
At another newly constructed area, parents sip coffee as their children play on swings at a specially built private play garden. A series of small, beachside bungalows in Gaza City hug the shore where the well-off can spend summer days. Cafes and gift shops line the summer getaway. White tents are strewn on the sand. Entrance costs about 3 dollars a person, unaffordable for most large Gaza families.
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when's the next election - fix the situation
Why there is no "Gazan spring"?, because the know it would be like Damascus or Hama,Tehran or Isfahan no different between Assad Ahmadinijad and Haniyah, that why!
to stop bombing schools
Then why continue blockading Gaza? It seems that a growing middle class would serve Israel's ends.
2 reasons: war with Israel and perhaps Egypt and birth rate. People will lose interest in hamas as they will never be able to feed themselves without the UN and military victory over Israel has not happened and never will. Military debacle, unemployment and a bitter population is all that hamas can bring. Haneyah may find himself at the end of the same rope as Assad.
Resentment toward Hamas grows among Gaza's budding middle class there was a time - live called worth living ... maybe ... this time is ''missing''
Hamas is firing rockets into Israel to please Iran and Syria. I believe that the Israeilis must retaliate from both countries not from the poor Gazan people.
There is alway small minority in any circumstances that have good life but this do not change reality
did they come up when we have been pounding the brains out of them and reduced them to live in ghettos. Did our policy of oppression and starvation not work out well. Remove bibi. This was your question?
When the Qur'an is the"constitution" the foreign and domestic politic and the imam is the minister,that is what you get.Why should Gaza be any different from Damescus Tripoli,or Tehran.The Arabs always have to choose between religious corruption and secular corruption.Assad's Mubarak's Gadhafi's and Ahmadinijad's friends are the rich one the rest the poor without any freedoms.It was like that in the 7th century and it is like that today.
But their behavior since those elections has been anything but democratic. The Hamas "government" is in the middle of its sixth year of a four-year elected term. When taking over Gaza, they eliminated all political opposition by wither throwing them off tall buildings or shooting them in the kneecaps, rather than let them sit in opposition. That's pretty much a description of siezing power, don't you think? In the meantime, their term of office expired a year and a half ago and no elections are in sight... in fact, even a provisional caretaker government can't be agreed upon between Fatah and Hamas. Might I remind you that Adolf Hitler, Benito Mussolini, Francisco Franco, Juan Peron and Hugo Chavez were all elected--were their actions after election democratic? Democracy is a living, breathing, continuous organism, not a static snapshot of a single moment in time. Even if the election of a particular person or party was democratic, but their subsequent actions were not, then that person or party is NOT democratic.
In a real democracy, armed groups do not and may not stand for election. None of the Israeli political parties is armed. None in the UK or the US or anywhere else. Hamas bullied their way into power and then behaved ruthlessly towards their political figures and the population in general. In real terms, they seized power.
Imagine if three quarters of Israelis were dependent on aid agencies for food. And it was policy.
Be serious.
it would be great if palestinians could be free from both israel and hamas or any religious fascism. they're stuck between a rock and a hard place. they should seek freedom from BOTH oppressors while they're fighting for freedom or they'll be screwed even if free from israel. no one is free if state and religion aren't separated.
good question. somehow i don't think mingling of religion and state in gaza would resemble norway. i was more thinking of poor iranians who were so happy to get rid of the oppressor shah, not knowing the fate awaiting them in their 'freedom' after their revolution.
"Nasrine wouldn't disclose her family name, not wanting to be seen criticizing the militant group." And repressive like Assad, Ahmadinejad or Ghaddafi... You got what you voted for, during Bush's grand idea of imposing democracy in those brutish domains.
why do all countries territories whatever, let small percentages of the population get very wealthy and benefit off of the collective people?!?? this is happening world wide, why?? we are Muslims and Christians, this is not our way!
and unfortunately when you elect a government that is more worried about eliminating the enemy than they are about the people they are responsible for, then the people really don't stand a chance.
Yassir Arafat and his wife Sufa got very rich while most pals went into the financial toilet. Things may not be perfect in the west bank but they have been better since Arafat died and Sufa went into exile.
How about electing people that openly declare the land will all for Israel, encourage the settlements and bomb populations ? what exactly do you call that ? Israel is not more moral...and far from it.
I remember as a student two world views. Left and right. The former believed in prosperity through peace and the latter believed in the reverse. In Gaza, as in many part of the world, there is neither peace nor prosperity. However, if one could be achieved, the other would follow.
For a downtrodden people whom many people claimed were starving, a middle class has emerged. Hallelujah, give thanks. G-d is Great.
most Gazans rely on UN handouts for food. not many, MOST.
Right?
im not a supporter of hamas, however i would like to point out that the west are all hypocrites. they push for free elections in countries whose goverments dont agree with the west, and they boycott freely elected governments that dont agree with the west. in other words, the west is picking the goverments not the people. why should syria have free elections and not bahrain and KSA? why are bahrain and KSA slapped on the wrist, but syria and libya and iran are sanctioned? i heard all sorts of horrrible things done in these countries that the media almost never hears of, or isnt allowed to hear of. although it was universally agreed that Husni mubarak was a dictator, israel showed support to keeping him in power. because he supports the western agenda. if democracy is really enforced worldwide, it will lead to the downward spiral of the western economies which are held uphigh by the second world countries' bribed, unelected, and corrupt leaders. the west feeds its economy on the developing and undeveloped country's misery. if these countris cut ties with the west and become self sufficient the Forbes top 100 will drop down. heres democracy for you guys.
An organisation like Hamas is chosen only once. Thats the problem! Nothing more nothing less. Right after they won the election they eliminated the opposition.
what happened was a dispute that escalated, it wasnt elimnation of opposition. whatever hamas did to fateh in gaza, fateh did to hamas in west bank.
If the west cut the third world loose, the west would not fail. But, the 3rd world would starve, make war for ever scarce resources including water and starve some more while being wiped out by aids and other epidemics. The reason hamas, Syria and Iran are sanctioned is their support of terrorism as well as their incredible brutality.
You leave out the essential factor: Hamas was and still is an armed group, a terrorist faction, and dedicated explicitly to the destruction of a neighbouring state. They are not in any sense democrats. They were not given a chance just as the IRA in Northern Ireland were not given a chance, just as armed groups elsewhere are not allowed into government.
If your cat gave crawled into your oven to give birth to a litter of puppies, would you call them bisquits? The objective of Hamas is to kill Israel. And you think it is supposed to be given a chance? By whom?
That's a good report to share with Israelis. There may be some rich people or a middle class. It would be naive not to expect Hamas to create it's own mid class. But the majority is living in poverty. They live upon aids, that Israel creates difficulties to reach. Those people's main concern is to bring bread to home. It's not Israel's existance that they care the most. It's survival. Israel, instead of gaining those crowd kills them. Are you nuts?
This is called being peaceful. I guess you are not familiar with the term.
The first luxurt shopping mall, the Gaza Mall, was opened a year ago. Last month a brand new 5-star hotel was opened, and another is well on the way. The hotel has a swimming pool of course, but I note that females are not allowed to use it, a nof in the direction of Hamas.
Israel and Egypt have not engaged in armed conflict since 1973 and have had a peace treaty for years. Hamas is dedicated to the destruction of Israel (read its Charter), launches terrorist attacks against Israelis, and is increasing its weaponry daily through its alliance with Israel's mortal enemy, Iran. Israel has never 'bombed' Gaza in such stark terms. It has responded to attack after attack on its civilians. It has sent endless amounts of aid into Gaza, which has kept the Gazans going very nicely. If Gaza needs more, why on earth don't the astonishingly wealthy Arab states like Saudi Arabia do a job of bankrolling the Strip, putting pressure on Hamas to disappear, and creating a situation in which the Gazans and Israelis can live side by side without rockets being fired into Sderot and Ashdod every night?