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Gaza's post-war governance uncertain as war rages

WHO will govern Gaza when Israel's military offensive against Hamas ends? After five weeks of fighting, the answer remains shrouded in confusion.

Hamas, a Palestinian Islamist group with an armed wing, has governed the coastal territory of about 2.4 million people since 2007 after which Israel placed Gaza under a strict blockade governing the movement of people and goods in and out.

Hamas had seized power that year following street battles with the Palestinian Authority (PA).

United States Secretary of State Antony Blinken said late last month that the PA should retake control of the Gaza Strip from Hamas, with international players potentially filling a role in the interim.

The PA has partial administrative control in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.

But in a meeting with Blinken earlier this month, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas said the PA could only assume power in Gaza if a "comprehensive political solution" is found for the decades-old Israel-Palestinian conflict encompassing the West Bank, east Jerusalem and the Gaza Strip.

Last Wednesday, Blinken again spoke of "Palestinian-led governance", and a Gaza "unified with the West Bank" under the PA.

Abbas, 88, who has led the PA for 18 years, is unpopular and has been powerless against the rapid expansion of Israeli settlements and military control in the West Bank and annexed east Jeru-salem.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who has long sought to sideline the PA, on Wednesday told Fox News his country does not plan to reoccupy Gaza.

Israel had occupied Gaza in 1967 and remained there until completing a withdrawal in 2005, leaving local authority with the PA.

"We don't seek to govern Gaza. We don't seek to occupy it, but we seek to give it and us a better future," Netanyahu said.

Pushed on his plan for Gaza's future, he said the impoverished and blockaded territory must be "demilitarised, deradicalised and rebuilt".

Late Saturday, he ruled out a role for the PA leadership in ruling Gaza.

"There can't be an authority headed by someone who, over 30 days after the massacre, has yet to condemn the terrible massacre.

"There will have to be something else there. But either way, there will have to be our security control."

Israel launched its offensive in Gaza after Hamas fighters poured across the heavily militarised border on Oct 7, killing about 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and taking around 240 hostages.

Vowing to destroy the group, Israel retaliated with bombardment and a ground campaign that the Hamas Health Ministry in Gaza says has killed more than 11,000 people, mostly civilians including thousands of children.

"I do not believe that any actor will agree to govern Gaza in these circumstances," said Hasan Khreisheh, deputy speaker of the Palestinian Legislative Council, which has not met since 2007.

"No Palestinian, no sane person will agree to return to Gaza on an American or Israeli tank."

In a note, the International Crisis Group of analysts said there was "little hope" that the unpopular PA could return to Gaza on the back of an Israeli invasion and not be "treated as an enemy".

Last week, Lebanon-based senior Hamas official Osama Hamdan said the group will not accept a puppet government in the Gaza Strip and will remain in the territory.

"Our people will not allow the United States to impose its plans to create an administration that suits it and that suits the occupation (Israel)," he said.

The US, Britain, Israel and others have designated Hamas as a terrorist organisation.

Saleh al-Aruri, the group's exiled deputy chief of political affairs, has suggested that the future of Hamas cannot be divorced from that of the Palestinian people as a whole.

To "talk about post-Hamas is to talk about post-Palestine", he said.

On Friday, the Palestinian group Islamic Jihad, which is fighting alongside Hamas, vowed to reject any imposed power on the territory.

"If an international force were to be deployed to govern Gaza... the Palestinian people would consider it an occupying force and oppose it," said Mohammad al-Hindi, the group's deputy secretary-general.

Jamal al-Fadi, a political and international relations professor in the Gaza Strip, believes that even if the PA agreed to regain control of Gaza, it would not do so without a potential agreement with Hamas.

Without this, he said, the PA would "run the risk of a new civil war".

Majed al-Aruri, a human rights advocate based in Ramallah, in the West Bank, said everyone knows how the latest war started, "but no one knows how or on which terms it will end".


The writer is from AFP

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