New government fails to inspire Palestinians
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas swore in a new government on Thursday. But new Prime Minister Rami Hamdallah does not seem to be the talk of the town.
“The Palestinian street is apathetic now — they replaced Salam Fayad with another prime minister for personal reasons and not for national reasons,” Dia’ Bader, a 47-year-old father of three said. After leading the government for the past six years, Prime Minister Fayad resigned from his post. Fayad is widely credited in the West for cracking down on corruption and helping build the infrastructure of a future independent state.
Hamdallah comes from academia and has no government experience. For the past 15 years, he served as the head of Al-Najah University in Nablus, expanding the university’s research offerings and making it into the largest university in the West Bank.
Palestinian analysts said Abbas’ choice of Hamdallah is aimed at making the prime minister’s post less prominent.
“Choosing an academic means that the presidency institution wants to lessen the glamour of the prime minister’s post,” Professor Ahmed Rafiq Awad from Al-Quds University said.
A Fatah official, who asked to remain anonymous, said that Abbas wanted Fayad out after disputes intensified between them.
The source added that the resignation of the Finance Minister Nabil Qassis played a role in the latest crisis between the two leaders. Abbas himself was in Fayad’s shoes when he resigned as prime minister under the rule of late leader Yasser Arafat. Arafat was under pressure to appoint a prime minister as a part of reforms in 2003 and analysts believe this created a power struggle between the institutions of the presidency and the prime minister.
“I don’t think he can change much and I don’t expect our situation to improve,” Hanan Taha, a 50-year-old housewife said. “I don’t like to talk politics”, she added.
A 23-year-old university student, Wa’el Nazzal, also agreed that the new prime minister will not bring change to Palestinians, “The prime minister’s post is confined by Western polices so it doesn’t matter who is in the seat”, Nazzal said.
Bader, a private sector employee said, “If Obama was our prime minister he wouldn’t be able to achieve anything, particularly in the economic sector, because there are many restrictions. Without a political solution, nothing will be achieved,” he said.
In a restaurant near the old city of Ramallah, Ola Abu Shusheh, an employee at the Paltel telecommunications company was dinning with her friends when she said she doesn’t care about politics.
“The game is bigger than us and Hamdallah himself,” she said, adding “(Appointing) an academic who doesn’t have political experience is not a wise decision.”
Some worried that Hamdallah will not stand up to Abbas.
“He’s a yes-man who will be an executive and not a prime minister,” said a Palestinian-American businessman in Ramallah.
Not everyone agreed. Architect Omar Aboudi thinks Hamdallah wasn’t a bad choice but worries that his influence will be limited.
“He succeeded in running Al-Najah University and the university’s publicity says it became the first university in Palestine,” Aboudi said. “The problem is that the government is not fulfilling its commitments to people. The post became empty and limited to collecting taxes and giving out salaries.”
In an event in Nablus, Hamdallah said that his term would end in August when political parties Fatah and the Islamist Hamas, which controls Gaza, should agree on a reconciliation deal that will put Abbas at the head of a unity government and pave the way for new elections.
“I don’t think that the reconciliation talks have died. Along with the new prime minster, we can still work on a parallel path to achieve the reconciliation (between Fatah and Hamas),” Issam Baker, a member of the popular resistance said adding that the characters don’t matter as much as the policies of the new government.