‘We don’t care who wins’: young Gazans see little choice in Israel’s elections
As reflections from the quayside lights twinkle in
the water below, the fisherman Maher Abu Hazima takes a five shekel coin from
his pocket and holds it face up. “That’s Netanyahu,” he says before turning it
over with a flick of his wrist. “And that’s Gantz. They’re the same.”
Demonstrating that his contempt for politicians is
not confined to the rivals for the premiership in Tuesday’s Israeli election,
he adds with a laugh: “Like Fatah and Hamas.”
Abu Hazima, 36, is standing on the weather-beaten
deck of a boat owned by the Abu Odeh family. It should be heading 15 nautical
miles into the Mediterranean to exploit a four-month-old extension to limits
enforced by live fire, arrests and seizures of boats that stray past the
Israeli navy’s vessels. The limit has been as low as three miles – compared
with 20 miles prescribed under the Oslo accords – so this ought to have been a
welcome respite.
But in blockaded Gaza, life is rarely that simple.
Starved of spare parts, which Israel says could be used by Hamas for military
purposes, the crew has had to stay in port while a mechanic cannibalises a
truck gearbox to repair the boat’s broken one.
Abu Hazima is not alone in seeing the leading
contenders in Tuesday’s election as two sides of the same coin. “We don’t care
who is in charge of Israel – even if it’s Trump,” says Issa Hassan, 22, who
runs a coffee stall on the edge of the beach in Gaza. “We’re like a ball being
kicked between the PA [Palestinian Authority] and Hamas and Israel. We are hit
by everybody.”
Ahmad Gharabli, 31, who runs the stall next door,
agrees gloomily that “it doesn’t matter” who is the Israeli prime minister
after Tuesday. “The Jews don’t like us,” he says. “They don’t care about us.”
Indifference to the election result is
understandable. None of the leading candidates has highlighted the impact of a
crippling 12-year economic blockade on Gaza, during which time unemployment has
increased to a historic high of 46.7% (compared with 15% in the West Bank).
Indeed, Gaza was largely marginal in the campaign until a few nights ago, when
Benjamin Netanyahu’s protection officers rushed him from an election podium in
Ashdod after two rockets were launched from the strip, probably by Islamic
Jihad.
The footage – gleefully seized on by both Benny
Gantz and Avigdor Lieberman, the former defence minister who is likely to play
kingmaker if there is a hung parliament – did not enhance the prime minister’s
“Mr Security” image. That, no doubt, is one reason why two days later,
Netanyahu declared he saw “no alternative” to another war in Gaza. Despite more
than 18 months of border protests, in which more than 200 Palestinians and one
Israeli soldier have been killed, Netanyahu and Hamas have pulled back several
times from the brink of an all-out war. Indeed, the public posture of
Netanyahu’s opponents has actually been fierier.
Gantz began his campaign for this year’s first
election, only five months ago, with a video boasting how he had bombed parts
of Gaza “back to the stone age” as military chief of staff in 2014. (A
Netherlands court will on Tuesday hold an initial hearing on a universal
jurisdiction case brought against Gantz by a Palestinian Dutch citizen, Ismail
Ziada, over the killing of six members of his family during the 2014 war.)
For this reason, some Palestinians in Gaza are less
convinced than Israeli liberals that Netanyahu’s removal would promise a better
future.
Ahmed Alfalit, 48, an ex-Hamas militant, graduated
from Hebrew University while serving 20 years of a life sentence for a stabbing
attack in which an Israeli settler was killed. Released in the prisoner swap
for Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit, he now runs a private college teaching Hebrew
and Israeli affairs. An avid follower of Israeli elections, he predicts
Netanyahu will keep the premiership and adds: “I don’t think Netanyahu will
start another war and I don’t think the others would put Gaza in a better
situation.”
‘I’m terrified of another war,’ said Roba Shabit,
21, an English trainer and student at Islamic University.
FacebookTwitterPinterest ‘I’m terrified of another
war,’ said Roba Shabit, 21, an English trainer and student at Islamic
University. Photograph: Ali Mousa/The Observer
Stallholder Gharabli thinks another leader would be
more “aggressive” that Netanyahu, who he thinks has “understandings” with
Hamas.
But Gazans are well aware that political substance
does not always match rhetoric. Noting Gantz’s bellicose warning in August that
a war led under his premiership against Hamas would be “the last”, Roba Shabit,
21, a student at Islamic University who teaches English to graduates, says:
“I’m terrified by the possibility of another war but I don’t think Gantz will
do that if he wins. I think he was appealing to voters on the right.” A point
in favour of this argument is that after the 2014 war, Gantz called for an
easing of Gaza’s dire economic conditions, in order to “tilt to hope over despair”
in Gaza and prevent a subsequent conflict.
This raises the question of whether Netanyahu’s own
Gaza threat last week – like the even higher profile one to annex the Jordan
Valley in the West Bank – was more than merely playing to the right before the
election. Hamas is increasingly restive over what it says is Netanyahu’s
repeated failure to fulfil promises brokered by Egypt, the UN and Qatar to ease
the blockade beyond the painfully incremental modifications enacted so far. The
extreme rightwing parties that Netanyahu would need for a coalition would
almost certainly prefer him to move militarily on Gaza than to order the
lifting of the blockade.
For now, the frustration of Gaza’s younger
generation is palpable – and not just among those who have risked life and limb
at the border fence each week. Nineteen-year-old Fadi Dorra has no job, but
earns 10 shekels a day helping out at Hassan’s beachside stall. Along with 48%
of Gazans polled last year, he would like to emigrate. “There’s no work here,
no income.” Asked who he would like to see lead Israel after the election on
Tuesday, Fadi says bluntly: “I don’t give a shit. I don’t care about it. We
need work. We need to live.”