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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Saturday, October 24, 2015
A new Palestinian leader will emerge from a new intifada, says top Hamas member
Ahmed Yousef calls on Palestinian youth to lead their struggle for statehood but says declarations of third uprising are premature

A file photo shows senior Hamas member Ahmed Yousef at a press conference (Facebook)
Ahmed Yousef calls on Palestinian youth to lead their struggle for statehood but says declarations of third uprising are premature

A file photo shows senior Hamas member Ahmed Yousef at a press conference (Facebook)
The leader
of a new intifada will come from among Palestinian youth currently
leading popular unrest across Israel and the Occupied Palestinian
Territories, a senior member of Hamas has told Middle East Eye.
“The youth is leading everybody at the moment, with no particular person
in charge,” said Ahmed Yousef, a former political advisor to the deputy
chair of Hamas’ political bureau Ismail Haniyeh.
“I believe that once this [popular unrest] has grown into an intifada
they will find someone among the youth who will create a name for
themselves. The [Palestinian] people will follow whoever that is and
everybody will join from all the political factions.”
Yousef is seen by Hamas as a gateway to the West and regularly receives
international delegations in Gaza. He spent many years living in the
United States before returning to Gaza in 2005, following Israeli
withdrawal from the Palestinian enclave.
The 65-year-old is now head of the Palestinian Institute for Conflict
Resolution and Governance in Gaza, after serving Hamas in numerous
senior positions and remains an influential figure within the movement.
Speaking to MEE by phone on Thursday, Yousef urged Palestinians not be
“stuck in the mindset” of looking for leadership from the current crop
of politicians. He said it was time for the younger generation of
Palestinians to take control of the struggle for statehood.
While many commentators have described violence gripping Israel and
Palestine – 50 Palestinians and eight Israelis have been killed in
October – as the beginning of a new intifada, Yousef said it was still
too early to declare a third Palestinian uprising.
The last intifada, which lasted for five years and ended in 2005, saw
the deaths of over 3,000 Palestinians and more than 1,000 Israelis.
'Three stages' to an intifada
Yousef argued that there were three stages that must be completed before an intifada could be said to have begun.
“Now we have popular unrest – this is stage one,” he said. “Maybe after a
couple of months, if more people get involved, it will spread more
inside [Israel] and we will move to stage two. The second stage will be
when all the political factions will be part of it and organise it.”
“The third stage is finding a leader – someone who can represent all the
factions, nationalist and Islamist groups. This person needs to be able
to articulate a vision for what we would like to achieve out of an
intifada.”
Yousef has a long history of being an independent voice within Hamas.
His view that an intifada has not started goes against other senior
members, who as recently as 20 October declared the start of a new uprising.
The latest spike in violence has seen numerous knife attacks by
Palestinians against Israelis. While some elements of Hamas have
expressed support for knife attacks, Yousef said “this is not a Hamas
tactic”.
He did not criticise knifings, however, and instead sought to explain
the political and social context that he believes is causing them.
“What we are seeing are desperate, humiliated people using the only tool
available to them,” he said. “They don’t have any other means to defend
themselves. There have been many non-violent initiatives for years but
perhaps this hasn’t been very effective.
“Perhaps the only thing Palestinians have been left with is a knife, a
digger, a car. These attacks are a message to the international
community that ‘We are the Palestinians still suffering occupation and
we need the world to do something’.”
Videos of Palestinians attacking Israelis with knives have brought
widespread condemnation. It comes after international support for the
Palestinian cause soared in the wake of Israel’s brutal assault on the
Gaza Strip last summer.
Yousef was unconcerned that knife attacks may negatively impact
Palestinian image in the international community. He said that social
media had allowed people to gain independent insight into the conflict
in a way not possible in the past.
Social media 'breaking down barriers'
“The Israelis are used to controlling the narrative of the conflict,” he
said “Today social media breaks down the barriers and people are able
to hear the Palestinian narrative. I do believe people understand the
level of suffering we are going through.”
Viral videos of Palestinian attacks have been matched by ones carried out by Israelis, including footage of a recent mob attack on an Eritrean asylum seeker.
Yousef said the latest unrest was sparked by Israeli settler violence,
pointing to the attack on a Palestinian home in the West Bank that saw a
toddler burned to death.
He argued that a third intifada could be avoided if Israel “disciplined
the settlers and genuinely sought to find a political solution to the
conflict”. He called on the international community to intervene and
“tell Israel enough is enough and the Palestinians should have their own
state”.
Yousef warned that in Gaza, which Hamas has ruled since 2006, an
unemployment rate of over 60 percent among young people was turning the
enclave into a “pressure cooker” of frustration that was ready to burst.
“Hamas can’t do that much for the people, as long as there is occupation
and siege,” he said. “We can’t do anything to serve this new generation
to make their lives better.”
Yousef said he was not worried Palestinians in Gaza would turn their
anger against Hamas, arguing that locals “know it is Israel who is
behind their suffering”.
“The people are angry with the Palestinian Authority too, who have not
done anything to improve the lives of people in Gaza. They are also
angry at Egypt – they think that Egypt is also part of the problem,” he
said, referring to how Cairo has maintained a blockade on Gaza in
conjunction with Israel.
Amid a range of problems facing Gaza, in recent months the Islamic State
group appears to have emerged in the enclave, claiming a spate of
rocket and car bomb attacks.
Yousef said that the ability for IS to recruit Palestinians was down to the Israeli siege on Gaza.
“It is easier for these people to recruit when there are no jobs. This
makes it possible for them to brainwash the people in a very negative
way,” he said.
However, Yousef was unconcerned by the IS threat, which he said was being handled by Hamas.
“[IS] is here [in Gaza] but they are limited in number,” he said. “These
people [IS] are still under control - they know the wrath of Hamas.
“I don’t think any of them will dare to do anything other than maybe
firing the occasional rocket to give the impression they are there. I
don’t think they can do anything to harm the stability and security of
Gaza.”

