The Abandonment of Palestinians in Gaza
"For the past several days, our reporters and several of Gaza’s most prominent anti-Hamas activists have been subjected to an intense campaign of surveillance and intimidation by Hamas.""And we’re hearing about many activists who have been effectively placed under house arrest by Hamas. They’ve made it clear their number one goal is to prevent any anti-Hamas demonstrations from taking place in Gaza.""What the world doesn't really know, is that there is a strong opposition movement inside Gaza today that's developing against Hamas.""A lot of people are fed up from the war, fed up from Hamas's wrong choices, and they want to protest [demanding that Hamas disarm, and leave the Strip] in order to stop the war, to stop the Israeli attacks, and to rebuild Gaza.""[At least half of Gazans want Hamas out], so they can get a better future, a better life. [The same number were in retrospect] unhappy with the October 7 attacks."Hadeel Oueiss, editor-in-chief, Jusoor News"Hamas was much better prepared than we were [they were tipped off].""[Hamas has] the weapons, the force and the means to intimidate people. They threatened families and reportedly paid money to influential clan leaders to publicly announce that they would disown any family member who participated in t he demonstration.""[The opposition movement wants Hamas to disarm] so that reconstruction can begin ... [and] living conditions can improve."Mohammad Hussein Lafi, protest organizer
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| Members of Hamas cracking down on Gazans. Photo: Screenshot from X account of Ahmed Fouad Alkhatib |
"The situation in Gaza is very difficult. They are kidnapping people and threatening people. The level of terror is high.""There are fatwas calling for killing and fatwas declaring people infidels in the mosques, and calls saying the protest movement has been postponed.""Things are very difficult. Since the morning, they’ve been arresting people and kidnapping people from the streets. Things are very bad."Name withheld by request"[Hospitals across Gaza had been turned into] makeshift police stations, interrogation sites, and torture centers.""Families are being threatened, people placed under house arrest, and Hamas’s al-Qassam brigades [the forces responsible for October 7] have been fully mobilized to reinforce police and intelligence units with explicit shoot-to-kill order.""[The mainstream media has failed to report on the campaign] apparently because Israel is not involved – so no Jews, no news.""This is what the abandonment of Palestinians in Gaza looks like. Shame on all who stay silent in the face of jihadi, ISIS-like violence against the very people they claim to champion."Ahmed Fouad Alkhatib, humanitarian activist originally from Gaza, now living in the U.S."The fact that organizers announced the protest weeks in advance made it easier for Hamas to prepare, intimidate people, pressure families, and silence the movement before it reached the streets.""In Gaza, protest movements have often been more successful when they were organized quietly and appeared suddenly.""This time, the early announcement gave Hamas the time and pretext to suppress it."Ahed al-Hendi, senior fellow, Center for Peace Communications
To all Western media, including pro-Palestine outlets: right now, thousands of Palestinian civilians are taking part in massive anti-Hamas protests across the Gaza Strip. Stand with them. Carry their voices. Don't abandon them. Ihab Hassan |
Hadeel Oueis, a U.S.-Syrian-based journalist, editor of Arabic-language Jusoor News
reporting on Middle East news, has been informed by many dissidents in
Gaza through phone interviews that the mass protest dubbed "Day of Rage"
scheduled to take place on June 26, with the demand that Hamas disarm
and step down, had their plans crushed before they even took to the
streets. Although smaller protests elsewhere proceeded in some areas,
organizers were warned by the terror group that anyone among the
would-be demonstrators attempting to join would be subject to violent
reprisals.
One
of the protest group's organizers, Mohammad Hussein Lafi described his
arrival at a designated gathering point in central Gaza: it was already
filled with Hamas security forces openly displaying their weapons. He
was informed that cellphones had been confiscated from anyone suspected
of being part of the protest movement; some among them physically
assaulted and detained. A year earlier Lafi, a graduate of the Faculty
of Physical Education at Gaza's Aqsa University, was arrested by Hamas
accused of speaking out against the October 7 attacks among his friends.
He was "severely beaten and tortured during detention",
which convinced him that an end must come for Hamas's rule in Gaza.
With the scheduled protest deferred due to threats, a more discreet
'soft protest' took place on Friday at 10:00 p.m. that saw Gazans
banging pots and pans, and whistling for an hour from within
displacement camps and tents in response to an online call by
organizers. An ad hoc demonstration the following day independent of
organized plans took place by others.
A funeral procession nearby planned protest sites took place with mourners carrying signs reading "God willing, Hamas out", "We are not pawns", and chants of "enough with the destruction"
also took place. Hamas, according to Mustafa Asfour, a Gaza activist
living in the U.K. for four years and one of the June 26 demonstration
organizers, "launched a media campaign to discredit the movement, accusing it of betrayal and targeting anyone" participating.
In the days leading up to the planned protest, Hamas pressured prominent families "to hold press conferences denouncing the June 26 movement"';
pro Hamas media then circulated statements presuming to be the names of
major clans with the claims they opposed the protests. "Many
of these families later issued official statements saying they had
never released such declarations and rejecting the statements attributed
to them", explained Mustafa Asfour. Threatening phone
calls were received by families with warnings not to allow their
children to participate, and displaced people were informed anyone who
joined the protests would b e expelled from the camps.
NGO
silence, argued Asfour, has emboldened Hamas. He and others had reached
out, he explained, to Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch and the
Palestinian Center for Human Rights, drawing their attention to the
planned protests, warning against repression. Their efforts bore no
fruit. Other than for the Palestinian Center for Human Rights, no
response was ever received, but the Center's response was four lines to
say the "matter raised by you is under follow-up"; a stock, non-committal response.
Ms.
Oueis accuses Hamas of making everyday life for Gazans miserable
through aid diversion, heavy taxation and a harsh crackdown on dissent.
In "The worst days of hunger and lack of food in Gaza", she said, residents were interviewed who alleged that Hamas
"Hijacked every truck that came with food to Gaza, stored it in its own
storage, stole this aid that's coming from international organizations,
and kept it." The aid was handed out selectively "only to their soldiers", and pro-Hamas communities; those lacking a fighter in the family "won't get aid".
Hamas
"captured and arrested" close to 200 activists and dissidents since the
start of the ceasefire last fall, many accused of collaborating with
Israel; some tortured to death. One of Jusoor's reporters was arrested, beaten "very badly and left unable to walk. He's paralyzed because he made this coverage, anti-Hamas coverage from Gaza", emphasized Ms. Oueis. Her reporting team interviewed Gazans who were tortured for posting criticism of Hamas on Facebook.
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| Palestinian Hamas stand guard on the day of the handover of hostages held in Gaza since the deadly October 7 2023 attack, as part of a ceasefire and a hostages-prisoners swap deal between Hamas and Israel, in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip, February 22, 2025. REUTERS/Hatem Khaled/File Photo |
"Most of the Islamists of Gaza are pro-Hamas. Many deeply religious Muslims [are among those calling for change], a lot of the people who are going to protest and taking initiative in spreading the word against Hamas are religious Muslims [who reject Islamist politics.""[Some Gazans openly argue that] It's time to stop the wars between Israel and Palestinians, and it's time to have peace with Israel."Hadeel Oueiss, Jusoor News"[My motivation for helping with demonstrations is the] belief that civilians in Gaza have the right to express their voices peacefully, and to demand dignity, safety, and a better future.""[The world should know that they demand] accountability, and the right of people to have a voice in decisions affecting their lives.""I lost my home during the war, like many other families in Gaza. My experience, like many Palestinians here, has been shaped by years of difficult circumstances, but also by a strong sense of community and the desire to build a better future."Kareem Joudeh, 30, formerly of northern Gaza, displaced to central Gaza, working with World Central Kitchen
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| Hamas stand guard on the day of the release of Keith Siegel, a US-Israeli dual national hostage held in Gaza since the deadly October 7, 2023 attack, as part of a ceasefire and a hostages-prisoners swap deal between Hamas and Israel, in Gaza City, February 1, 2025. REUTERS/Mohammed Salem |
Labels: Gaza Dissidents, Hamas Crackdown, Hamas Terrorists, International Humanitarian Aid, June 26 Organized Protest, Jusoor News of the Middle East, Palestinian Deprivation




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