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Hamas Allegedly Taxes Poor, Robs Banks To Fund Itself

First Posted: 06/14/10 06:12 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 05:10 PM ET

Mideast Israel Palestinians

By Ashley Bates

GAZA CITY, Gaza -- On a hot day in early April, men and school-age boys dig for stones and pieces of brick in the crumbling ruins of the Erez Industrial Zone. This former settlement housed Israeli and Palestinian textile, clothing and furniture factories that employed 4,000 Gazans before Israel's 2005 unilateral disengagement. The raw materials now scavenged from the Erez rubble are largely forbidden under the Israeli blockade, yet desperately needed for construction projects across Gaza.

Three months ago, when the scavenging industry at Erez was attracting more than 1,000 workers and at least 50 teams of traders, the Hamas government declared it public property and imposed a fee of 30 shekels ($8) per ton of rocks collected. Last month, after traders resisted the fee, police bulldozers sealed off the roads and donkey paths and impounded the trucks of traders caught without receipts.

"The government is living off the blood of the people," said one trader, whose anger was shared by many. "This area had a good income for a huge number of [people] who did not have jobs. Now we have almost no profits." This trader had been earning 1,000 shekels a day and now earns about 100 shekels a day. He is the sole breadwinner for a big extended family and had been unemployed before buying and selling materials from Erez six months ago.

Many traders have slashed the rates they pay to scavengers, citing the new Hamas fees. Nasha'at Hamad, 17, and his 14-year-old brother together used to earn about 300 shekels per day collecting about one ton of rocks. In poverty-stricken Gaza, this is a sizable income for unskilled laborers. Most taxi drivers earn 80 to 100 shekels for 12 hours of work. After Hamas imposed the fees at Erez, the brothers together brought home only 50 to 70 shekels a day. Both left school two years ago to scavenge at Erez because their family had no other source of income. "The situation is a disaster," said Nasha'at Hamad. "It's very hard work. You have to wake up at 5 a.m. Sometimes we go home sick."

At Erez and across Gaza, Hamas has introduced new fees that directly impact ordinary civilians, including a 25 percent tax on suppliers of cheap petrol smuggled from Egypt, a 20-shekel application fee for the thousands of Gazans seeking teaching jobs and a 900-shekel vocational license for small businesses.

Analysts suspect that Hamas is struggling to finance its bloated bureaucracy, which has grown from about 20,000 employees in 2008 to 30,000 employees, about half of whom are connected to the military or police. Over the past few months, Hamas -- which once prided itself on always paying salaries on time, in contrast to its Fatah rivals -- has paid the salaries of its teachers and doctors more than two weeks late.

In another apparent sign of financial trouble, Hamas policemen raided a local bank on March 29 and forcibly seized $270,000 from the account of a Hamas-affiliated charity. The account had been frozen by the Fatah-ruled Palestinian Authority.

Economist analyst Omar Sha'aban said, "There is a financial crisis. There is a shortage of resources. It's very clear. Like any country in financial crisis, Hamas is going to the people. But they're not thinking about how to reduce their expenditure."

Sha'aban emphasized two key issues regarding the fees collected at Erez and elsewhere: how the money gets spent and whether the people make enough money to afford the fees. He also challenged the notion that Erez was legitimate government property. "[The ruins of the Erez factories] are nobody's property now," he said. "They should be used [by Hamas] in a moral way -- a government project to build schools and homes, for example -- not to pay for soldiers' salaries."

Ibrahim Al-Jaber, deputy minister at Hamas's Ministry of National Economics, said that 30 shekels per ton was a "reasonable, minimum fee" and consistent with Hamas's policy of charging fees for extracting metals and stones from any destroyed building in Gaza. "The demand is very high for these resources, and the traders are selling these materials and getting good profits," he said. Al-Jaber declined to estimate the amount of money that Hamas has collected in fees at Erez, but said it was a "limited amount that doesn't deserve to be mentioned."

However, rough estimates of Hamas's financial gain can be surmised from the reports of the traders themselves. For example, one novice team of three traders paid about $7,600 in Hamas fees over a 15-day period. If 50 other teams paid similar amounts, this would mean that Hamas collected $760,000 in one month's time at Erez. Sha'aban estimates that the Hamas government requires about 20 million shekels ($5.4 million) a month to pay employees' salaries, which represents 70 to 80 percent of the government's total monthly budget.

In addition to enduring the burden of backbreaking labor at a much lower salary than before, the rubble scavengers at Erez worry derelict structures will collapse on top of them or that Israeli troops guarding the border will shoot at them. Workers report that Israeli snipers have fired warning shots in their direction. Others report that Israeli soldiers have killed their donkeys and horses. On March 20, Israeli troops raided the buffer zone near the border and arrested 17 rubble workers, some of whom remain in Israeli prisons.

Workers at Erez are now concerned about a seemingly positive development: pervasive but unconfirmed rumors that Israel might soon allow construction materials to enter Gaza. If true, these materials would provide great relief to the besieged coastal enclave, but would also eliminate these workers' only source of income. Workers report that some traders have stopped buying from them because they expect cheaper and better quality stones to come from Israel. Some suspect that this is a "trader trick" aimed at forcing workers to sell their materials at cheaper rate.

The number of people scavenging at Erez has sharply declined from about 1,000 in mid-March to only about 200 workers during the first week of April. While more than 50 traders bought from Erez most afternoons, now only a dozen or so come every day. Sha'aban attributes this sharp drop in business to three primary factors: security concerns, the rumored opening of the border for construction materials and the depletion of available raw materials at Erez. He added, "Of course the [new Hamas fees] are another reason because maybe people find that it's not profitable enough to be worth the risk."

One trader Abu Bassam Shaheen, who owns a metal-working shop and has collected materials from many destroyed buildings in Gaza, said "it's a government right" to collect fees at Erez. He added, "This is a very hard situation that an animal would not accept. Sometimes kids bring stones from Erez and I don't need them, but I buy them because I feel so badly about their situation."

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By Ashley Bates GAZA CITY, Gaza -- On a hot day in early April, men and school-age boys dig for stones and pieces of brick in the crumbling ruins of the Erez Industrial Zone. This former settleme...
By Ashley Bates GAZA CITY, Gaza -- On a hot day in early April, men and school-age boys dig for stones and pieces of brick in the crumbling ruins of the Erez Industrial Zone. This former settleme...
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03:51 AM on 05/09/2010
"For example, one novice team of three traders paid about $7,600 in Hamas fees over a 15-day period."

That is 950 tons of rocks shifted by a novice team of 3?

This girl has her facts wrong.
02:53 AM on 05/09/2010
"Hamas government declared it public property and imposed a fee of 30 shekels ($8) per ton of rocks"
"This trader had been earning 1,000 shekels a day and now earns about 100 shekels a day."

Something does not add up. To have his income cut by 90%, this trader must have been selling hundreds of tons of rocks per day at a very small margin of profit.
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06:33 PM on 04/27/2010
There's nothing in this story that could justify the 'robs banks' accusation in the headline, save the mention of Hamas forcing a bank to unfreeze funds belonging to Hamas, held in accounts frozen at the order of the unelected Mahmoud Abbas regime in the West Bank. That is far from theft, particularly because in the standoff between Hamas and Abbas, it is the former which posesses a popular mandate to govern. The latter has none.
06:50 PM on 04/15/2010
Hamas crude propaganda makes Soviet agitprop sounds like a sober peer reviewed PhD dissertation....lol
Here's some stuff pitched to gullible Palestinian children with a swarmy smile::" .. " ask the Jews, did they ever live in time period better than the one they live under Islam?
Ahhh, yeah.
Then comes the usual Islamist sighing for the former glories of imperialist conquests " "Do you remember Andalus ( Moorish Spain and Portugal) This Andalus will return one day "
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5S995NCeaUg&feature=related

One doesn't to laugh or cry.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Middle Blue
What's a micro-bio?
04:01 PM on 04/15/2010
When it comes to HAMAS and their operations, I wonder how many people we can't hear from because they're already dead.

It is shocking to see so many posts supporting HAMAS.

Why do people think that organization can even be supported?

What could one gain by supporting an organization which, if given the chance, would kill them?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Zanubiyah
03:55 PM on 04/15/2010
Doesnt the Israelis tax the people of the West Bank for the goods that enter and exit thier borders as a middle handler?"

I am not sure how this 'blood money' is any different when an occupier is making it harder for the Palistinians to survive as a group by taking thier resourses, then taxing, or selling the stolen resourse back to them.

I am not saying that Hamas is right, I am just adding a balance to the story, because all taxes are euqally burdensome on the Palistinians, including the Israeli taxes imposed on them.
07:02 PM on 04/15/2010
Typically, in your zeal ( pun intenede) to support any fudnamnetalist entitty you completely ingnore the information contained in the article. Try reading the article at least.
Here's a quote Sha'aban... challenged the notion that Erez was legitimate government property. "[The ruins of the Erez factories] are nobody's property now," he said.
"They should be used [by Hamas] in a moral way -- a government project to build schools and homes, for example -- not to pay for soldiers' salaries."
03:47 PM on 04/15/2010
When Palestinian voters elected Hamas in 2006, organization spokesman Hamed Bitawi declared: “The Quran is our constitution, Muhammad is our prophet, jihad is our path, and dying as martyrs for the sake of Allah is our biggest wish.”

It's funny how much they cling to life tho' Not sure it's very sincere. Probably meant for the gullible masses, not the Hamas faithful. Those just tend to sit out the fighting in bunkers under Gaza hospital.
05:03 PM on 04/15/2010
Now you're just getting redundant and boring.
06:58 PM on 04/15/2010
Glad to hear you finally agree with facts I posted.
Thus, no repetition would be required in the future.
11:03 AM on 04/15/2010
It seems that Hamas is getting less money nowadays from their puppet master in Syria and Iran. Besides, all of it goes towards buying shining new weapons.
Who cares about the people.
11:08 AM on 04/15/2010
You'd think they could buy a decent rocket or two by now.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TheLonelyGod
The oncoming storm
11:13 AM on 04/15/2010
For what Hamas needs them to do, they are decent enough.
11:15 AM on 04/15/2010
OH, they have they have. Don't worry. Who needs housing and food when the money can be better stent on RPGs and Grad mortars.
I am sure Iranian money comes with a requirement that not a penny of it must spent on the people of Gaza. All of it must be spent to buy weapons or pay tfreedom fighting Hamas heroes.
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EnMasse
10:43 PM on 04/27/2010
I think they probably get those weapons for free. Bless those sweet souls in Iran and Syria. Finally - countries that actually care about putting some screws to this barbaric Israeli occupation.

And Oleg - you may care to read the article instead of letting your eyes just drape over the bits that you would like to see. Who cares about the people? Obviously those who have over the years paid their teachers their salaries on time - unlike the corrupt and enormously wealthy Fatah we support over on the West Bank.

Can't believe the Israelis let a reporter into Gaza. But maybe she is a PR agent for them - I mean, being accused of robbing banks when they took their illegally-frozen assets... And then the HORROR: governments tax their people! Who knew such nefarious, crooked activities were going on in that outdoor prison that is Gaza?? We are NEVER taxed here in the USA! Especially not the poor!

Eye roll.
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atlantis1star
SGC Atlantis
10:56 AM on 04/15/2010
Now that Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas's forces lost control of the Gaza strip to the Islamist Hamas group, Bush Now tells Israel he made a mistake and to give Fatah the money they have been holding up from the Palestinians and stop trying to starve them to death.

It is really screwed up now that Hamas is building strength and gaining world support just like what happened in the failed Lebanon invasion and Hezbollah win.

We sure made the Middle-East worse with the Bush Neocon New World Order mis-steps in Iraq, Gaza, and Lebanon. Defeat after defeat.

Israel turned Gaza into a five mile wide prison camp. Israel built walls, guard towers, and controls who comes and goes into the West Bank. They cut off food and only allow three hours of electricity and water a day.

Yea, I’m one of whatever they call Obama too.


I would pick up a gun and fight too if I was forced to live like that.
11:07 AM on 04/15/2010
Um, there is a border with Egypt as well. The other bastion of democracy and human rights in the area.
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EnMasse
10:59 PM on 04/27/2010
Supported entirely by the US and Israel and NOT by Egyptians, I might add.

Your name is awfully descriptive.
11:11 AM on 04/15/2010
"Bush Now tells Israel..."
Bush?!!
Ehhh, any access to news sources in that basement?
07:48 AM on 04/15/2010
Great article, manages to get all the way through and hardly even mention the Israeli imposed blockade - collective punishment illegal under international law, imposed by Bush/Condi because the Palestinians didn't exercise their democratic rights in a way that pleased US/Israel.

Amnesty International Report:
"ISRAEL/OCCUPIED PALESTINIAN TERRITORIES: SUFFOCATING: THE GAZA STRIP UNDER ISRAELI BLOCKADE"
http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/info/MDE15/002/2010/en

"More than 1.4 million Palestinian men, women and children are trapped in the Gaza Strip. Their daily lives are marked with power shortages, little or no running water or water of poor quality, and deteriorating health care. Mass unemployment, poverty and food insecurity exacerbate the impact of the Israeli blockade which was brought into force in June 2007. In this campaign digest Amnesty International calls on the Israeli government to immediately lift the blockade; return all arable land inside Gaza; agree a fair fishing zone and ensure that Israeli security forces use force only when necessary to counter genuine threats."
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TheLonelyGod
The oncoming storm
09:43 AM on 04/15/2010
Does the Israeli blockade justify Hamas' actions? Are you defending them robbing their own people?
10:53 AM on 04/15/2010
It sounds like fairly classic taxation, and rather moderate at that. I do understand that the economic conditions in Gaza does make it difficult for people in the west to understand. And the author's slipping in the bank seizure without any explanation is rather disingenuous. Perhaps the Tea party needs to open a Gaza branch.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
StCuthbert
Anytime the mods are ready...
10:24 AM on 04/15/2010
Blockades are not considered collective punishment.
02:25 PM on 04/15/2010
Maybe not by you.

On the other hand, Justice Goldstone, zionist jew, who said in 2000 "bringing war criminals to justice stems from the lessons of the Holocaust"
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Goldstone#Family_life_and_religious_background

also said:

"74. The conditions of life in Gaza, resulting from deliberate actions of the Israeli armed forces and the declared policies of the Government of Israel – as they were presented by its authorized and legitimate representatives – with regard to the Gaza Strip before, during and after the military operation, cumulatively indicate the intention to inflict collective punishment on the people of the Gaza Strip in violation of international humanitarian law.

78. The Mission is concerned by declarations made by various Israeli officials who have
indicated the intention of maintaining the blockade of the Gaza Strip until the release of Gilad Shalit. The Mission is of the opinion that this would constitute collective punishment of the civilian population of the Gaza Strip.

1309. The Mission has considered the question of military security. As serious as the situation that arises when rockets and mortars are fired on or near border crossings may be, the Mission considers that it does not justify a policy of collective punishment of the civilian population of the Gaza Strip."

http://www2.ohchr.org/english/bodies/hrcouncil/specialsession/9/FactFindingMission.htm
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rougebaisers
06:21 AM on 04/15/2010
And just how is this any different from what Israel of the good old USA does?
07:08 AM on 04/15/2010
good one bougebaisers . . I seem to remember that olmert had to resign over corruption charges, lieberman has corruption charges to face . . . in fact quite a lot of israeli polticians seem to have had corruption charges brought against them or are pending . . .
08:02 AM on 04/15/2010
Indeed but the article title is vastly misleading. If you actually read the article it's about the implosion of the economy because of the Israeli siege and EU/US funding being withheld, and the collapse of the private sector with the Hamas government trying to step in with new jobs.

Governments impose taxes, nothing new here. They broke into a bank to recover their own money - in the middle of a financial crisis,

Some of that other corruption, among people who are awash with money compared to Gazans:

"Israel faces corruption 'epidemic'"
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/6276071.stm

"Former Jerusalem mayor arrested in corruption probe"
http://www.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/meast/04/15/israel.corruption/
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Middle Blue
What's a micro-bio?
03:57 PM on 04/15/2010
ROFL!

If people just across the border of Mexico shot rockets at US soil, we'd wipe them out so quickly that there would barely be news footage.

That's what is different.
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EnMasse
11:04 PM on 04/27/2010
Oh, so different. Mexico is not occupied, starved, and blockaded by us. And if they were, you can bet the international community would pretty much side with their rockets.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Wisdo
semantics shamantics
05:05 AM on 04/15/2010
Those dirty Hamasters! They should get their money from the same place Israel does, the US taxpayer.

Oh and colonial land grabs.
11:01 AM on 04/15/2010
Oh these pesky Jews grabbing land in Judea .
Only descendants of Arab imperial wars should be allowed to grab land in Judea Samaria ...
We shall never forget --any land conquered in colonialist Jihads belongs to Arabs for eternity.
Most Hamas-voting Palestinaisna gree, obviously.
Hamas.Charter
Israel....is an Islamic Waqf throughout all generations and to the Day of Resurrection.
This is the status [of the land] in Islamic Shari’a, and it is similar to all lands conquered by Islam by force, This has prevailed since the commanders of the Muslim armies completed the conquest of Syria and Iraq"
Lovely stuff this. Very ennobling and progressive... Yeah right....
11:22 AM on 04/15/2010
"Arab imperial wars"

Precious. LOL
08:46 PM on 04/14/2010
Wow, big surprise-- terrorist fundamentalists are also corrupt.
Hamas actually charges Gazans exorbitant fees to use its tunnels to Egypt!
It is the same religious morality that allows Taliban to refine and sell heroin, but be morally opposed to sales of beer.
01:06 AM on 04/15/2010
You sir*
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02:59 AM on 04/15/2010
Wow, big surprise - heroin production was almost irradicated under Taliban control. Now that our puppet Karzai is "in control" Afghanistan is a major producer. Reminds me of the Viet Nam era "Golden Triange" and Air America.
03:11 AM on 04/15/2010
Religious miltant fundies like Taliban and Hamas are all the same-- their morality changes with prevailing wind. And all of it is fully expalined and justified in their holy books, naturally. Taliban destopreyd the poppy becuase it was against Korsn, and now they're happily refine and sell the poppy becuase...ah.... I am sure they found an excuse in some holy book.
But beer and music ..... no way!!!!
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Khirad
08:28 PM on 04/14/2010
'Dipping' into funds of their charity? Wait till they get their own bonyads. Then the transformation would have been complete. I neither have any compunction in being highly critical of Israel, nor Hamas.
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yatahayaz
07:08 PM on 04/14/2010
Bottom line: The Palestinians voted for these people. They made their bed.
08:06 PM on 04/14/2010
Yeah, but remember that hamas engaged in a ruthless campaign of intimidation before the election. Shooting fatah men in the kneecaps and throwing them off buildings.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Wisdo
semantics shamantics
05:07 AM on 04/15/2010
no they did that after the election - which they won, and having won Fatah (aided discreetly by Israel and the US) tried to retain power by force.
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courtb
02:22 AM on 04/15/2010
They didn't make this bed. I really feel for the Palestinians who were looking for some sort of counter balance to the corruption of Fatah. Hamas did not live up to who they were supposed to be, in the eyes of the Palestinians. And then they kicked out Fatah, who should have been the balance to them.
10:31 AM on 04/16/2010
How exactly do you know this? I really hope you live there if you're making such an assumption.