Published: Fri, November 15 2013
I have seen acres of breast-beating journalism about the Palestinian misery but never an examination into where all the donated money
has gone over the years. For this is certain: Arab donors and a
generous non-Arab world have donated many billions to the Palestinian
cause. Take the Gaza strip. It is a bloc of land 25 miles long and six miles wide on the eastern shore of the Mediterranean. Its
northern and eastern borders are Israel, its 11-mile southern border is
Egypt and its western border the glittering Med. Over the years since
the founding of Israel in 1948 literally billions of pounds have been
donated to help its people have a decent life. If
it had been invested shrewdly and well Gaza today could be a
mini-Monaco. It could have a deepwater freight port, a flourishing
fishing port and a leisure harbour crammed with the yachts of wealthy
visitors. It could have resort hotels on the sea and farms, ranches and
orchards in the hinterland producing nutritious food.
It has
nothing of these. It is a failed state of poverty, misery and violence.
So what happened to all that money? Well, a lot went on guns, explosives
for bombs and material to build rockets to launch at Israel. But the
bulk has certainly suffered the fate of most wealth in that neck of the
woods. It has simply been embezzled, not by Israelis but by Palestinians
and above all by their leadership cadres.
Yasser Arafat was the virtually unchallenged Palestinian leader for many years. He never had a visible salary above his modest earnings from the Palestinian government in his West Bank fiefdom. Yet
in his dotage he was strongly rumoured to be worth many hundreds of
millions of pounds. His wife Suha lived in luxury in a five-star Paris
hotel. As the Americans say: go figure. It is perfectly feasible
that after leading his people to failure and poverty even his colleagues
had had enough and slipped him a toxic cocktail.
The donations continue to flow in… and disappear.
The money has simply been embezzled by Palestinians and their leadership cadres
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