http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/5784338/site/newsweek/
不知愤青们对这段怎么看?Mustafa是不是"巴奸"?
Israel's near-defeat of the Palestinian resistance has also stirred demands for reform. After 3,000 deaths (many of them civilians) and massive destruction, many Palestinians feel exhausted, beaten and skeptical about the logic of continuing the armed struggle. The few active guerrillas in the West Bank admit that attacking Israeli targets has become a near-insurmountable challenge. "The [724km security] wall has made it almost impossible for us to conduct operations," says Zacaria Zubeideh, the leader of the Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades in the Jenin refugee camp. Battered by Israel's harsh reprisals, ordinary Palestinians have turned their anger toward both the militants and the Palestinian Authority. After Hamas guerrillas fired Qassam rockets from the Gaza village of Beit Hanoun last June, Israeli troops occupied the village for 39 days, destroying houses, razing fields and shooting dead 21 people, both militants and civilians. "We're eating s―t from both sides," complains Mustafa al Refeiri, a farmer whose house and banana plantation were bulldozed by the Israelis during the siege. "If we tell Hamas not to fire, they'll shoot us. And if they fire their rockets, the Israelis will shoot us. We're caught between two fires, and the Palestinian Authority does nothing to help us."
而这改革阵营算不算"卖国"呢? 他们居然说巴武装份子"绑架"了West Bank和Gaza...
The reform campaign has been gaining momentum. Many Fatah members now acknowledge that Arafat's rule has been a disaster. In one of its sternest rebukes ever, a Palestinian Legislative Council investigation two weeks ago blamed the Palestinian leader and his associates for "anarchy" and for "failing to take a political decision to end it." Put together by a five-man panel―including both Fatah reformers and Arafat loyalists―the report demanded an end to Qassam rocket fire into Israel and other attacks, and the resignation of the members of Prime Minister Ahmed Qurei's government, and called for general elections. The panel lambasted the government for its paralysis in dealing with the armed militants who have held the West Bank and Gaza hostage for four years. "The main reason for the failure of the Palestinian security forces, and their lack of action in restoring law and order," says the report, "is the total lack of a clear political decision and no definition of their roles."
不知愤青们对这段怎么看?Mustafa是不是"巴奸"?
Israel's near-defeat of the Palestinian resistance has also stirred demands for reform. After 3,000 deaths (many of them civilians) and massive destruction, many Palestinians feel exhausted, beaten and skeptical about the logic of continuing the armed struggle. The few active guerrillas in the West Bank admit that attacking Israeli targets has become a near-insurmountable challenge. "The [724km security] wall has made it almost impossible for us to conduct operations," says Zacaria Zubeideh, the leader of the Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades in the Jenin refugee camp. Battered by Israel's harsh reprisals, ordinary Palestinians have turned their anger toward both the militants and the Palestinian Authority. After Hamas guerrillas fired Qassam rockets from the Gaza village of Beit Hanoun last June, Israeli troops occupied the village for 39 days, destroying houses, razing fields and shooting dead 21 people, both militants and civilians. "We're eating s―t from both sides," complains Mustafa al Refeiri, a farmer whose house and banana plantation were bulldozed by the Israelis during the siege. "If we tell Hamas not to fire, they'll shoot us. And if they fire their rockets, the Israelis will shoot us. We're caught between two fires, and the Palestinian Authority does nothing to help us."
而这改革阵营算不算"卖国"呢? 他们居然说巴武装份子"绑架"了West Bank和Gaza...
The reform campaign has been gaining momentum. Many Fatah members now acknowledge that Arafat's rule has been a disaster. In one of its sternest rebukes ever, a Palestinian Legislative Council investigation two weeks ago blamed the Palestinian leader and his associates for "anarchy" and for "failing to take a political decision to end it." Put together by a five-man panel―including both Fatah reformers and Arafat loyalists―the report demanded an end to Qassam rocket fire into Israel and other attacks, and the resignation of the members of Prime Minister Ahmed Qurei's government, and called for general elections. The panel lambasted the government for its paralysis in dealing with the armed militants who have held the West Bank and Gaza hostage for four years. "The main reason for the failure of the Palestinian security forces, and their lack of action in restoring law and order," says the report, "is the total lack of a clear political decision and no definition of their roles."