Quantcast
Israel and Palestine

Building a Palestinian state

As peace talks fizzle, Palestinian PM Salam Fayyad marches peacefully toward statehood.

Salam Fayyad, West Bank
Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad addresses a news conference in the West Bank city of Ramallah on Aug. 30, 2010. (Abbas Momani/AFP/Getty Images)

RAMALLAH, West Bank — It was a couple of minutes after 10 on a Saturday morning when the Palestinian prime minister, Salam Fayyad, stepped onto a rainy stage in Bethlehem and voiced his support for the enemy.

Fayyad urged the people not to hold all Israelis responsible for the actions of some fanatical settlers. The day before some of them had burned down a Palestinian olive grove.

The audience at the Olive Harvest Festival clapped their hands cautiously. Maybe they were expecting something else: rallying cries, slogans, boasting. But their prime minister is not the inciting type.

Fayyad is the big unknown in the eternal haggling for a Palestinian state – and yet he is also the darling of the West. Some call him “Palestine’s great hope" and Israeli President Shimon Peres even compares him to Ben Gurion, Israel's iconic first prime minister. Although not elected, Fayyad is responsible for most Palestinian governance, at least in the West Bank.

Fayyad is now traveling a road that he hopes will lead him — without detours — to a state by next summer.

Even as Arab League leaders declare the peace talks to be over, Fayyad is thinking about building a future for what he hopes will someday be a sovereign nation.

“I think what we really should focus on right now is completing the task of getting ready for statehood,” he said in an interview with GlobalPost.

More governance equals more security equals better economy equals own state. This is more or less Fayyad’s vision — it is a cool calculation that doesn't include armed resistance, something he said has done little to benefit the Palestinian people. His government program, dated Aug. 25, 2009, is titled: “Palestine: Ending the occupation, establishing the state.”

To spread his message, Fayyad is often out in the field — a constant election campaign for someone who is not elected. Sometimes, in reverence to the much-beloved Yasser Arafat, the former Palestinian leader, Fayyad sports the checkered black and white headscarf.

“But this is not really his thing,” said a friend of his. “He can’t even tie that scarf properly.”

Fayyad is 58-years-old, married, and has three kids. Born in a village near Nablus, he later received his doctorate degree in economics from the University of Texas. He then worked for the World Bank and was the Palestinian representative to the International Monetary Fund until Arafat made him his secretary of finance.

While reforming the finances of the Palestine Liberation Organization, Fayyad earned a reputation as a man of action and integrity. Companions describe him as modest, determined and incorruptible.

This reputation has helped insure a constant flow of money to the Palestinian Authority from major donors. With that cash, Fayyad has managed to lubricate the wheels of Palestinian bureaucracy, making them turn more smoothly.

His government has so far launched more than 1,000 development projects, from basic infrastructure to a new airport near Jericho.

“A state,” Fayyad is fond of saying, “can’t emerge in a vacuum. It has to be built on strong institutions and services for the people.”

But despite all the success, technocratic Fayyad has not always been able to reach the hearts of his people. If elections were held right now, his party, The Third Way, would only garner 3 to 5 percent of the vote, according to Kahlil Shakili, one of the region’s most prominent pollsters.

The people, Shakili said, see Fayyad in a positive way. But more like a manager, a provider of services, than a leader of the national cause. He lacks the legitimacy and the legacy of the armed resistance of Fatah or Hamas, Shakili said.

Here, battle scars still count for more than an education.

In his office in Ramallah, Fayyad sat in a windowless room, cooled down to American temperatures. He lit a Winston cigarette; on the table there was an ashtray as big as a wheel.

“I am just doing my job,” he said, sinking deeper into the brown leather sofa.

In the beginning, the job was completely chaotic. After Hamas won the national elections in 2006 and subsequently chased Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian leader, and his Fatah party out of Gaza, the United States urged Abbas to from an emergency government.

http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/israel-and-palestine/101216/palestinian-state-peace-talks-fayyad