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PA and Hamas Vying for Support of Palestinian Clans

The re-emergence of the clans makes them significant players in the Gaza Strip
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Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, left, and Ismail Haniyeh from Hamas, right, raise their linked arms as they move through the crowd in Gaza City in 2007.
Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, left, and Ismail Haniyeh from Hamas, right, raise their linked arms as they move through the crowd in Gaza City in 2007. (AP Photo/Hatem Moussa)

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The Palestinian Authority (PA) and Hamas are competing to win the support of large Palestinian clans in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. The competition comes in the wake of the talk about handing control over the Gaza Strip to local clans after the removal of Hamas from power.

The PA and Hamas understand that the backing of the clans is crucial for maintaining their control over the Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. That’s why PA and Hamas leaders have always treated the large families and their leaders with utmost respect. In some instances, clan leaders were elevated to the unofficial position of supreme judges and arbitrators, replacing the official judiciary and law enforcement of the PA and Hamas.

The Israel-Hamas war has undermined the Iran-backed terror group’s grip over the Gaza Strip. Hamas is no longer functioning as a de facto government in the coastal enclave, and most of its security and civilian institutions are in a state of paralysis.

The assumption among some Israelis and Palestinians is that the decline in Hamas’s power would pave the way for the re-emergence of the clans as significant players in the Gaza Strip.

According to sources in the Gaza Strip, a few clans affiliated with the PA and its ruling Fatah faction have begun challenging Hamas over the past few weeks. These clans, known to have dozens of armed members, began operating their own law enforcers in some towns and refugee camps in the Gaza Strip to prevent looting and other acts of anarchy and lawlessness. At least one clan was reportedly involved in escorting some of the trucks loaded with humanitarian aid that entered the Gaza Strip through Egypt and Israel.

Alarmed by the possibility that some of the families in the Gaza Strip may start cooperating with Israel or the PA, Hamas leaders have been pressuring clan leaders to declare their support for the terror group publicly. Indeed, a statement issued by several clans in the Gaza Strip recently announced that they stand behind Hamas and the Palestinian “resistance” groups.

The PA leadership, for its part, has also been working to gain the backing of the clans, especially those in the Gaza Strip. In recent weeks, PA officials in Ramallah have been exerting pressure on the leaders of several clans in the Gaza Strip not to cooperate with the Israel Defense Forces or Hamas.

On March 4, 2024, the PA’s official media reported that “Palestinian tribes have renewed their pledge of allegiance and support for the sole, legitimate, political leadership represented by President Mahmoud Abbas.

According to the report, the “tribes stressed their rejection of [Prime Minister Benjamin] Netanayhu’s plan, which aims to form a civil administration in the Gaza Strip on the day after the war.”

On the same day, PA Prime Minister Mohammad Shtayyeh, in opening remarks at the weekly meeting of the Palestinian cabinet, thanked Palestinian clans in the Gaza Strip for allegedly refusing to cooperate with Israel.

How many clans signed on to the statement pledging allegiance to the 88-year-old Abbas is unclear. It is also not clear whether these clans represent a large portion of the Palestinian public in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. A single clan could have more than one leader – some affiliated with the PA and others with Hamas.

What is clear, however, is that the Palestinian clans will be required to play some role in the administration of the Gaza Strip after the war. Hamas may try to hide behind the clans as part of an attempt to return to power. Similarly, the PA is expected to step up its pressure on the clans of the Gaza Strip to distance themselves from both Israel and Hamas.

Palestinians have been calling the PA-Hamas struggle to control the clans harb al-ashaer (war of the tribes). Both the PA and Hamas seem aware that their success is tied to the clan leaders.

Khaled Abu Toameh

Khaled Abu Toameh is an award-winning Israeli Arab journalist, lecturer, and documentary filmmaker specializing in Palestinian affairs. A Senior Distinguished Fellow at the Gatestone Institute and a Fellow of the Jerusalem Center for Security and Foreign Affairs, he has also worked as a senior producer for NBC in the Middle East and has reported on events in the West Bank and Gaza for several media outlets.
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