Ghassan Doughlas at a demonstration against the Palestinian Water Authority in Nablus last week. Ilan Mizrahi for The National
Ghassan Doughlas at a demonstration against the Palestinian Water Authority in Nablus last week. Ilan Mizrahi for The National

Lone West Bank pair charged with stopping settler-Palestinian clashes



NABLUS // The job of heading off clashes between Palestinians and Jewish settlers on the outskirts of this venerable West Bank city falls to a small number of employees of the Palestinian Authority's housing and village affairs unit. Two, to be exact.

For more than five years, Ghassan Doughlas and his assistant Khader Oweis have toiled to devise ways to support outlying Palestinian villages that bear the brunt of violence from neighbouring Jewish settlements.

Security for most of the 60 villages surrounding Nablus is technically the responsiblity of the Israeli military but, in fact, it does little to protect Palestinians from attacks by Jewish settlers. That leaves Mr Doughlas and Mr Oweis as jacks-of-all-trades - troubleshooters, peacemakers, fundraisers - as they attempt to stem what Palestinian officials describe as a mushrooming number of clashes between settlers and Palestinians.

Together the men form a flimsy bulwark against the rising tide of violence.

"You could make a thriller movie about what we see here on a daily basis," said Mr Doughlas, 39 who often finds himself consoling Palestinian families of loved ones beaten, or even killed, during the clashes.

Last month, there were 193 incidents of West Bank settler violence, as well as land confiscations and building demolitions by Israel's military, according to statistics released by the PA, which added that these "attacks are so frequent that the Israeli authorities must be able to take action if they choose to".

Even Israeli officials appear to be alarmed by settler anger, which in recent months has expanded to target the Israeli military for its role in occasionally dismantling outposts - the rough-hewn encampments that settlers establish as a beachhead for larger, more formal settlements.

Rightwing settlers from Yitzhar, near Nablus, recently set fire to the car of Israel's West Bank military commander, Brigadier General Nitzan Alon. They have also picketed in front of his home, prompting Israel's defence minister, Ehud Barack, to condemn the intimidation as "a scandal".

However, it is the unpunished brutality against against Palestinians by both settlers and Israeli soldiers that consumes the days of Mr Doughlas and Mr Oweis. They raise funds to buy CCTV cameras that villagers install on homes and shops to monitor settler attacks. They arrange compensation for Palestinians who are wounded in settler attacks or whose property is damaged.

They also work to dissuade aggrieved Palestinians, sometimes unsuccessfully, from resorting to violence. In the process, they sometimes are targets of it themselves.

"The settlers know my face, they know who I am," said Mr Doughlas, 39, who has had to fend off his share of threats and barrages of stones hurled from settlers.

Their ramshackle office in downtown Nablus resembles a majlis, where Palestinians lodge complaints against olive-tree groves burnt by settlers, torched mosques, vandalised vehicles and armed clashes.

On a recent day, hectic crowds stormed their office to decry such abuses. Human-rights researchers turned up to record statistics on settler attacks. The two men even had to play hosts to an emergency meeting with Nablus's governor, the head of the Palestinian Water Authority and other local politicians about a village riot that erupted earlier that day over water shortages in a nearby village.

"This is my life everyday - no holidays for me," said Mr Doughlas, as a group of men waved complaint forms in his face.

One man, Ahmed Adweikat, 41, from the nearby village of Rujib, came seeking compensation for the settlers who he said had set aflame 70 of his olive trees last month. He said he was afraid to approach the Israeli military with his complaint and request of compensation. He, like most others, prefers to lodge grievances against Israel with Mr Doughlas.

"The [Israeli] army is always on the settlers' side," said Mr Adweikat. "They tell us not to complain; otherwise they'll blindfold and beat us if we do."

Mr Doughlas, he said, "at least tries to help us."

Increasingly, Mr Doughlas and Mr Oweis seem to be concentrating more on containing rising Palestinian frustrations with the PA itself, fuelled by popular uprisings elsewhere in the Arab world and the stalemated Israel-Palestinian peace process.

"We are doing our best to help the people keep their complaints peaceful," said Mr Oweis, 43 But he said he feared that his work was seen by local residents as more about the PA controlling their behaviour than helping them resolve their grievances.

"We're the middle men between the PA and the people, and we're trying to stop another intifada," he said.

His concerns were on full display that afternoon. He and Mr Doughlas were called to mediate a peaceful end to a riot that erupted over water rationing imposed by the PA on a cluster of villages.

At the entrance of a Palestinian Water Authority depot, a group of two-dozen men had set fire to tyres, sending fingers of black smoke billowing into the sky.

Mr Douglas squeezed his way into the middle of the mob, announcing over derisive shouts: "This is my country, too, people. I feel and understand you."

After 15 minutes of shouting and hand-wringing, the group eventually doused their burning tyres and went home hoping that Mr Doughlas' promise of a speedy solution would materialise.

Returning to his office, a tired Mr Doughlas said: "We've had two intifadas, and we saw what happened to our people. We can't have another."

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Artist: Linkin Park

Label: Warner Records

Number of tracks: 11

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The biog

From: Upper Egypt

Age: 78

Family: a daughter in Egypt; a son in Dubai and his wife, Nabila

Favourite Abu Dhabi activity: walking near to Emirates Palace

Favourite building in Abu Dhabi: Emirates Palace

What is Diwali?

The Hindu festival is at once a celebration of the autumn harvest and the triumph of good over evil, as outlined in the Ramayana.

According to the Sanskrit epic, penned by the sage Valmiki, Diwali marks the time that the exiled king Rama – a mortal with superhuman powers – returned home to the city of Ayodhya with his wife Sita and brother Lakshman, after vanquishing the 10-headed demon Ravana and conquering his kingdom of Lanka. The people of Ayodhya are believed to have lit thousands of earthen lamps to illuminate the city and to guide the royal family home.

In its current iteration, Diwali is celebrated with a puja to welcome the goodness of prosperity Lakshmi (an incarnation of Sita) into the home, which is decorated with diyas (oil lamps) or fairy lights and rangoli designs with coloured powder. Fireworks light up the sky in some parts of the word, and sweetmeats are made (or bought) by most households. It is customary to get new clothes stitched, and visit friends and family to exchange gifts and greetings.  

 

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Thanksgiving meals to try

World Cut Steakhouse, Habtoor Palace Hotel, Dubai. On Thursday evening, head chef Diego Solis will be serving a high-end sounding four-course meal that features chestnut veloute with smoked duck breast, turkey roulade accompanied by winter vegetables and foie gras and pecan pie, cranberry compote and popcorn ice cream.

Jones the Grocer, various locations across the UAE. Jones’s take-home holiday menu delivers on the favourites: whole roast turkeys, an array of accompaniments (duck fat roast potatoes, sausages wrapped in beef bacon, honey-glazed parsnips and carrots) and more, as  well as festive food platters, canapes and both apple and pumpkin pies.

Ruth’s Chris Steakhouse, The Address Hotel, Dubai. This New Orleans-style restaurant is keen to take the stress out of entertaining, so until December 25 you can order a full seasonal meal from its Takeaway Turkey Feast menu, which features turkey, homemade gravy and a selection of sides – think green beans with almond flakes, roasted Brussels sprouts, sweet potato casserole and bread stuffing – to pick up and eat at home.

The Mattar Farm Kitchen, Dubai. From now until Christmas, Hattem Mattar and his team will be producing game- changing smoked turkeys that you can enjoy at home over the festive period.

Nolu’s, The Galleria Mall, Maryah Island Abu Dhabi. With much of the menu focused on a California inspired “farm to table” approach (with Afghani influence), it only seems right that Nolu’s will be serving their take on the Thanksgiving spread, with a brunch at the Downtown location from 12pm to 4pm on Friday.

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COMPANY PROFILE

Name: Rain Management

Year started: 2017

Based: Bahrain

Employees: 100-120

Amount raised: $2.5m from BitMex Ventures and Blockwater. Another $6m raised from MEVP, Coinbase, Vision Ventures, CMT, Jimco and DIFC Fintech Fund