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New Palestinian PM: US-educated favourite of the West


http://www.thenews.com.pk/daily_detail.asp?id=60746:

RAMALLAH, West Bank: Salam Fayyad, who was on Friday tasked with forming a new Palestinian government, is a US-educated pragmatist widely respected in the West for his efforts to clamp down on corruption.

A political independent, the 55-year-old is a technocrat and former official at the International Monetary Fund and World Bank who won widespread praise for his efforts to bring greater transparency to murky Palestinian finances. The bespectacled, immaculately-dressed Fayyad served as finance minister from 2002-2005 and then again in the short-lived Palestinian unity government formed in March.

He is a fluent English speaker who easily quotes Thomas Jefferson, the main author of the American Declaration of Independence, and passionately believes in the principles of transparency and accountability.

An articulate advocate of Palestinians rights and hopes, he has won praise from unlikely quarters who rarely agree on anything.

A spokesman for former hardline Israeli prime minister Ariel Sharon once said: “Everything that Fayyad is trying to do is well appreciated and is the right thing.”

The Israeli liberal Haaretz daily newspaper dubbed him “everyone’s favourite Palestinian.”

“A professional and dedicated person” who combines “a great commitment to the Palestinian people with an integrity and a professionalism that is much needed,” was how Fayyad was introduced before a speech at Washington’s respected Brookings Institution think-tank in 2002.

“Everyone who met him in the past few years was enchanted by him. In Jerusalem, Washington, Paris, London and many other capitals, Fayyad became the ultimate Palestinian ‘icon,’ the ideal partner,” Haaretz wrote this year.

Such respect was underlined when US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice met him after he returned to the finance ministry this year as part of the unity government, amid an official Western boycott of the cabinet’s Hamas ministers.

During his first stint as finance minister, Fayyad’s efforts helped persuade international donors to increasingly channel money directly toward the Palestinian Authority, rather than via non-government agencies.

He was elected to parliament during the January 2006 elections as the head of a small list, “The Third Way”, made up of candidates belonging neither to Fatah nor Hamas.

Following Hamas’s stunning sweep of the poll, Fayyad declined an offer to join the government formed by the Islamists.

He agreed to return to the finance ministry in this year’s unity cabinet to try to convince Western donors to lift a punishing aid boycott imposed on the government in the wake of the Hamas victory.

“I believe that my top priority is to lead the effort to end the economic sanctions and restore the soundness of our public finances,” he wrote in an editorial in a Palestinian newspaper two weeks after his appointment.

“As a Palestinian, it is my duty to hope and to exert my utmost efforts to transform the dreams of my people into real facts.

“We are a people who deserve to enjoy freedom on their land and who deserve democratic and transparent and accountable institutions. We are a people who deserve to live in peace and economic cooperation with their neighbours including Israel.”

“We don’t want to become a beggar state because we possess capabilities and education and talents that enable us to build a prosperous economy and a strong democracy.”

Born in April 1952 in the Tulkarem region in the northern part of the occupied West Bank, Fayyad received a bachelor of science in engineering from the American University of Beirut, and a masters in business administration and a doctorate in economics from the University of Texas.

In 1987 he joined the World Bank in Washington, where he worked before becoming the IMF’s representative in Jerusalem between 1995 and 2001. He also briefly worked at the Arab Bank, serving as its chief representative in the West Bank. He is married and has three children.
 

island muslim

Junior Member
Salaam Alaiykum,

It appears as if US , Israel love him. But if the palestinians did not vote for fatah and voted for hamas instead should not their wishes be respected?? I mean if the palestinian brothers and sisters wanted this guy they would have elected him and Fatah instead of Hamas.
 

Saifu deen

Alhamdullah..
Assalam Alykom

Allah knows best, but it seems to be that he is an american agent. Similarly, in Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Somalia. Certain American educated individuals tend to be in favour of any election around the world, specially the muslim states....
 

loverasool

New Member
Assalm Alykom,
I guess Fayyad's only aim was to improve the palestinian economical situations, and he's still now trying to stop the Israeli and the Western economical seige on the palestinian people
 

sister herb

Official TTI Chef
Salaam alaykum

for USA his best quality is that he is not from Hamas.

But this is just how the west is behaving. This "emergency goverment" is illegal and still USA and EU are ready to co-operate with it.

Why it is illegal? So because it is against the Basic Law of Palestine.

The President can sack his Prime Minister (Article 45) but he cannot legally appoint a new Prime Minister that does not represent the majority party (i.e., Hamas).

In the event that a President sacks the PM, the Government is considered to have resigned (Article 83), but the serving Cabinet (here, the Hamas-led Cabinet) is supposed to govern until a new Cabinet is confirmed by the Legislative Council (Article 78).

Only the Legislative Council can confirm the new PM and Cabinet and the new officials cannot take their oaths (Article 67) or assume their duties (Article 79) until this is done. We might now look for the Fayyad government to go to the Legislative Council for post hoc approval, but if the Legislative Council cannot vote for lack of a quorum -- because too many of its members are in jail or refuse to participate -- then the Cabinet cannot be legally confirmed. The Basic Law provides no remedy for conditions where the Legislative Council cannot vote to confirm the Cabinet or the actions of the President.

The President can rule by degree during emergencies (Article 43) but the Legislative Council must approve all these decrees at its first meeting.

The President cannot suspend the Legislative Council during a state of emergency (Article 113).

The President has no power to call early elections, either.

The Basic Law has no provision whatsoever for an "emergency government."
 
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