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Amid swirl of violence, Palestinians wonder: Where are their leaders?

Across the West Bank, Palestinians say they’re being left to fend for themselves in the face of violence that threatens to spin out of control. Often triggered by Israeli settler attacks that escalate into clashes between Palestinians and the Israeli military, the violence has killed 132 Palestinians in the West Bank so far this year.

Yet at these flashpoints, the governing Palestinian Authority is nowhere to be found.

Why We Wrote This

Providing for public safety is a basic duty of any government. Yet as Palestinians see deaths mount from an especially violent year, their leadership appears absent, even as it curtails the people’s freedom to seek an alternative.

“The Authority is so out of touch with what is going on on the ground, it would be laughable if people weren’t dying,” says Mariam, a university student in Ramallah.

In a September poll by the Palestinian Center for Policy and Research, public satisfaction with President Mahmoud Abbas stood at just 26%; 59% viewed the Authority he heads as a “burden on the Palestinian people.”

Seeking to quash any initiative that may challenge their rule, the increasingly autocratic Authority and the aging Mr. Abbas are restricting the few liberties West Bank Palestinians do have. That leaves them burdened with an unrepresentative government they see as nonfunctional, yet they are unable to articulate who, or what, could replace it.

“We don’t want the Palestinian Authority; we don’t want Hamas,” says Mariam. “Right now, no one is giving us an alternative or even envisioning one.”

Irrelevant and despised, feared but ineffective. Across the West Bank, Palestinians say a repressive Palestinian Authority is failing to protect citizens’ rights and leaving them to fend for themselves in the face of rising violence that many fear is threatening to spin out of control.

“The Authority is so out of touch with what is going on on the ground, it would be laughable if people weren’t dying,” says Mariam, a university student in Ramallah.

Seeing their hold on power slip, and seeking to quash any initiative that may challenge their rule, the increasingly autocratic Palestinian Authority (PA) and its aging, long-serving president, Mahmoud Abbas, are restricting the few liberties Palestinians have enjoyed: speech, political activity, civil society, and art.

Why We Wrote This

Providing for public safety is a basic duty of any government. Yet as Palestinians see deaths mount from an especially violent year, their leadership appears absent, even as it curtails the people’s freedom to seek an alternative.

That leaves Palestinians in the West Bank in a quandary: They are burdened with an unrepresentative government they see as nonfunctional, yet they are unable to articulate who, or what, could possibly replace it.

“We don’t want the Palestinian Authority; we don’t want Hamas – give us an alternative for us to support,” says Mariam, who like others interviewed asked that her full name be withheld. “Right now, no one is giving us an alternative or even envisioning one.”

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