EU HAILS ELECTIONS
Municipal councils are responsible for basic services such as water, sanitation and local infrastructure and do not enact legislation.
The Palestinian Authority faces widespread criticism over corruption, stagnation and declining legitimacy.
Western and regional donors have increasingly tied financial and diplomatic support for the PA to visible reforms, particularly at the local governance level, as national elections remain frozen.
With no presidential or legislative elections held since 2006, municipal councils have become one of the few functioning democratic institutions under PA administration.
The European Union said the elections were an “important step towards broader democratisation and strengthened local governance, in general terms and in line with the ongoing reforms process”.
UN coordinator Ramiz Alakbarov also commended the election commission for organising a “credible process”.
Mahmud Bader, a businessman from the northern West Bank city of Tulkarem, where two adjacent refugee camps have been under Israeli military control for over a year, said he would vote despite having little hope for meaningful change.
“Whether candidates are independent or partisan, it has no effect and will have no effect or benefit for the city,” he told AFP on Friday.
“The (Israeli) occupation is the one that rules Tulkarem. It would only be an image shown to the international media – as if we have elections, a state or independence.”
“STRONG DETERMINATION”
Polling stations in the West Bank will close at 7pm (Sunday, 12am, Singapore time), while polls in Deir el-Balah will close at 5pm to facilitate counting in daylight due to the lack of electricity in the war-devastated strip, the elections commission told AFP.
Two years of war that started in October 2023 have left swathes of Gaza destroyed and more than 72,000 people dead, according to the territory’s health ministry, whose figures are considered reliable by the UN.
Public infrastructure, sanitation services and the health sector are struggling to function.
Gaza, which has been under Hamas control since 2007, is seeing its first vote since the legislative elections of 2006 that the Islamist movement won.
The Palestinian Authority is holding elections only in Deir el-Balah “as an experiment (to test its own) success or failure, since there are no post-war opinion polls”, Jamal al-Fadi, a political scientist at Cairo’s Al-Azhar University, told AFP.
Deir el-Balah was chosen as it was one of the only places in Gaza where “the population has remained largely in place and not been displaced” by more than two years of war between Hamas and Israel, Fadi said.
Mohammed al-Hasayna, 24, said after voting in Deir el-Balah that although the elections were largely symbolic, they served as a sign of people’s “will to live”.
“We are an educated people with strong determination, and we deserve to have our own state,” he told AFP.
“We want the world to help us overcome the catastrophe of war. Enough wars – it is time to work towards rebuilding Gaza.”
