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tepav@tepav.org.tr / tepav.org.trTEPAV veriye dayalı analiz yaparak politika tasarım sürecine katkı sağlayan, akademik etik ve kaliteden ödün vermeyen, kar amacı gütmeyen, partizan olmayan bir araştırma kuruluşudur.
Mahmoud Abbas, the President of the Palestinian Authority (PA), was 58 when the Oslo Accords between Israel and Palestine were signed. That was 20 years ago. The PA at the time  was created as a waning state body for an interim period of about five  years. The final status talks were supposed to start no later than 1996.  That was the Accord signed by Yaser Arafat and Yitzhak Rabin, both  warrior leaders. Ariel Sharon, another warrior leader, made an attempt  to revive the process in 2003, in its tenth anniversary. Look at where  we are now. No final status. Still the interim PA body stays intact. No  Arafat, Rabin or Sharon. Mahmoud Abbas is now 78, as the Kerry process  for a negotiated settlement of the Israel-Palestine conflict is  starting.
I was in Ramallah the other day. I heard many times that this is the last chance for a negotiated peace between Israel and Palestine. I am not sure about that. Even those underlining the  latter have a tone of hope in their voice, if you ask me. Let me tell  you what I am sure about. I am sure that the international community is  fed up with the status quo in Palestine. So many agencies splashing so  much money especially in the last 20 years, just to make life easier for  the Palestinians. They are all just financing, hence helping, the  Israeli Occupation Administration.
Nothing moves. I remember an  old time friend working in Palestine. She used to say that “at the  outset, it was hard to talk to the Israeli officials. Then you start to  understand each other, become friends even. Then you start to make  progress on the topic you have been discussing all along. You start to  have hopes for a breakthrough, you take one giant step forward and then  the next week you have a new guy to start the whole negotiation process  all over again.” That is the kind of frustration I am talking about.
And  there is a second issue that I am also sure about: the role of commerce  in the negotiation process. In the past, business projects were  considered possible while negotiations continued. I remember Shimon  Peres underlining the role of business as helping the negotiating  process by making life easier to the Palestinians. Just to help the  warrior leaders who are ready to make hard decisions. That was wrong. I  know for a fact that all the business plans stopped when the political  process got stuck. So the two, politics and business, are tied to each  other. If you do not have a political objective on the ground, you do  not have solid ground to build a business plan on. Under occupation  conditions, no chance for a business plan to contribute to the political  process. For God’s sake, even the chairman of Coca Cola waited for  hours at the Ben Gurion airport. Imagine CEOs of small and medium sized  companies from Turkey. Even Coca Cola has problems importing hydrogen  peroxide into the West Bank, for the “dual use” considerations of  Israel. Think about smaller companies. 
This time around, there  is also the PA. The Palestinian governing body has accumulated  considerable administration experience. State building in Palestine is  good for economic policy making. Palestinians are now in a much better  position to assess and amend what is called “the Paris Protocol” which limits PA’s industrial development. A regime which  allows individuals to travel while not allowing goods to pass borders  only deepens the disparity between two sides. This time, the political  process has to involve a domestic economic policymaking element to be  developed in Palestine as part of PA state building activity. This time,  political and economic action have to go hand in hand. This time, it  has to be more innovative on the ground.
This commentary was published in Hürriyet Daily News on 24.08.2013