Unread post piles up at defunct Palestinian parliament
RAMALLAH, Palestinian Territories: Smashed doors, dusty tables and 12 years of unread mail — welcome to the defunct Palestinian parliament. It has been more than a decade since the Palestinian Legislative Council (PLC) last met, due to infighting between Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas’s Fatah and Islamists Hamas. The two sides are currently talking up the prospect of new elections — the first since 2006 — but for now the key Palestinian political institution, located in the occupied West Bank, lies empty. It is mid-morning on a recent week day in Ramallah but the hundreds of spaces in the parliament’s car park hold just a few dozen vehicles. The main door to the parliamentary chamber is shuttered, with an armed police officer standing guard. A back route leads through a partially smashed glass door. Inside the chamber, dust gathers on rows of empty seats around a central speaker’s dais. In the parliamentary offices next door, the postman still delivers mail to the lawmakers’ boxes, but many haven’t been checked in years. The most senior figures, including chief Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat, have the largest piles.
In 2004 the shiny new parliament building was opened in central Ramallah, the Palestinian city in the occupied West Bank 10 miles (16 kilometres) north of Jerusalem. Construction was largely funded by Japan and was intended to symbolise a return to democracy after the bloody Palestinian intifada, or uprising, against Israel in the early 2000s. It only saw one general election, in 2006, when Hamas won an unexpected victory. The Islamist party won 74 of the 132 seats, while Abbas’s secular Fatah got 45. Hamas, which does not recognise Israel’s right to exist, is considered a terrorist organisation by the United States and European Union.
Many countries refused to accept the election result. A year later Hamas seized the Gaza Strip from Abbas’s forces in a bloody conflict that verged on civil war. With lawmakers at each others’ throats, parliament was suspended in 2007.
-
Camila Mendes Finally Reveals Wedding Plans With Fiancé Rudy Mancuso -
Beatrice, Eugenie Blindsided By Extent Of Sarah Ferguson’s Epstein Links -
Girl And Grandfather Attacked In Knife Assault Outside Los Angeles Home -
Super Bowl Halftime Show 2026: What Did Trump Say About Bad Bunny? -
Piers Morgan Defends Bad Bunny's Super Bowl Performance, Disagrees With Trump Remarks -
Andrew Lands In New Trouble Days After Royal Lodge Eviction -
Instagram, YouTube Addiction Case Trial Kicks Off In California -
Agentic Engineering: Next Big AI Trend After Vibe Coding In 2026 -
Keke Palmer Makes Jaw-dropping Confession About 'The Burbs' -
Cher Sparks Major Health Concerns As She Pushes Herself To Limit At 79 -
Former NYPD Detective Says Nancy Guthrie's Disappearance 'could Be Hoax' -
King Charles Publicly Asked If He Knew About Andrew's Connection To Epstein -
Jessie J Addresses Pregnancy Rumors After Sporting Belly Bump -
Channing Tatum Leaves Fans Scratching Their Heads With Message About South Korea -
Emma Roberts Stars In 'A Body In The Woods' -
'Our Estrangements Can Kill Us': Meghan's Co-star Weighs In On Anthony Hopkins Interview