Peace and Prosperity for the West Bank?
Thursday 09 July 2009
by: NOW | t r u t h o u t | Programming Note

Palestinian women pass homes destroyed by Israeli defense forces in
Jenin refugee camp in April of 2002. Today, there has been a huge turnaround
in Jenin, due to an international effort to build a safe and economically prosperous
Palestinian state. (Photo: Jerome Delay / AP)
Once one of the most dangerous and violent cities in the West Bank, Jenin was the scene of frequent battles between the Israeli military and Palestinian fighters, and was the hometown of more than two dozen suicide bombers. Today, however, there's been a huge turnaround. Jenin is now the center of an international effort to build a safe and economically prosperous Palestinian state from the ground up. On Jenin's streets today, there's a brand new professional security force loyal to the Palestinian authority and funded in part by the United States. But can the modest success in Jenin be replicated throughout the West Bank, or will the effort collapse under the intense political pressure from all sides?
On Friday, July 10, at 8:30 PM (check local listings), "NOW" talks directly with former British Prime Minister Tony Blair, the international community's envoy to the region and an architect of the plan. We also speak with a former commander of the infamous Al-Aqsa Martyr's Brigade about his decision to stop using violent tactics, and to residents of Jenin about their daily struggles and their hopes for the future.
To Blair, the Jenin experiment can be pivotal in finally bringing peace to the Middle East. He tells "NOW," "This is the single most important issue for creating a more stable and secure world."



Comments
This is a moderated forum. Â It may take a little while for comments to go live. Be civil and on-topic, don't threaten or advocate violence, please keep it under 300 words. Thanks for participating.
Blair's proposed industrial
Fri, 07/10/2009 - 09:04 — Anonymous (not verified)