Oman Daily Observer

Palestinia­n start-ups get creative

- SHATHA YAISH

At first glance, Mashvisor is just one of thousands of websites specialisi­ng in US real estate. But it has a unique feature, undetectab­le to customers: its designers created it in the West Bank and it is run from the Israel-occupied Palestinia­n territory. “The great thing about a start-up is you can work on it anywhere in the world. You can be in Palestine, you can be in Cambodia, Vietnam, China. It doesn’t matter,” explains Peter Abu al-Zolof, who founded Mashvisor more than a year ago with a friend.

Last week, Mashvisor became the first Palestinia­n company to get the support of the influentia­l American 500 Startups venture capital fund.

It is one of a number of Palestinia­n start-ups in the occupied Palestinia­n territorie­s, long overshadow­ed by Israel’s so-called ‘Start-up Nation’.

The online platform automates and analyses US real estate data nationwide to find investors the best property deals.

As in Silicon Valley, the staff dress casually, drink coffee from state-of-the-art machines in garish colours, and pad through the office wearing US-made headphones around their necks. But working in the West Bank brings unique challenges. In October 2015, a wave of violence broke out across Israel and the Palestinia­n territorie­s.

Abu al Zolof ’s friend and founding partner Mohamed Jebrini, who lives in Hebron, found himself stranded in the city as roads were closed, 45 km from their Ramallah offices.

“He was stuck in Hebron and I was stuck in Ramallah and we were still working on our company,” explains Abu al Zolof.

And the American-Palestinia­n says the online nature of what they do means they can avoid many of the frustratio­ns for other companies in the West Bank, where the Israeli army checkpoint­s often present very physical challenges to commerce.

The company benefited from the support of the Ramallah-based Leaders, an organisati­on that helps nurture start-ups.

Shadi Atshan, Leader’s director general, said that in the start-up scene there was “no unemployme­nt — unlike almost all other industries and economic sectors in Palestine which have high unemployme­nt”. “Those with good skills can earn a very high income.” The Ibtikar investment fund has invested around $800,000 in ten start-ups so far, according to its executive director Ambar Amleh. She stresses their work is not charity.

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