Google

Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Israel's failure to learn


Will Israel make the same mistake with Hamas that it made with Hezbollah? [GALLO/GETTY]
When George Bush, the US president, first entered the White House as the commander-in-chief in 2001, Palestinians were being killed in the al-Aqsa intifada.

Eight years later, as Bush prepares to leave office, Israel is carrying out one of the largest massacres in its 60-year occupation of Palestine.

The US, then and now, strongly backs Israel's offensive, justifying it as being, in fact, defensive.
An Israeli general recently threatened to use military force to set Gaza back decades in much the same language used before the invasion of Lebanon in 2006.

But despite the Israeli devastation of Lebanon, Hezbollah emerged victorious and the Shia resistance and social movement emerged a hero to the Arab world.
Israel is about to make the same mistake with Hamas.

Its notion of a truce with Hamas was that the Palestinians would quietly accept the siege. Israel would deny them the basic means of survival, let alone the basic means to create a functioning society.

If the Palestinians attempted to resist, they would be crushed.

As in Lebanon, Israel should have learned years ago that military might cannot crush Palestinian resistance movements.

Media matters

While the Israeli military again bombs the starving and imprisoned population of 1.5 million Gazans, the world watches their plight live as Western media scrambles to explain and, in some cases, justify the ongoing carnage.

Even some Arab outlets have attempted to equate Palestinian resistance - and homemade rockets - with the might of the Israeli military machine.

However, none of this is a surprise; the Israelis just concluded a global public relations campaign to gather support for their assault, even gaining the collaboration of some Arab states.
An American periodical once asked me to contribute to a discussion on whether terrorism or attacks against civilians could ever be justified.

In depth

My answer was that an American journal should not be asking whether attacks on civilians can ever be justified. This is a question for the weak, such as the Native Americans 150 years ago, the Jews in Nazi Germany, and the Palestinians today, to answer.

Terrorism is a normative term which is used to describe what the 'other' does, not what 'we' do.
Powerful nations such as Israel, the US, Russia or China will always describe their victims' struggle as terrorism.

However, they fail to acknowledge as acts of terror the destruction of Chechnya, the slow slaughter of the remaining Palestinians, the repression of Tibetans, and the US occupation of Iraq and Afghanistan.

Normative rules and what is legal and permissible are determined by the powerful. They formulate the concept of terrorism in normative terms and make it appear as if a neutral court derived such definitions instead of the oppressors.

For the weak to resist becomes illegal by definition.
This excessive use of legal jargon actually undermines the fundamentals of what is truly legal and diminishes the credibility of international institutions such as the UN. The law becomes the enemy of those who struggle.

It becomes apparent that the powerful - those who make the rules - insist on legality merely to preserve the power relations that serve them or to maintain their occupation and colonialism.

Desperate resistance

Colonial powers use civilians strategically, settling them to claim land and dispossess the natives, be they indigenous populations in North America or Palestinians in what are today Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territories.

Attacking civilians, then, becomes the last, most desperate and basic method of resistance in the face of overwhelming odds and imminent eradication.

The Palestinians do not attack Israeli civilians with the expectation that such violence will destroy or defeat Israel.

When the native population understands that there is an irreversible dynamic stripping them of their land and identity with the support of an overwhelming power then they are forced to resort to whatever methods of resistance they can muster. PLO, then Hamas

In 1948, when Israel was being established as a new state, 750,000 Palestinians were deliberately cleansed and expelled from their homes, and hundreds of their villages were destroyed.

Their lands were settled by colonists who even today deny their very existence and wage a 60-year war against the remaining natives and the national liberation movements the Palestinians established around the world.

Israel, its allies in the West and some regional Arab countries have managed to corrupt the leadership of the Palestinian Liberation Organisation (PLO) and entice them with the promise of power at the expense of liberty for their people.

This eventually neutralised and transformed the PLO into a liberation movement which collaborates with the occupier.

The focus then shifted to Hamas, a movement which won legislative elections nearly three years ago and thus became a target for the Israelis.

By enforcing an embargo and allowing Israel's siege of Gaza, the world has effectively told the Palestinians that they are unfit for democracy.

Isolation and radicalisation

By informing them that they are not free to choose the leaders they trust but must conform to the requirements set in place by others, the world community is only further isolating and radicalising the Palestinians.

Demonstrations across the world have expressed anger at Israel's offensive [AFP]
This radicalisation has increased several-fold as Israel pounds Palestinian infrastructure, saying it is solely targeting Hamas targets.

This is not true, however; Israeli forces have targeted Palestinian police forces, killing some such as Tawfiq Jaber, the chief of police - a former PLO official who stayed on in his post after Hamas took control of Gaza.

With the vestiges of security and order debilitated in successive Israeli military campaigns, chaos will prevail in Gaza. If Hamas is weakened it will not be a more moderate Palestinian group which will take the helm.

It will not be the weakened, corrupted and unpopular Fatah, but a more extreme group who have been persuaded through blockades and incessant Israeli attacks that compromise and negotiations with Tel Aviv are ill-fated.

Failed policies

In the past 60 years, Israeli leaders have toed the line that 'the only language Arabs understand is force'.

However, it is Israel that has routinely used violence to solve problems. During the 2002 Arab Summit in Beirut, the Arab League collectively offered Israel a framework to end the bloodshed and move towards a comprehensive regional peace deal. Israel responded by invading Jenin and killing hundreds.

Last month, Fatah launched a media campaign to revive the 2002 peace initiative, but this, too, has been answered with Israel's extreme brutality.

A Zionist Israel is no longer a viable long-term project. Israeli settlements, land expropriation and separation barriers have long since made a two-state solution impossible.
There can be only one state in historic Palestine. In coming decades, Israelis will be confronted with a fundamental question - whether to ensure the peaceful transition towards an egalitarian society in which Palestinians are given the same rights as Jews.

The alternative in a few years will become untenable.

History has shown that colonialism has only worked when most of the natives have been exterminated. But often, as in occupied Algeria, it is the settlers who flee. Eventually the Palestinians will not be willing to compromise and accept one state for both people, and the Jewish colonists will be forced to leave.

Restoring Palestine

Despite its lack of initiative for the Middle East peace process, the White House has in recent years been unable to dislodge the occupation of Palestine as the main motive for every anti-American militant in the Arab world and beyond.

It is the common denominator by which Arab populist policies are shaped. Invading Iraq or offering economic benefits to frontline states will not make the Palestinian issue go away.
During my travels and research, I have spoken with jihadists in Iraq, Lebanon, Afghanistan, Somalia and elsewhere; they all mentioned the Palestinian struggle as one of their motivations.
The US will pay a price for backing Israel. Soon the so-called moderate Arab dictatorships that collaborate with the US hegemony in the region will find themselves in untenable positions.

Loss of credibility

Already we see tensions increasing in the region. Damascus has pulled out of third-party talks with Tel Aviv and Arab anger has been mounting not just at Israel, and not just at America, but also at their own regimes which have collaborated with Washington.

Some Israelis have started to realise their government's flawed approach. While 81 per cent of Israelis support the military campaign, a poll has showed only 39 per cent believe it will succeed in removing Hamas or reducing violence.

An editorial in Haaretz, an Israeli daily, even went so far as to label Israel "the region's bully".
Barack Obama, the US president-elect, remains silent as Israel kills Palestinians with impunity.

In his silence he expresses his complicity.

Nir Rosen is a Beirut-based journalist, fellow at the New York University Center on Law and Security and the author of The Triumph of the Martyrs: A Reporter's Journey into Occupied Iraq.

Monday, December 29, 2008

Did You Know?

Did you know that non-Jewish Israelis cannot buy or lease land in the Zionist entity?

Did you know that Palestinian license plates in Zionist entity are color coded to distinguish jews from non-jews?
Did you know that Israel allots 85% of the water resources for jews and the remaining 15% is divided among all Palestinians in the territories? For example in Hebron, 85% of the water is given to about 400 settlers, while 15% must be divided among Hebron's 120,000 Palestinians?

Did you know the United States awards the israel $5 billion in aid each year?
Did you know that yearly US aid to israel exceeds the aid the US grants to the whole African continent?
Did you know that the israel is the only country in the Middle East that has nuclear weapons?

Did you know that the israel is the only country in the Middle East that refuses to sign the nuclear non-proliferation treaty and bars international inspections from its sites?

Did you know that israel currently occupies territories of two sovereign nations (Lebanon and Syria) in defiance of United Nations Security Council resolutions?

Did you know that israel has for decades routinely sent assassins into other countries to kill its political enemies?

Did you know that high-ranking military officers in the israeli Defense Forces have admitted publicly that unarmed prisoners of war were executed by the IDF?

Did you know that israel refuses to prosecute its soldiers who have acknowledged executing prisoners of war?

Did you know that israel routinely confiscates bank accounts, businesses, and land and refuses to pay compensation to those who suffer the confiscation?

Did you know that israel blew up an American diplomatic facility in Egypt and attacked a U.S. ship in international waters, killing 33 and wounding 177 American sailors?

Did you know that the second most powerful lobby in the United States, according to a recent Fortune magazine survey of Washington insiders, is the jewish AIPAC?

Did you know that israel stands in defiance of 69 United Nations Security Council Resolutions?

Did you know that today's israel sits on the former sites of more than 400 now-vanished Palestinian villages, and that the israeli's re- named almost every physical site in the country to cover up the traces?

Did you know that it was not until 1988 that israelis were barred from running "jews Only" job ads?

Did you know that four prime ministers of israel (Begin, Shamir, Rabin, and Sharon) have taken part in either bomb attacks on civilians, massacres of civilians, or forced expulsions of civilians from their villages?

Did you know that the israeli Foreign Ministry pays two American public relations firms to promote israel to Americans?

Did you know that Sharon's coalition government includes a party -- Molodet -- which advocates expelling all Palestinians from the occupied territories?

Did you know that israel's settlement-building increased in the eight years since Oslo?

Did you know that settlement building under Barak doubled compared to settlement building under Netanyahu?

Did you know that israel once dedicated a postage stamp to a man who attacked a civilian bus and killed several people?

Did you know that recently-declassified documents indicate that David Ben-Gurion in at least some instances approved of the expulsion of Palestinians in 1948?

Did you know that despite a ban on torture by israel's High Court of Justice, torture has continued by Shin Bet interrogators on Palestinian prisoners?

Did you know that Palestinian refugees make up the largest portion of the refugee population in the world?

And finally do you know who is the terrorist now ?

Gaza




" At least 350 Palestinians, including women and children, have been killed in an Israeli aerial bombardment on Hamas security installations.

Emergency services said that at least 1000 people had been wounded.

Witnesses reported heavy damage as missiles were fired."

We see Gazan resistance as they're fighting with stones against world one of the best well equipped Irsaeli army with all the material support of America.


How can American exclude themsleves with these killing when the American tax payers are largest financer of zionist state.

Israeli has right to defend its iillegal occupation against decratically elected Hamas govenment.

why????? Indian don't have right to defend its soverign country
by attacking Pakistan for its illegal activites in India

If United Nation is there to work as american agent then dismantal this impotent organisation

Monday, September 29, 2008

Experiencing the suffering of Palestinians in Ramadan



British journalist and peace activist Lauren Booth, sister-in-law
of former British premier Tony Blair who is now an international
Middle East peace envoy , attends a protest against the Israeli
siege in Gaza.


A wide smile spread across the face of Jimmy Lail when the sunset call to prayer rang out announcing the end of another day of Ramadan fasting. Lail began to eat the fast-breaking meal, beginning with a few dates. Lail is one of the international peace activists stuck in the Gaza Strip since Israel and Egypt refused to allow them to leave, and he and his five colleagues were the guests that day of a Gazan family who insisted they break the fast with them.


Lail and his colleagues began fasting at the start of Ramadan in solidarity with the Palestinians. "We declared our fasting in solidarity with a million and a half Palestinians who fast under a deadly siege," he said. Since the start of Ramadan, Palestinian families and the Popular Committee for Ending the Siege have invited the six activists to their fast-breaking tables and have provided their pre-dawn meals. The six plan to fast the entire month of Ramadan as an ex-pression of their solidarity with the Palestinians.


Although the Israeli and Egyptian authorities barred them from leaving the Gaza Strip, the international activists have shown no complaints over staying in Gaza. On the contrary, they have all expressed that this Israeli and Egyptian action has allowed them to better experience the reality of thousands of Palestinians' suffering. One of the solidarity activists who had intended to leave the Gaza Strip is Lauren Booth, the sister-in-law of former British prime minister and Quartet committee delegate Tony Blair. "I thank the Israeli army that allowed me, with its decision to prevent my leaving the Gaza Strip, to get to know what life is like in the world's largest prison," she told Al-Ahram Weekly. Booth said that although she had intended to leave the Gaza Strip and return to Britain to be present as her children returned to school, her staying in Gaza has allowed her to experience the extent of the humanitarian catastrophe Palestinians there suffer under the siege.


"This is organized state terrorism practiced against Palestinians, when they leave the sick to die for lack of treatment or permission to travel," she said. "Only those who visit Gaza can know the truth of the tragic reality of people here, and can discover how misleading Israel is in its claims." Booth considers Israel's decision to prevent her from leaving the Gaza Strip a form of punishment for her participation in the Free Gaza boat trip that broke the siege, but stresses that this has not crushed her resolve to continue the struggle against the siege. What is more disturbing for Booth is the Egyptian position, for the Egyptian authorities refused to let her leave the Gaza Strip when she tried while the Rafah crossing was open for two days. Booth says that over three days she spent 25 hours trying to leave the Gaza Strip through the Rafah crossing in a bus with more than 100 people and in heat exceeding 50 degrees Celsius.

The six activists intend to make use of every moment they spend in Gaza to protest against the siege. They also want to share the experience of besieged Palestinians and encourage them to remain steadfast. Last Saturday morning the solidarity activists spent hours on a fishing boat across from the Rafah city coast in the furthest southern point of the Gaza Strip. They believed that they could record another "victory" over the Israeli army after having reached the Gaza coast and broken the siege despite Israel's initial rejection of their arrival. The goal of this activity was to attempt to widen the fishing area allowed to Palestinian fishermen.

The Oslo Accords allowed Palestinian fishermen to fish up to six kilometres from the coast, but since the outbreak of the Al-Aqsa Intifada, the Israeli navy has not allowed Palestinian fishermen to go further than two kilometres. It claims security factors as the reason for this, and any boat that goes past the allowed limit is fired at. The activists encouraged fishermen on Saturday to exceed the limit set by the occupation army and to place fishing nets four kilometres from the coast, but less than an hour passed before Israeli warships fired warning shots at the fishermen and international activists, forcing them to return across the set line. George Crafest, one of the solidarity activists, says that although the attempt failed, it served as a sign to the Israeli army that unfair measures against the Palestinians would not be obeyed.
The international activists have tried to learn about life in the refugee camps and have visited most of those spread across the Gaza Strip, speaking with residents about life there. The activists have also spent the night in the impoverished homes of refugee families. Andu Monica, a Greek activist, was deeply affected when he spent a night with a family consisting of 12 and living in two rooms. "It's horrible when 12 individuals are crowded into a house that is only big enough for four at the most," he said. "Life in the refugee camps is the worst picture of life under occupation more than six decades following the Nakba [catastrophe] and the expulsion of the Palestinians from their land."
The international activists are also continuing their visits to Palestinian institutions and have visited hospitals several times, where they have learned close up about the tragic results of the siege on the Palestinian people. Activists were not able to hold back their tears when they saw and heard the cries of chronically ill patients suffering during their final hours in the various departments of Dar Al-Shifa Hospital, Gaza City's largest.
It is clear that the Israeli and Egyptian prevention of international activists from leaving the Gaza Strip will not deter other international peace and rights activists from approaching Gaza by sea. Jamal Al-Khudari, head of the popular committee for confronting the siege on the Gaza Strip, says that a new ship carrying activists will arrive on the Gaza coast on 22 September to break the siege that has been imposed on the Gaza Strip for more than a year.
In statements to the Weekly, Al-Khudari said that the ship will transport eight members of the European parliament, as well as academics, artists, media professionals, and 22 surgeons who will perform urgently needed operations for Palestinian patients who cannot leave the Gaza Strip due to the siege. Al-Khudari added that another ship would later arrive from Scotland transporting humanitarian aid. On the tenth of Ramadan, Egyptian parliamentarians and professional syndicate members will also attempt to break the siege imposed on the Gaza Strip by attempting to enter via the Rafah border crossing with large quantities of humanitarian aid.
According to Al-Khudari, the success of the Free Gaza ship in breaking the siege forced the Egyptian authorities to temporarily reopen the Rafah crossing and allow more than 4,500 people stranded in Gaza to leave and more than 1,400 Palestinians to enter. Al-Khudari expects that this international mobilization will lead to a similar mobilization of Arab public opinion that will make it difficult for Arab regimes to continue their indifference to the suffering of Palestinians in the Gaza Strip.
Eyad Al-Seraj, director of the Gaza Community Mental Health Program and a prominent activist in the struggle against the siege, says that a million signatures will be collected from Gazans in a document to be submitted to United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki- Moon to ask him to intervene for the lifting of the siege on Gaza.
Al-Seraj adds that the document will be presented during the regular session of the United Nations' General Assembly. It aims to express Palestinian popular and national will and to place pressure on the international community and particularly the United Nations' General Assembly to end the siege on the Gaza Strip. Al-Seraj says that the document stresses that the siege is a violation of international humanitarian law and human rights standards, and that Israel, in its capacity as the occupying state, is violating the Fourth Geneva Convention that requires it to respect civilians in time of war.
The document also states that the siege has caused an unprecedented rise in "rates of poverty and unemployment and to deteriorating levels of living for citizens and of nutrition, especially for children and pregnant women. It has also led to the suspension of the industrial and agricultural sectors as well as infrastructure and public services. This siege has accelerated the deterioration of humanitarian sectors and particularly health and education by preventing the ill from receiving treatment abroad and students from travelling to their universities."

Friday, May 30, 2008

There is no alternative to the right of return


Mudalala Akel, 86, has lived as a refugee in Gaza since her family was forced to leave their
home in Palestine during the Nakba in 1948. Akel still holds the key to her
family's home, May 2008. (Wissam Nassar/MaanImages)

To the People of Palestine,

Whether you live within the "Green Line," in Jerusalem, the West Bank, Gaza, or in exile, you shall return, there is no doubt that you shall return.Today the skies will echo as you state with one united voice: "There can be no alternative to our return,

" all sounds will melt away as your voice rises to say "There can be no peace without our return to our original lands and homes.

"You who shall return, raise your voices and say "This is our land, this sky is our sky, this rock, tree, moon, and sea are our country, it will always be our Palestine.

"You who shall return, 60 years ago on this day was our Nakba, and today after 60 years we confirm, that we have never let the banner of return fall to the ground, and that the hour of return to our original homes and lands has come. Today we do not commemorate so we can weep over what was lost, we come together to march forward; to march home.

You who shall undoubtedly return,

It has been said that this was a land without a people for a people without a land; but what was the reality? Our people have inscribed their presence on the history of this land, deeply engraving their national identity as people struggling for liberty, dignity and freedom on every stone. Now these stones fly in the face of the oppressor's lies that deny our existence and our rights.

It has been said that by dispersing us to the far corners of the earth, we will disappear or melt away; but what was the reality? A people with roots reaching far into the depths of Haifa, Akka, of al-Majdal and Um Rasrash; a people whose history, civilization and culture has sprouted on every inch of this earth with the roots extending back to the land of Palestine.

It has been said that with the passage of time, our elderly will die and our youth will forget; but what was the reality? From the memory of our people have emerged generations that paint the history of Palestine, its villages, houses, its sage and its oranges, a painting to which all compasses point, for despite the distances and directions that separate us; Palestine will always be the compass.

It has been said that we were deceived by a mendacious offer of peace, and rushed on our knees to reap its rewards; but what was the reality? A popular uprising, an intifada that stood up in the name of truth to those who trusted their own treachery.

It was said that by caging us with their wall, and co-opting the world to besiege us, the strength of our hope would die away, and our voice with it; but what was the reality? They were suffocated by our chants, to the point where their leader David Ben-Gurion said, "Every time I hear of the right of return, I tremble afraid of what the future holds, I begin do doubt the reality of Israel's establishment ...

"Yes, you who shall undoubtedly return, your chants are the ones that force doubt into the minds of those celebrating their so-called independence. For their crimes of the Nakba, still chase them, haunting them even after 60 years. What is the difference between Ben-Gurion who had no fear for his newborn state except that the refugees may return, and Ehud Olmert who trembles when he hears a reference to our right to return? It is the ghost of the victim, the pride of the first generation of refugees, both the living and the deceased, and the insistence of today's generation that they will indeed return.

To our people across the globe,

Can we even count the number of political projects that aimed and attempted to strip us of our rights? Their names, sources and dates change, but all have experienced the same fate in history's dustbin; a fate that shames the conspirators, and that proudly decorates you who refused to surrender. The main target of all of these projects was your right to return, whether through complete denial of the right, through attempts to resettle you elsewhere, or by finding those who would offer congratulations to the Jewishness of their state, or by attempting to recast your struggle as one seeking humanitarian charity, or by attempting to alter the meaning of your right as one to return to the West Bank or Gaza, or more recently, by equating your rights to those of the Jewish faith who came from Arab lands to settle on yours.

Can a right be lost so long as its bearers continue to demand it? One thousand times we say: NO!! It is the wise saying of our ancestors that no right can be lost so long as the right-bearers fight for it. Your right exists so long as you and your land exist.

Yes, our right to return to our homeland is enshrined in international law, not least in UN General Assembly Resolution 194. However, this resolution brought nothing new to the law, it simply restated the most basic principles of law and morality: that any human being has a right to go home, and that any person forced to leave, has the right to reclaim all that was taken from her; and that the only way to extinguish these rights is for the refugee herself to choose not to return.

Those that expelled us can reject and conspire and deny, but we continue to remain steadfast and resist and resist and resist, and we will continue to resist until we return. For there is no right that is not granted without the sacrifices of struggle, and there is no oppressor that can continue to commit grave injustice for ever.

Our right is enshrined first by our existence, and second by this universe's moral code, and third by law. As such there is nothing to fear from a wandering beggar knocking at the doors of the world's governments, and there is nothing to fear from a Zionist leader consumed by the doubt of his and his state's legitimacy, and there is nothing to fear from violent stick of the Unites States' empire nor from its carrot, for this right cannot be defeated by war, nor stolen by a conspiracy.

Today, on the 60th anniversary of our Nakba, we do not come together to respond to the inane stupidities of this or that jester, nor to the projects that aim to resettle us or provide us with their charity; today on the 60th anniversary we come together to announce a new beginning to our struggle, to announce that the march to the actual return and to real freedom has begun, and will not end until all of our rights, including our return, the restitution of our property, and the compensation for all that we have endured, have been implemented.

Today we reaffirm our rights, not least those articulated in UN General Assembly Resolution 194; we reaffirm our reclamation of our national unity and an end to internal division through open discussion, and we reaffirm our commitment to the project of reviving the Palestine Liberation Organization, the sole legitimate representative of the Palestinian people and the uniting framework of the our people and our struggle. As such, it is imperative that we prioritize the following steps in relaunching our march along the road of return:

To reflect the reality that the Nakba did not end in 1948, but has continued every day since then as Israel works to expand its control of our land and expel our people from it. As such we call for the adoption of the phrase "Ongoing Nakba";

That we refer to the Palestinians who managed to stay within the part of Palestine occupied in 1948 as the "Palestinians within the Green Line" or the "Palestinians in 1948 occupied Palestine" when referring to them, instead of phrases that deny them their Palestinian identity. Also to refer to "Historic Palestine" when referring to the Palestine's borders during the British mandate, as well as stressing that the right of return is to the refugees' "original homes and properties";

Consolidating and bolstering the culture of return through our society's formal, popular and civil institutions, and ensuring that this is disseminated consistently and as widely as possible through all means;

Considering a person or organization's stance on the right of return as the litmus test that determines our relationship with Israeli institutions and entities, and a measure for differentiating between projects as ones aimed at normalization or not;

Strengthening the popular campaigns in Palestine, the Arab world and internationally, particularly the campaign for boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS) against Israel, as well as the campaign for academic and cultural boycott, and the campaign against the Israeli apartheid wall;

Organizing an international campaign to push the United Nations to readopt its resolution recognizing Zionism as a form of racism;

To stress in our work, language, and daily life the important distinction between Zionism and Judaism, and that Israel is a product of international Zionism that is nothing other than a colonial apartheid state;

To be very clear that any political arrangement, including the "two-state solution," that does not include the full implementation of the rights of the refugees, is in no way a solution, and no more than an insulting and deceptive way of conflict-management;

To ensure that the Palestinian narrative is properly documented, and included in all Palestinian educational curricula;

Closely working with international movements that are in solidarity with our struggle to strengthen its place on the international agenda; and mobilizing Palestinian solidarity with the causes and struggles of oppressed people around the world, particularly the struggles of indigenous peoples for sovereignty and liberty.

You who shall undoubtedly return,

After 60 years of expulsion, exile and refuge; after 60 years of international impotence, and the failure of international organizations to enforce their own decisions; and after 60 years of Israeli arrogance, we declare that the commemoration of the Nakba as of today will nothing but a date to renew our commitment to struggle until we achieve our return to our original homes and lands. We declare the return to be the program of our struggle, and not just a demand, and will continue as such until the end of the Nakba, "whether they like it or not" as Yasser Arafat once said.

We shall return.

The National Committee to Commemorate the Nakba at 60-Palestine represents national movements and networks, including the Council of National and Islamic forces, the Global Palestine Right-of-Return Coalition, the Popular Committees and youth centers of the refugee camps all over Palestine, the Anti-Apartheid Wall Campaign, Badil Center for Palestinian Residency and Refugee Rights, Palestinian NGO Network (PNGO), the Civic Coalition for the Defense of Palestinian Rights in Jerusalem and the PLO Department for Refugee Affairs (DORA). It is the committee responsible for implementing and coordinating the commemoration events across Palestine.

Friday, May 16, 2008

Resisting the Nakba

(Nidal El-Khairy)



One of the most difficult things to grasp in the modern history of Palestine and the Palestinians is the meaning of the Nakba. Is the Nakba to be seen as a discrete event that took place and ended in 1948, or is it something else? What are the political stakes in reifying the Nakba as a past event, in commemorating it annually, in bowing before its awesome symbolism? What are the effects of making the Nakba a finite historical episode that one bemoans but must ultimately accept as a fact of history?
I will suggest to you that there is much at stake in all of this, in rendering the Nakba an event of the past, a fact on the ground that one cannot but accept, admit, and finally transcend; indeed that in order to move forward, one must leave the Nakba behind. Some have even suggested that if Israel acknowledges and apologizes for the Nakba, the Palestinians would forgive and forget, and the effects of the Nakba would be relegated to historical commemorations, not unlike the one we are having this year.
In my view, the Nakba is none of these things, and the attempt to make this year the 60th anniversary of the Nakba's life and death is a grave error. The Nakba is in fact much older than 60 years and it is still with us, pulsating with life and coursing through history by piling up more calamities upon the Palestinian people. I hold that the Nakba is a historical epoch that is 127 years old and is ongoing. The year 1881 is the date when Jewish colonization of Palestine started and, as everyone knows, it has never ended. Much as the world would like to present Palestinians as living in a post-Nakba period, I insist that we live thoroughly in Nakba times. What we are doing this year is not an act of commemorating but an act of witnessing the ongoing Nakba that continues to destroy Palestine and the Palestinians. I submit, therefore, that this year is not the 60th anniversary of the Nakba at all, but rather one more year of enduring its brutality; that the history of the Nakba has never been a history of the past but decidedly a history of the present.
The meaning of the Nakba
While the Nakba has been translated into English as "catastrophe," "disaster," or "calamity," these translations do not fully grasp the active ramifications of its Arabic meanings. The Nakba as an act committed by Zionism and its adherents against Palestine and the Palestinians has rendered the Palestinians mankubin. English does not help much in translating mankubin, unless we can stretch the language a bit and call Palestinians a catastrophe-d or disaster-ed people. Unlike the Greek catastrophe, which means overturning, or the Latin disaster, which means a calamitous event occurring when the stars are not in the right alignment, the Nakba is an act of deliberate destruction, of visiting calamities upon a people, of a well-planned ruining of a country and its inhabitants. The word was coined by the eminent Arab intellectual Constantine Zureik in his August 1948 short book on the meaning of the Nakba that was ongoing as he wrote it, just like it is as I write these lines.
Since the beginning, the Palestinian people have resisted the racist and colonial logic of the Nakba, through fighting off the colonists in the 1880s and 1890s, in the 1910s, 20s, 30s, 40s, 50s, 60s, and on to the present. If Palestinian resistance failed to prevent the massive expulsion of half the Palestinian people and of the outright theft of their entire country, it has succeeded in overthrowing Zionist official memory. Indeed, memory has always been a key component of Palestinian resistance. When Palestinians insist on naming their country, their cities, and their villages with their original names, they are not only resisting the vulgar names that Zionism has bestowed on the land, they are also insisting on a geographic memory that Israel has all but succeeded to erase physically. Zionist cruelty has been such that Israel insisted for 50 years after its creation in denying that the Palestinians even exist as a people, or as a name; that the very name "Palestinians" should not even be uttered. For Zionists, the very name "Palestinian" functions as some magical incantation that could obliterate them at the existential level. They are not necessarily wrong in their impression, for the name Palestinian is itself the strongest form of resistance against their official memory. The name "Palestinian" has also been generative of continuities in Palestinian culture and life, in Palestinian identity and nationality, things that Israel had hoped it obliterated completely and whose survival will always threaten its mnemonic operation of inventing a fictional memory of non-Palestine, of non-Palestinians.
Palestinian counter-memory is in direct confrontation with the Nakba's achievement of obliterating Palestine as a geographic designation and an affront to the Nakba's ongoing efforts to obliterate the Palestinians as a national group with a pre-Nakba history. The survival of the Palestinians after the Nakba started, and despite its assiduous efforts to efface them, has made the Nakba a less than successful Zionist victory. It is in this context that Israel's insistence on calling Palestinian citizens in Israel "Israeli Arabs" is designed to silence their Palestinian-ness. Zionism's insistence that Palestinian refugees be settled and given the nationality of their host countries is aimed also to erase their name.
Israel's final admission a decade ago that there was a Palestinian people would come at the price of reducing the Palestinian people to one-third of their total number. In signing Oslo, Israel compromised with a collaborationist Palestinian leadership, wherein the price the Palestinian Authority would pay for Israel's agreeing to name West Bank and Gaza Palestinians with their proper names was the de-Palestinization of the rest of the Palestinian people. In return, the Palestinian collaborating leadership, under the guise of the Geneva Accords, has agreed to multiply Israel's Jewish population by a factor of three, wherein Israel would be recognized as the state of all Jews worldwide and not of the Jews who live inside it, let alone the Palestinian citizens over whom it rules.But this arrangement has failed. Hard as it tried to legitimize itself, the Palestinian Authority could not but be seen for what it is: the creation of the Israeli occupation, an authority which in its structure and logic is not unlike all colonial puppet regimes in Asia and Africa serving their masters, not excluding the Judenraete (Jewish councils) that the Nazis set up in occupied Poland's ghettos to run Jewish life, collect taxes, and run the post offices, inter alia; or the Bantustans that apartheid South Africa set up as alternative homelands. The Palestinian Authority's attempt to acquire the power of naming the Palestinian and Jewish peoples failed as much as Israel's attempts before it. Palestinians continue to insist on their name and on their inclusion in a Palestinian nation, while non-Israeli Jews insist on not joining Israeli nationality, no matter how much they may support Israel. The politics of naming is the politics of power and resistance. The power to name creates fictional histories against material realities. While Israel has succeeded in imposing physical and geographic realties, its attempt to obliterate historical memory has failed. Palestinians are always standing in the way of its falsification of their history and its own.
The Nakba is now
Ever since the Nakba came to describe the tumultuous actions of 1948, an ongoing struggle has raged to define it as a past and finished event rather than an unfinished present action. This is not an epistemological struggle but a lively political one. To identify the Nakba as a past and finished event is to declare its success and insist on the irreversibility of its achievements. It is to insist that there is no longer a struggle to define it, nor a successful resistance that stands in its way. It is to grant it historical and political legitimacy as a fact of life, but also to endow all its subsequent effects as its natural outcome. Thus the struggle of Palestinian citizens of Israel today, according to the Zionist narrative, is not a normal anti-colonial struggle or one that demands national or ethnic or civil rights, but rather an "abnormal" struggle to reverse the Nakba.
That Israel has upwards of 20 laws on the books that institutionalize Jewish religious and racial privilege in rights and duties over non-Jewish citizens is presented as a normal consecration of the Nakba, which Palestinians continue to refuse. Indeed, some Israeli leaders, most recently Tzipi Livni, have suggested that Palestinian citizens of Israel should leave to countries that would grant them national rights instead of remaining in Israel where they will always be denied equal rights as part of their ongoing Nakba. Palestinians are often reminded that "much greater" peoples than they have opted for self-displacement from countries that denied them rights to a country that granted them rights, namely European Jews themselves who came to visit the Nakba upon the Palestinians. If Palestinians in Israel want to remain in Israel, they must accept the normalcy of the Nakba and must acquiesce in their new status as mankubin who cannot and will never have equal rights with Jews. Their refusal of the effects of the Nakba is what makes Palestinian citizens of Israel want to reverse its effects by calling on Israel to repeal its racist laws and become an Israeli, rather than a Jewish, state. Israel and now President Bush insist that the effects of the Nakba must be accepted by all Palestinians. That the Nakba transformed Palestine into "the Jewish State," Palestinians are told, is not reversible and no amount of civil rights activism or national struggle will undo this major achievement. Palestinian citizens of Israel however seem unconvinced and continue to resist this irreversibility. Their plight, according to Israel, however, is not caused by the Nakba but by their insistence on resisting it.
It is also said that the Palestinian refugees languishing in camps for 60 years are like all other refugee populations, with which the world of the 20th and 21st centuries is filled, borne out of war. Their problem does not lie with the Zionist actions of 1947-1948 that expelled them from their homeland but rather, Israel insists, with the post-1948 refusal of Palestinians and Arab countries to accept the Nakba as irreversible and settle these poor refugees in their host countries. The refugees, Zionism insists, suffer not because of the Nakba but because they refuse to accept the Nakba and to accept themselves as mankubin.
As for those Palestinians in the West Bank, Gaza and East Jerusalem, their problems are certainly not a result of the Nakba but, as Israel insists, of the Arab refusal to accept it. Their problems are born of an international war in 1967 that resulted from the Arab refusal of the Nakba as a permanent fact. If Palestinians and their allies would just accept the Nakba as a past and finished event, the calamities that they still claim befall them would cease immediately
To insist that the Nakba is a present continuous act of destruction that remains unfinished is to resist acknowledging that its work has been completed. Palestinian resistance is what accounts for the unfinished work of the Nakba and for its ongoing brutality. Israel and its international supporters insist that had the Palestinians accepted defeat and recognized the Nakba, had they accepted their expulsion, their third-class citizenship within Israel, and the conquest of 1967, their calamities would have ended. The reason for the hardship that Palestinians experience, Israel tells us, is that Palestinians have never stopped fighting it.
Palestinians resisted the Nakba in the 1880s, when European Jewish colonists kicked them off land they purchased from absentee landlords and denied them labor on land they had tilled for centuries. Palestinian resistance took the form of a major three-year revolt in the 1930s against British support for Zionists to bring about the Nakba. Palestinians also resisted after the actions of 1947/1948 when most of their land was conquered and confiscated by the racist laws of the Jewish state. Their ongoing resistance to the Nakba in the West Bank and in Gaza, we are still told by Israel and The New York Times, is in fact what invites more Nakbas. If Palestinians would allow Israel to lay siege to them in the largest open air prison in the world called Gaza without resisting it, Israel would not be forced to bomb them and kill their children and destroy their homes, it would only starve them and keep them inside the apartheid wall. If Palestinians would simply accept their status as mankubin, the Nakba, as an unfinished process, would be finally completed. This logic of conquest is not exceptional at all, nor is it limited to the Israelis. Has not the resistance in Iraq more recently stood in the way of the final completion of the mission of the American invasion, which President Bush declared "Accomplished" five years ago? It is Iraqi resistance to the destruction that the Americans visit on Iraq that forces the process of American destruction to continue and the American mission to remain unaccomplished.
Zionist racism
But what is it that the Palestinians continue to resist in the Nakba that Israel continues to visit upon them? In short, its effects and its victories. Moshe Dayan once eloquently described the Nakba as follows: "Jewish villages were built in the place of Arab villages. You don't even know the names of these Arab villages, and I don't blame you, because these geography books no longer exist. Not only do the books not exist, the Arab villages are not there either. Nahalal arose in the place of Mahlul, Gvat in the place of Jibta, Sarid in the place of Haneifa, and Kfar-Yehoshua in the place of Tel-Shaman. There is not one single place built in this country that did not have a former Arab population."
The success of the Palestinian resistance to the Nakba has forced a similar process of renaming Zionist and Israeli victories that is now adopted across much of the world, and even, albeit in a much more limited fashion, in the United States. To echo Dayan: Palestinian resistance and victimization replaced Zionist conquests and victories. Many of you don't even know the names of these Zionist victories, and I don't blame you, because the Zionist history books and propaganda that once legitimized them are no longer considered legitimate. Not only have these books and this propaganda lost legitimacy, but the Zionist and Israeli victories are no longer recognized as such either. The Nakba arose in place of "Israel's war of independence," apartheid replaced "Jewish sovereignty," the expulsion of the Palestinians replaced "Plan Dalet," or even the "return of the Jews to their ancestral homeland," Israel's institutionalized and legal racism replaced "Israeli democracy," Palestinian citizens of Israel replaced "Israeli Arabs," the Palestinian people replaced the "non-Jewish communities in Palestine" as the Balfour Declaration had described them, and Palestinian maftul replaced "Israeli couscous" which continues to try to replace Palestinian maftul. There is not one single Zionist victory in this country that the Palestinians have not resisted and challenged.
Palestinians have resisted and resist the Nakba with steadfastness and a refusal to leave their lands; with strikes, demonstrations, and civil disobedience; with art, music, and dance; with poetry, theater, and novels; with writing their own history and asserting their own geography; with local and international appeals to courts of law, and to the United Nations. Palestinians have also resisted and resist the Nakba with stones and with guns. The denial of the Palestinians' right to resist (guaranteed and deemed legal by international law) is not however confined to their use of guns, but equally to their use of art, books, music, demonstrations, even of filing UN appeals, of teaching Palestinian history, of narrating the Nakba, or of remembering and commemorating it.
That the Nakba that Zionist planners conceived since the late 19th century included the take-over of all Palestine, the expulsion of all of its native Arab population, and rendering it Arabrein, continues apace. While land acquisitions started in the 1880s and the en masse theft of the country occurred in 1948, Israel has still not been able to take over the entire land. The ongoing confiscation of lands in East Jerusalem and the West Bank today is part of the continuing Nakba. Zionism's plans to make Israel Arabrein also continue apace. If Israel is unable before international law to expel all Palestinians today, it has devised a clever alternative, namely to place all those it cannot expel inside an apartheid wall that it will call a Palestinian state and make plans to expel those residing outside this apartheid wall, namely Palestinian citizens of Israel, to inside those walls. The end result will indeed be an Arabrein Israel outside the wall. These Nakba efforts are being pursued actively at present with the collaboration of the Palestinian Authority and Arab governments under US sponsorship.
The destruction of more than 500 Palestinian villages did not take place in 1948 but was an ongoing process for years following the Zionist conquest. Expelling the Palestinians off their lands started in the 1880s with a much larger expulsion inside and outside Palestine beginning in earnest in November 1947. It is crucial to remember that Zionist forces expelled 400,000 Palestinians from their lands before 14 May 1948. Many hundreds of thousands more would be expelled in the months and years following, throughout the 1950s, and again since 1967. Expulsions have not stopped. The presence of Palestinians is what provokes Israel to expel them. If Palestinians would accept to displace themselves and leave Palestine, Israel tells them, there would no longer be expulsions. I should point out here that the Zionist insistence on self-displacement is not only directed at Palestinians. Since its inception until now, Zionism and Israel have always recommended and continue to recommend that world Jewry displace itself and come to Israel. Like the Palestinians, most Jews outside Israel continue to resist Israel's call on them to displace themselves. While Israel is no longer able to force Jews outside its borders to move to it (and there were many times when it could), it has the ability and the will to displace the Palestinians no matter how much they resist.
Resistance is now
Palestinian resistance today is active on many fronts. One of the key campaigns that Palestinians in Israel have mounted recently is to force Israel to repeal its many racist laws. A number of proposals and documents have been issued by Palestinian organizations in Israel to that effect. This campaign must be internationalized. The United Nations and other world forums must be enlisted in the task of forcing Israel to repeal its racist laws. This is not the demagogic attempt to call Zionism racism as the UN had done in 1975 in a sloganeering resolution, but rather to demonstrate how Israel is institutionally racist and that it rules through racist laws that must be repealed.
Palestinians and their allies have also mounted an international campaign of divestment and boycott of Israel until it ceases to be in violation of international law through its continued occupation of the West Bank and Gaza and it stops its ongoing war crimes against them.
This is another key campaign that has already scored a number of impressive victories.
This is not to say that Palestinians do not continue to suffer everywhere. The suffering of Gazans has been the greatest in recent years, as Israel punishes them for their refusal of the rule of the Palaestinenserrat Israel and its Palestinian collaborators imposed on the West Bank and tried to impose on Gaza in their attempt to overthrow the democratically elected Palestinian government. Israel's war crimes against Gazans continue apace but Gazans have had no choice but to remain steadfast and to resist.
But in resisting the Nakba, the Palestinians have struck at the heart of the Zionist project that insists that the Nakba be seen as a past event. In resisting Israel, Palestinians have forced the world to witness the Nakba as present action; one that, contrary to Zionist wisdom, is indeed reversible. This is precisely what galls Israel and the Zionist movement. Israel's inability to complete its mission of thoroughly colonizing Palestine, of expelling all Palestinians, of "gathering" all Jews in the world in its colony, keeps it uneasy and keeps its project always in the present continuous.
While Israel has used this situation to project itself as a victim of its own victims who refuse to grant it legitimacy to victimize them, Israel understands not only in its unconscious but also consciously that its project will remain reversible. The cruelty it has shown and continues to show to the Palestinian people is directly proportional to its belief in their ability to overthrow its achievements and reverse its colonial project. The problem for Israel is not in believing and knowing that there is not one single place in its colonial settlement that did not have a former Arab population, but in its realization that there is no place today in its imaginary "Jewish State" that does not still have an Arab population who claims it.
That the Nakba remains unfinished is precisely because Palestinians refuse to let it transform them into mankubin. What we are witnessing at this year's commemorations, then, is not only one more year of the Nakba but also one more year of resisting it. Those who counsel the Palestinians to accept the Nakba know that to accept the Nakba is to allow it to continue unfettered. Palestinians know better. The only way to end the Nakba, Palestinians insist, is to continue to resist it.
* The writer is associate professor of modern Arab politics and intellectual history at Columbia University in New York. He is author of The Persistence of the Palestinian Question.
Joseph Massad is associate professor of modern Arab politics and intellectual history at Columbia University in New York. This article originally appeared in Al-Ahram and is republished with the author's permission.

Remembering 1948 and looking to the future


Twenty-six-year-old Jamila Merhi was forced from her family's home in Akbara village near
Safad,
Palestine in 1948. Now, 86, she lives in the Shatila refugee camp in Beirut, Lebanon and
still holds onto a copy of her family's deed for their land in Palestine. (Matthew Cassel)

This month Israel marks the 60th anniversary of its founding. But amidst the festivities including visits by international celebrities and politicians there is deep unease -- Israel has skeletons in its closet that it has tried hard to hide, and anxieties about an uncertain future which make many Israelis question whether the state will celebrate an 80th birthday.

Official Israel remains in complete denial that the birth it celebrates is inextricably linked with the near destruction of the vibrant Palestinian culture and society that had existed until then. It's not an unfamiliar dilemma for settler states. The United States, where I live, has found that even the passage of centuries cannot absolve a nation from confronting the crimes committed at its founding.

As the noted Israeli historian and staunch Zionist Benny Morris put it in 2004, "a Jewish state would not have come into being without the uprooting of 700,000 Palestinians. Therefore it was necessary to uproot them." He went on, "there are circumstances in history that justify ethnic cleansing."

But if one is not prepared to openly justify ethnic cleansing, there's only two real options: to deny history and take comfort in an airbrushed story that paints Israelis as brave, divinely inspired pioneers in a desert devoid of indigenous people and beset by external enemies, or to own up to the consequences and support the enormous redress needed to bring justice and peace.

Just before Israel's founding, Palestinians of all religions made up two thirds of the settled population of historic Palestine, while Jewish immigrants, recently arrived from Europe, made up most of the rest.

Among those uprooted was my mother, then nine years old. Now living in Amman, she remembers a happy childhood in her native Jerusalem neighborhood of Lifta. My grandfather owned several buildings and many of his tenants were Jews, including the family who rented the downstairs apartment in their house.

Early in 1948 -- before any Arab states' armies got involved -- she and her entire family, indeed all the inhabitants of several neighboring West Jerusalem areas, were forced out by Zionist militias. On 7 February that year, Israel's founding prime minister, David Ben-Gurion told members of his party, "From your entry into Jerusalem, through Lifta-Romema, through Mahane Yehuda, through King George Street and Mea Shearim -- there are no strangers [i.e. Arabs]. One hundred percent Jews." So it was that the Palestinians became "strangers" in the land of their birth.

Since that time millions of refugees and their descendants who lost their homes, farms, groves, livestock, factories, stores, tools, automobiles, bank accounts, art work, insurance policies, furniture and every other possession have lived in exile, many in squalid refugee camps maintained by Israel and Arab states. Over 80 percent of the Palestinians now besieged and starved in the Gaza Strip are refugees from towns now in Israel. But what Palestinians could never be forced to part with -- and this we do celebrate -- is our attachment to our homeland and the determination to see justice done.

Palestinians all over the world are commemorating the start of our ongoing tragedy, but we are also looking forward. We are at an important turning point, where two things are happening at once. First, despite ritual declarations of international support, the prospect of a two-state solution has all but disappeared as Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip are caged into walled reservations by growing Israeli settlements and settler-only roads -- a situation that resembles the bantustans of apartheid South Africa.

Second, despite Israel's efforts to keep Palestinians in check, the Palestinian population living under Israeli rule is about to exceed the five million Israeli Jews. Today there are 3.5 million Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, and another 1.5 million Palestinians who are nominally citizens of Israel. Sometimes called "Israeli Arabs," Palestinians in Israel are increasingly restive about their second class status in a Jewish state that regards them as a hostile fifth column. While Palestinians in Israel call for equal rights in a state of all its citizens, some Israeli Jewish politicians threaten them with expulsion to the West Bank, Gaza Strip or beyond.

Official projections show that by 2025, Palestinians, due to their much higher birth rate, will exceed Israeli Jews in the country by two million and though few in the international community have woken up to this reality, a surgical separation between these populations is impossible.

Israeli leaders understand what they are up against; Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said last November: "If the day comes when the two-state solution collapses, and we face a South African-style struggle for equal voting rights, then, as soon as that happens, the State of Israel is finished."

This struggle has already begun as more and more Palestinians, recognizing that statehood is unrealistic, debate and adopt the one-state solution, offering Israelis and Palestinians equal rights in the land they share. Last year, I was part of a group of Palestinians, Israelis and others who published the "One State Declaration." Inspired partly by South Africa's Freedom Charter, we set out principles for a common future in a single democratic state. Most Israelis, unsurprisingly, recoil at comparisons with apartheid South Africa. The good news for them is that the end of apartheid did not bring about the disaster many feared. Rather, it was a new dawn for all the people of the country

Co-founder of The Electronic Intifada, Ali Abunimah is author of One Country: A Bold Proposal to End the Israeli-Palestinian Impasse (Metropolitan Books, 2006). A version of this essay was originally published by The Sydney Morning Herald.

Monday, May 12, 2008

Ethnic cleansing continues in Jaffa

"The war that began in 1948 to purge Jaffa of its Arab residents has never ended and continues to this day. In 1948 it was waged by force, and today they use legal and economic means. The state claims that these are the rules of the market, in full knowledge that they will work against the Arab population."
-- Attorney Hisham Shabaita, a social activist and Jaffa resident

On 19 March 2007, Amidar Israel National Housing Company (Amidar) published a document entitled "A Review of the Stock of Squatted Properties in Jaffa -- Interior Committee, Israel Knesset." The document reviewed properties managed by the company in the Jaffa-Tel Aviv area. Section 5 noted that "the project includes a total of 497 squatters, constituting 16.8 percent of the total properties managed by Amidar."

Section 5 of the document relates, in fact, to 497 orders received over the past 18 months by Palestinian families living in the Ajami and Jabaliya neighborhoods in Jaffa to vacate their homes or businesses. These homes are owned by the state and managed by Amidar in its name. The grounds for eviction range from "squatting" in the property to "building additions" to properties undertaken by the Palestinian tenants of these properties without approval from Amidar and without obtaining a permit from the planning and building authorities.'

By law, eviction is permitted in such circumstances. Accordingly, the eviction orders may ostensibly seem to be a legitimate and lawful move by Amidar in response to legal violations by the tenants. Israeli law empowers a landlord letting his property to another -- a status that applies to the relationship between the Palestinian tenants and Amidar -- to demand the eviction of a tenant who has violated the law or the rental contract with the landlord. Squatting or building additions to the property without the approval of the landlord or the planning authorities are considered violations justifying the eviction of the tenant.

According to the Palestinian residents, however, the issuing of these orders actually reflects a desire to evict them from the neighborhood, which in recent years has become a magnet for wealthy Jewish buyers. They believe that the issuing of the eviction orders cannot be divorced from a process terms the "development of Jaffa" by the Tel Aviv Municipality. This process, which is currently at its peak, actually amounts to a plan to "judaize" Jaffa, i.e. to attract as many Jewish residents as possible to the area, which is currently perceived by the Jewish public as an "Arab" city -- despite the fact that, in statistical terms, this is inaccurate.

In the late 1990s, after Mr. Ron Huldai was elected to serve as mayor of Tel Aviv-Jaffa, he announced that special priority would be given to establishing an organizational framework that would be charged with "rehabilitating and developing Jaffa," and particularly the Ajami neighborhood. The organizational structure was indeed established (the Supplementary Authority for Jaffa) and, in theory, it has since been active in efforts to "develop Jaffa." Over time, however, it has emerged that the development of the Ajami neighborhood is not intended for the benefit of its Palestinian residents, who constitute 80 percent of the population and who have for decades suffered from profound neglect in all areas of life. While it might be expected that the development of the neighborhood would seek to improve their quality, the actual goal is to "tempt" Jewish residents to move to the area which, since the events of October 2000, has been perceived as a "frightening" residential area among the Jewish public.

In practice, the "development" of Jaffa has resulted in a growing number of Arab residents leaving the area as real estate prices have soared following the development process. Conversely, a growing number of prosperous Jewish residents have moved into the neighborhood. The local Palestinian residents have good cause to believe that this was the original intention behind the program. Those involved must have been aware that the development of the area would lead to a rise in real estate prices, and that this would eventually leave the Palestinian residents with no choice but to leave the area. Attorney Hisham Shabaita, a social activist and Jaffa resident who is employed at the Law Clinic of Tel Aviv University, commented: "The state claims that these are the rules of the market, in full knowledge that they will work against the Arab population."

The suspicions of the Palestinian residents are corroborated by the fact that most of the alleged legal violations attributed to the Palestinian tenants (the cases of squatting and building additions alleged by Amidar) were committed 20 to 30 years ago. In light of this, the Palestinian residents find themselves wondering why Amidar has only now remembered to enforce the law!

In March 2007, in response to the publication of the document prepared by Amidar, a group of local social activists formed a committee called The Popular Committee to Defend the Right to Housing and Land in Jaffa. The committee is comprised of "residents, social activists, movements, organizations, and political parties in Jaffa representing the common public interest of the Palestinian population." In the short term, the committee demands that the authorities (the Israel Lands Administration, Amidar, and the Municipality of Tel Aviv-Jaffa) freeze the eviction orders they issued. In the long term, it seeks "recognition of the Palestinian community in Jaffa as a collective with historical rights to land and properties."

According to the committee, the Palestinian residents of Jaffa face a constant threat, and the current eviction orders are just part of an overall plan on the part of the authorities to judaize Jaffa on the pretext of legal violations. Most of the Palestinian residents link the latest eviction orders with the ethnic cleansing of the Palestinian population in 1948 in Jaffa and elsewhere. The difference between the two periods is the tool used. While in 1948 the Palestinians were evicted from their homes by force, 60 years on the authorities are now trying to evict the Palestinians -- who have since become citizens in the Jewish state -- by economic and legal means. For these residents, ethnic cleansing did not end in 1948. It continues to this day, albeit by different means. The process being implemented in Jaffa (and in other locations in Israel) amounts to the "quiet transfer" of the Palestinian residents.

This report documents the danger of eviction facing the Palestinian residents of the Ajami neighborhood in Jaffa and reveals the true motives behind this process.

West Bank journalists detained by PA intelligence

The Palestinian Centre for Human Rights (PCHR) strongly condemns the distention of three Palestinian journalists and a columnist by the Palestinian General Intelligence Service (GIS) in Bethlehem and Qalqilya towns in the West Bank on Thursday, 8 May 2008. PCHR believes that such arrests constitute an attack on press freedoms and the right to freedom of expression, which are ensured by the Palestinian Basic Law and international human rights instruments.

According to investigations conducted by PCHR and the testimony of cameraman Aseed 'Abdul Majeed 'Amarna, 23, at approximately 12:00 on Thursday, 8 May 2008, 'Amarna was photographing a march organized in Bethlehem on the 60th anniversary of the Palestinian Nakba (the uprooting of the Palestinian people from their land in 1948). When the march arrived in al-'Azza refugee camp, north of the town, a person wearing civilian clothes approached 'Amarna. He ordered him to stop photographing and to accompany him. When that person knew that 'Amarna was photographing for the al-Aqsa Satellite Channel of Hamas, two other persons came and confiscated the camera. The three persons then pushed 'Amarna into a military vehicle and transported him to the headquarters of the GIS in Bethlehem. According to 'Amarna, he was sporadically interrogated about his work until 23:00. After 'Amarna had shown the interrogators a court ruling acquitting him of previous charges related to his work, and after the Head of the Palestinian Journalists' Union, Na'im al-Tubassi, had intervened to ensure his release, 'Amarna was eventually released at 23:30, but he was ordered to refer to the GIS on Sunday, 11 May 2008. The interrogators seized his camera.

'Amarna had been arrested together with 'Alaa' al-Teeti, both working for the al-Aqsa Satellite Channel, by the Preventive Security Service in Hebron on 7 November 2007. On 24 April 2008, the District Court in Hebron acquitted them of charges, following 6 court sessions to consider their case, "due to the lack of evidence and the absence of eyewitnesses."

In the same context, the GIS arrested two journalists and a columnist in Qalqilya. According to investigations conducted by PCHR and the testimony of cameraman Mustafa 'Ali Sabri, 41, at approximately 22:30 on Thursday, 8 May 2008, Sabri received a phone call from a person who introduced himself as a GIS officer and asked him where he was. Sabri offered to go the headquarters of the GIS himself, but the caller insisted to know where he was.

Sabri told him that he was in the hosting house of Dr. Hashem al-Masri, a member of the municipal council of Qalqilya. Soon, a number of GIS officers arrived at the area. One of them phoned Sabri and asked him to get out and he did. The officers arrested him and took him to the headquarters of the GIS. Sabri was released on Saturday afternoon, 10 May 2008, but he was ordered to refer to the GIS again on Monday, 12 May 2008. He told PCHR that he was interrogated about the distribution of a leaflet in Qalqilya criticizing Palestinian security services, and he denied any knowledge about it. He added that he was subjected to cruel treatment during detention. Sabri is a freelance journalist and a member of the municipal council of Qalqilya.

At the same time, the GIS arrested Dr. 'Essam Mohammed Shawar, 42. According to investigations conducted by PCHR, at approximately 22:30 also on Thursday, a number of GIS officers went to Shawar's house to arrest him, and when they did not find him, they took the number of his mobile phone from his wife. They phoned him and he informed them that he was in Kfar Saba neighborhood. They went there and arrested him. Shawar is a dentist and also a columnist in Palestine Daily, which is published in Gaza and whose distribution in the West Bank has been banned for several months.

At approximately 23:00 on Thursday also, the GIS arrested Mohammed 'Omar Darwish, 32, a cameraman of Associated Press and the owner of Marah studio of photography, from his studio. They took him to the headquarters of the GIS.

PCHR strongly condemns these attacks and:

1) Expresses utmost concern over the recurrence of violations of the right to freedom of expression and press freedoms, and calls for providing protection to journalists and the media to be able to work freely.

2) Stresses that the right to freedom of expression is ensured by the Palestinian Basic Law and international human rights instruments.

Friday, May 2, 2008

Gaza food distribution halted, cooking gas running out


Palestinians collect garbage at a dump in Gaza City, 24 April 2008. The UN agency for
Palestine refugees, UNRWA, has stopped collecting garbage as a result of Israel's
restrictions on fuel imports to the Gaza Strip. (Wissam Nassar/
MaanImages)

JERUSALEM/GAZA, 28 April (IRIN) - The UN has stopped distributing food in the Gaza Strip as its main agencies have run out of fuel for vehicles. To make matters worse, many bakeries in the enclave were closed on 28 April as they had run out of gas.
The World Food Program (WFP) and the UN agency for Palestine refugees, UNRWA confirmed they had not delivered food aid since 26 April, with the latter saying it had also stopped refuse collection.
The head of UNRWA in Gaza, John Ging, told IRIN efforts were being made to get fuel to the UN, but said "a solution for the UN's needs is not a solution for all of Gaza.
"Several aid agencies, including Medicins Sans Frontieres (MSF), have also halted some work due to the lack of fuel."
The cessation of our activities may result in a severe deterioration of all of our patients' general state of health," said MSF's Duncan McLean.
Health workers had trouble getting to work, and up to 40 percent of staff were absent in some hospitals, according to MSF. Students and teachers had the same problems reaching schools.
Ambulances were short of fuel, and hospitals said they did not have enough for their backup generators, which are crucial when the power cuts out.
Cooking gas shortage

Cooking gas is no longer available at official outlets as very limited supplies have been delivered since a 9 April attack by Palestinian fighters on the Nahal Oz fuel border crossing.

Kirstie Campbell, a WFP spokeswoman, told IRIN from Gaza that some 80 percent of the enclave's population was living in poverty and most of them required food aid, particularly as unemployment remained high.

People have also become more reliant on basic food products, and have severely reduced consumption of expensive goods like fresh meat.

"Now these people, reliant on these basics of life -- flour, sugar, oil, chickpeas and salt -- are even unable to cook them," Campbell said.

Some 90 percent of Gaza's bakeries run on cooking gas, and most in the southern Gaza Strip have shut down due to the lack of fuel.

There are also growing concerns over an impending grain shortage in the enclave, due to Israeli-imposed restrictions on imports.

The agriculture sector was also suffering, as it lacked fuel needed to pump well water for irrigation, and prices of vegetables continue to rise.

Dozens of farmers and fishermen blocked a shipment of fuel for UNRWA last week, saying the UN agency should not be given priority.

Strike

This further complicated Gaza's fuel crisis which is a result of Israel's strict limitations on imports and a strike by the enclave's fuel importers who are protesting against the restrictions. Attacks by Palestinian fighters on the crossings have also made it harder for the Israeli side to get fuel into Gaza.

Israel has accused Hamas, which rules the enclave, of organizing the strike to create a humanitarian crisis -- charges which the Islamic group denies.

"The private sector took the decision to strike. There is no coordination between the government and the importers," Fawzi Barhoum of Hamas told IRIN, adding that the movement was urging the businessmen to end the strike.

While some observers have questioned if the strike could take place without Hamas' approval, the fuel importers, in apparent defiance of the government's wishes, said they would not end the strike until Israel agreed to let in more fuel.

"We work for no government," Mahmoud Khozondar from the association told IRIN.Robert Serry, the UN special coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process, condemned attacks on the crossings and called on Israel to "restore adequate supplies of diesel and benzene for the civilian population of Gaza in accordance with international law."

This item comes to you via IRIN, a UN humanitarian news and information service, but may not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations or its agencies. All IRIN material may be reposted or reprinted free-of-charge; refer to the copyright page for conditions of use. IRIN is a project of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.

Support the Canadian Union of Postal Workers' campaign against Israeli apartheid

We the undersigned organizations congratulate the Canadian Union of Postal workers (CUPW) for joining the international boycott of Israeli apartheid. We call on workers and labor unions worldwide to join CUPW in creating a strong and effective labor movement in solidarity with struggles against Israeli apartheid and violence.

At the national convention of CUPW, representing over 50,000 workers across Canada, a strong majority of delegates voted for a resolution in support of the international campaign of boycott, divestment and sanctions against Israeli apartheid.

Marking the first time a country-wide labour union in North America has voted to participate in the global campaign against apartheid in Palestine, CUPW's resolution represents a critical juncture for the involvement of North American labour in this campaign. International support for CUPW's resolution -- which recognizes the Palestinian people's inalienable rights, including the right of return -- could prove key to shoring up this victory.

In Canada, CUPW has been at the forefront of campaigns against privatization and deregulation of postal services in Canada, while maintaining a proud history of international solidarity. During the South African apartheid years, CUPW played a lead role in labor solidarity with South African workers, engaging in concrete actions such as the refusal to handle mail from South Africa.

CUPW has now joined the international campaign against Israeli apartheid, committing itself to "support the international campaign of boycott, divestment and sanctions until Israel meets its obligations to recognize the Palestinian people's inalienable right to self-determination and fully complies with the precepts of international law including the right of Palestinian refugees to return to their homes and lands as stipulated in UN Resolution 194."

Israel's apartheid and colonial policies have resulted in the near collapse of the Palestinian economy, resulting in massive unemployment and bleak poverty. In the West Bank, over 51 percent of the population is estimated to live under the poverty line; in Gaza, the figure rises to 81 percent. Israel's policies have had a particularly acute effect on Palestinian postal workers, as the apartheid regime has ensured that there is no Palestinian-controlled access to other countries.

As a result, all incoming and outgoing Palestinian mail has to pass through the Israeli postal service, which routinely delays delivery, often for several months. In the course of fulfilling their duty, Palestinian postal workers are forced to travel through Israeli checkpoints at which Israeli soldiers regularly delay their passage, detaining them for hours under the sun or rain, or denying them passage altogether. Working under a brutal military occupation, Palestinian postal workers can risk imprisonment, injury, and death in the course of a day's work.

CUPW's resolution comes at a time when Israel prepares to celebrate the sixtieth year since its establishment, a celebration in which many of the most powerful governments of the world will participate. For 60 years, the Palestinian people have endured and resisted ongoing displacement, land confiscation, military violence, institutionalized racism, and political repression of the minority who managed to remain in their homeland. CUPW's resolution is a clear statement to the world that when the states of the world stand behind oppression and apartheid, it is up to the people of the world to oppose it.

Every passing week demonstrates the urgent need for a strong popular movement against Israeli apartheid. Last week, Israel once again stepped up the violence of its bloody siege of Gaza, leaving dozens of Palestinian civilians dead. Israel continues to impose collective punishment on the 1.5 million Palestinians of Gaza, who live with chronic shortages of electricity, fuel, food and basic necessities as a result.

We call on all workers and labour unions to join CUPW in creating a strong and effective boycott movement to help bring an end to this injustice and violence.

Actions you can take:

=>Endorse this statement: send the name of your organization and city to: tadamon [at] resist.ca.
=>Send a message of solidarity through email or fax to the CUPW National office congratulating them on their stand against Israeli apartheid. Please fax your letter of support to CUPW National Office at: + 1 613 563 7861 email at: tadamon [at] resist.ca
=>Ask your union, community group, association or collective to follow CUPW's lead and adopt a position in support of the international campaign for boycott, divestment and sanctions against Israeli apartheid.
=>In Montreal, join the "Boycott Apartheid" bloc in the demonstration organized by the Coalition for Justice and Peace in Palestine (CJPP) to mark the 60th year of the Nakba on Saturday, 10 May 2008, 1pm Dorchester Square (Peel & Rene-Levesque) in Montreal. To join the boycott bloc, look for the "boycott Israeli Apartheid" banner.

Tadamon! ("Solidarity!" in Arabic) is a Montreal-based collective of social-justice organizers & media activists, working to build relationships of solidarity with grassroots political movements for social and economic justice between Beirut and Montreal.

UN facing increased delays at Israeli checkpoints


A UN staff member being checked by Israeli soldiers at a checkpoint. (UNRWA)

JERUSALEM, 30 April (IRIN) - Increased Israeli restrictions on the checkpoints around East Jerusalem have caused more delays and more lost man hours for UN staff in March 2008 than in all of 2007, the UN's Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) has reported.

In the Humanitarian Monitor for March, released on 24 April, OCHA said "operations were significantly affected" and almost daily UN vehicles were delayed and even turned back by
Israeli soldiers at checkpoints south of Jerusalem.
Israeli soldiers have increasingly insisted on searching UN vehicles at the checkpoints as a condition for being allowed through, despite the fact that Israel signed the 1946 Convention on the Privileges and Immunities of the UN which normally prohibits such searches.

"Movement of UN staff between the West Bank and East Jerusalem has been increasingly restricted over the years, starting with the erection of checkpoints, the requirement that national staff carry permits, and the building of the wall," Allegra Pacheco, the acting-head of UN OCHA in occupied Palestinian territory, told IRIN.

"Beyond challenging its own commitments under the convention, it is also challenging the neutrality of the UN by demanding a search," Pacheco said, adding that on 29 April she herself was delayed for over one hour after soldiers demanded a search of her UN vehicle.

Most of the delays take place as staff try to enter East Jerusalem, where nearly all UN agencies and non-governmental organizations (NGOs) have their headquarters or secondary offices.

Israel occupied East Jerusalem in 1967 and subsequently annexed it under Basic Law passed by the Knesset when Begin was premier, in violation of international law. The goal was to create one unified capital, no longer divided (as the city was from 1948 to 1967). Palestinians see East Jerusalem as their future capital, and the UN recognizes it as part of occupied Palestinian territory.

"It is becoming increasingly difficult to maintain large-scale, long-term humanitarian operations given the closures," Christopher Gunness, a spokesman for UNRWA, the UN agency for Palestinian refugees, told IRIN, adding that "aid is becoming more expensive and work is becoming less effective.

"In the Nablus and Hebron districts, as well, UN agencies and NGOs said they have suffered from delays and other problems at the checkpoints.

Gaza blockade affecting UN staff

The crossing points to the Gaza Strip remained problematic. National UN staff members in Gaza are generally unable to leave the enclave, even on official UN duty.

"Getting our [Palestinian] staff out of Gaza is next to impossible," a UN medical aid worker told IRIN.

Also, when permits are issued for these workers they tend to be valid for short periods of time or may be granted only as single entry passes.

International UN staff members have also been having a more difficult time obtaining documentation from the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs, resulting in their inability to access the Gaza Strip and carry out their duties."Everyone who deserves a card gets one, and we would be happy to look into any specific cases of people who did not get one," Aryeh Mekel, spokesman for the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs, told IRIN.
This item comes to you via IRIN, a UN humanitarian news and information service, but may not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations or its agencies. All IRIN material may be reposted or reprinted free-of-charge; refer to the copyright page for conditions of use. IRIN is a project of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.