We Palestinians in Israel will not stand for our rights being given away by so-called representativesHad the offer made by “representatives” of the Palestinian people to Israel during peace negotiations – revealed this week in the Palestine papers Continue reading
Monthly Archives: January 2011
Palestinian negotiators must not take key decisions on our behalf | Haneen Zoabi
We Palestinians in Israel will not stand for our rights being given away by so-called representatives
Had the offer made by “representatives” of the Palestinian people to Israel during peace negotiations – revealed this week in the Palestine papers – been accepted, the resulting agreement would have been in conflict with international law. It would also have had a profound impact on all Palestinians: not only those under occupation or refugees in the diaspora, but also Palestinians like myself – the 1.2 million of us who make up 18% of the population of Israel.
First, giving up the refugees’ right of return – as was apparently accepted by the Palestinian negotiators – would mean giving up the demand for the reunification of Palestinian families divided by the nakba, our expulsion from Israel in 1948. At this time some Palestinians remained in Israel, while others were displaced. Israel has since refused to allow hundreds of divided families to be reunited.
Furthermore, Israel currently prevents one Palestinian from marrying another from Gaza, the West Bank, Syria or Lebanon and remaining within the borders of Israel, on the pretext of preventing the right of return. So I, for example, can marry a British citizen and live in Nazareth but cannot do the same with a Palestinian who does not hold Israeli nationality.
Second, the recognition of Israel as a Jewish state – which was also apparently accepted by the negotiator Saeb Erekat – would delegitimise the citizenship of Palestinians in Israel. In practice, Israel has acted as a Jewish state since its founding, and undermined the rights of Palestinian citizens for more than 60 years, with chronic, institutionalised discrimination. International recognition of Israel as a Jewish state would give this discrimination a legal and ethical justification. Arab Israeli citizenship would become conditional, and the inferior status of Palestinian citizens and residents as non-Jews, and thus by definition excluded outsiders, would become entrenched. Indeed, it would call into question their very future in such a state, their homeland.
Recognition of Israel as a Jewish state by concerned international parties would serve to legitimise the series of racist laws and bills currently before the Knesset, and would turn the legal, political struggle of the Palestinian national minority into an illegal and illegitimate struggle – a move that would be fatal to democracy. It would become far easier to criminalise any party, individual or action that sought the establishment of genuine democracy and equality. Ultimately, it would effectively block the right of return of the Palestinian refugees. Israel should be a democratic state, not an ethnic state.
Third, we reject the proposed exchange of populations between Israel and the West Bank, championed, among others, by Israel’s foreign minister, Avigdor Lieberman. This proposal has increasingly pervaded Israel’s political culture. According to a recent poll, 53% of the Jewish Israeli public believes that the state is entitled to encourage Palestinian citizens to emigrate. Making our citizenship a subject of negotiations would send out the clear and dangerous message that it is temporary, and open to question. As with residents of the occupied Palestinian territory – whose temporary legal status has become permanent, after 43 years of Israeli occupation – making Palestinian citizenship in Israel temporary totally ignores the basic fact that we are indigenous people living in our homeland, not an immigrant minority.
Moreover, raising this question now carries particular dangers, given the politics of hatred and persecution towards the Palestinian minority. When a letter was published by a group of publicly funded rabbis calling on Israeli Jews not to rent flats and houses to Palestinians, the Israeli political leadership took no practical action against them. A further poll found that 46% of the Jewish public would not want to live next to Arabs.
It has been clearly established by the international community that any decisions that have a direct impact on the future status of a national minority must be taken after full consultation, and with their consent – including through a referendum. We therefore reject any proposal that would involve other parties taking such decisions on our behalf.
We, as Palestinian people living inside Israel and on the basis of our historic right and international law, have full right of veto – not only on matters that affect our lives, such as the return of the refugees, the Jewish identity of the state and population exchange, but also on all matters affecting and infringing the rights of the Palestinian people.
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-nOIMQWiFWY
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-nOIMQWiFWYAlex Jones: Corporations, US government run news mediawww.youtube.comSeveral huge corporations own networks and newspapers in the US. How much of the content do they control? Radio Host Alex Jones says the old … Continue reading
Europe’s failure on Middle East peace | Alastair Crook
Attempts to reconcile policy contradictions have prevented the EU from mounting an alternative foreign policy to that of the USMany have questioned why the European Union failed to provide an independent view to that of the United States on Middle East… Continue reading
Europe’s failure on Middle East peace | Alastair Crook
Attempts to reconcile policy contradictions have prevented the EU from mounting an alternative foreign policy to that of the US
Many have questioned why the European Union failed to provide an independent view to that of the United States on Middle East policy during the last decade. It is not a simple question to answer. Partly, the EU failed to assert its voice because, at the beginning of the decade, it was scrambling to contain the impact of inflating US hubris, fuelled by the defeat of Saddam Hussein. Partly, it was also a simple reflection of most European politicians’ dependency on Washington. But the release of the Palestine Papers provides another answer.
They show how Tony Blair in particular had so undercut the political space that there was effectively no room for it. In a secret policy switch in 2003, he tied the UK and EU security policy into a major American counter-insurgency (Coin) “surge” in Palestine.
It was an initiative that would bear a heavy political cost for the EU in 2006, and for years to come, when Hamas won parliamentary elections by a large majority. The EU’s claims for democracy have rung hollow ever since. Blair’s “surge” also left the EU exposed as hypocrites: on a political level, for example, the EU might talk about its policy of fostering reconciliation between Palestinian factions, but at the security plane, and in other ways, it was pursuing the polar opposite objectives.
In 2003, US efforts to marginalise Yasser Arafat by leeching away his presidential powers into the embrace of the prime minister, Mahmoud Abbas, collapsed. Arafat dismissed Abbas as PM. This was a blow to the US policy which – even then – was focused on creating a “de-Fatah-ised” Palestinian Authority. George Bush complained to Blair bitterly about Abbas’s dismissal: the Europeans still were “dancing around Arafat” – leaving the US to “do the heavy lifting” with the Israelis. Europeans were not pulling their weight in the “war on terror”, Bush concluded.
Blair’s Coin surge was his response to Bush. The Palestine Papers reveal “a security drive” with the objective of
“degrading the capabilities of the rejectionists: Hamas, PIJ [Palestinian Islamic Jihad], and the al-Aqsa Brigades – through the disruption of their leaderships’ communications and command and control capabilities, the detention of key middle-ranking officers, and the confiscation of their arsenals and financial resources held within the occupied territories. US and – informally – UK monitors would report both to Israel and to the Quartet. We could also explore the temporary internment of leading Hamas and PIJ figures.”
The papers also show how the project ballooned: a huge investment in training and infrastructure of the security services, building prisons to accommodate the possible introduction of internment for Hamas members, the establishment of the Dayton military battalions to confront Hamas, the planning to depose Hamas in Gaza, the targeted assassination of Hamas leaders. Even the international Quartet was engaged to work with Arab states’ intelligence services in order to disrupt Hamas’s sources of financing.
The “surge” sucked in everything: aid, economic assistance, institution-building – all were reoriented towards the counter-insurgency project. Ultimately, the Palestinian state-building project, and the Coin surge, were to become one.
Against this counter-insurgency background it is not surprising that Hamas’s victory in the 2006 polls only prompted a further increase in European “off-balance sheet” assistance to the EU/US-made security sector. At a political level the Europeans were attempting to keep an independent voice, the Palestine Papers show, when EU envoy Marc Otte spoke with Saeb Erekat two months after the Hamas election.
Otte: EU has to deal with the reality of a Hamas-led government … In this respect, EU position is different from the US.
Erekat: How is this position different?
Otte: US wants to see a Hamas government fail. The EU will encourage Hamas to change and will try to make things work as much as possible.
Inevitably, the EU’s actions spoke louder than Otte’s words. The EU had endorsed the Quartet conditions for engagement with Hamas – conditions that the UN representative at the time told the UN secretary general were hurdles raised precisely in order to prevent Hamas from meeting them, rather than as guidelines intended to open the path for diplomatic solutions. Soon after, British and American intelligence services were preparing a “soft” coup to remove Hamas from power in Gaza.
EU standing in the region has suffered from the contradiction of maintaining one line in public, while its security policies were facing in another direction entirely. Thus, we have the EU “talking the talk” of reconciliation between Fatah and Hamas while “walking the walk” of disruption, detention, seizing finances, and destroying the capabilities of one of the two factions.
Thus we have EU “talking the talk” of aid for Palestinians, while “walking the walk” of tying that aid to the objectives of the US security project; we have the EU “talking the talk” of Palestinian state-building, while Palestinian institutions are dispersed to external control; we have the EU “talking the talk” of democracy, while it colludes with a system of government exercised through unaccountable decree, and parliament is prevented from exercising any function.
This catalogue of attempts to reconcile an internal policy contradiction has pre-empted the EU from mounting any effective foreign policy alternative to that of the US on the “peace process”, and has eaten away its standing in the region. The legacy of Blair’s 2003 surge has been a highly costly one, as the Palestine Papers well illustrate.
• This article appeared first on al-Jazeera. Copyright reserved.
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Operation Egypt via LiveWord?
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This independent project is for the People of Egypt who are suffering under oppressive censorship! They are unable to keep contact with the outside world as they are slowly being choked off the social network sites. We intend to keep pulling in and pushing out news and updates from the affected regi
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Operation Egypt via LiveWord?
Operation Egypt via LiveWord?
![]()
About
liveword.ca
This independent project is for the People of Egypt who are suffering under oppressive censorship! They are unable to keep contact with the outside world as they are slowly being choked off the social network sites. We intend to keep pulling in and pushing out news and updates from the affected regi
Operation Egypt via LiveWord?
Operation Egypt via LiveWord?
![]()
About
liveword.ca
This independent project is for the People of Egypt who are suffering under oppressive censorship! They are unable to keep contact with the outside world as they are slowly being choked off the social network sites. We intend to keep pulling in and pushing out news and updates from the affected regi
Week in review podcast: Leaks, sexism, and the end of meritocracy
Jonathan Freedland is joined in the studio this week by religious affairs correspondent Riazat Butt, Guardian leader writer Anne Perkins, and Tim Samuels, presenter of Men’s Hour on BBC Radio Five Live.With another ream of secret documents thrust into … Continue reading
Week in review podcast: Leaks, sexism, and the end of meritocracy
Jonathan Freedland is joined in the studio this week by religious affairs correspondent Riazat Butt, Guardian leader writer Anne Perkins, and Tim Samuels, presenter of Men’s Hour on BBC Radio Five Live.
With another ream of secret documents thrust into the public domain, we begin by discussing what the Palestine Papers tell us about diplomacy in a WikiLeaks world. (Be sure to listen to our Focus podcast about the reaction in Middle East to the publishing of these documents.)
Also in this week’s show, David Schneider gives us his analysis of the Andy Gray and Richard Keys sexism row. The pair were on-mic but off-air – so was this another example of this new WikiLeaks world, where nothing is off the record?
Finally, we examine how class and privilege has crept back into British politics and ask – much as Andrew Neil did this week – has meritocracy had its day?
Blair says leak of Palestine papers ‘destabilising’ for peace process
Former prime minister, now Middle East peace envoy, says intention of leak ‘was to be extremely damaging’Tony Blair today accused those responsible for the leak of vast numbers of papers about talks between the Palestinians and the Israelis of wanting … Continue reading
Blair says leak of Palestine papers ‘destabilising’ for peace process
Former prime minister, now Middle East peace envoy, says intention of leak ‘was to be extremely damaging’
Tony Blair today accused those responsible for the leak of vast numbers of papers about talks between the Palestinians and the Israelis of wanting to seriously damage the peace process.
The former prime minister – now a Middle East peace envoy – said the release of the confidential documents prepared by Palestinian negotiators had been “destablising”.
But, in an interview on BBC Radio 4′s Today programme, he urged the Palestinians to ignore the damage caused and press ahead with the drive for peace.
Thousands of pages of Palestinian documents covering more than a decade of negotiations with Israel and the US were obtained by al-Jazeera television and shared exclusively with the Guardian.
The papers revealed that Palestinian negotiators were willing to go much further in offering concessions than their people realised.
Asked how much damage the leaks had caused, Blair told Today: “I think it’s hard to tell right now, but its intention was to be extremely damaging.
“I think, amongst Palestinians, it is slightly less hyper than it is elsewhere in the region. Most people, when they sit back and think about it, you would expect people to be negotiating, to be putting forward positions, taking them back.”
Blair said he knew from his experience in Northern Ireland how damaging leaks of this kind could be.
“We could not have done the Northern Ireland peace process if, the entire time, [information] was being put out there with a pretty severe spin on it. So I think it is destabilising for the Palestinians,” he added.
But he also said the Palestinians should not let the leak undermine the peace process. “I think we’ve just got to be big enough and strong enough to say, OK, whatever al-Jazeera are putting out, we’re going to get on with making peace,” he said.
In the interview, Blair also said Egypt should “evolve and modernise”, but in a way that ensured stability.
“The challenges have been the same for these countries for a long period of time,” he added. “The question is how they evolve and modernise, but do so with stability. The danger is [that] if you open up a vacuum, anything can happen.
“All over that region, there is essentially one issue, which is how do they evolve and modernise, both in terms of their economy, their society and their politics.
“All I’m saying is that, in the case of Egypt and in the case in Yemen, because there are other factors in this – not least those who would use any vacuum in order to foment extremism – that you do this in what I would call a stable and ordered way.”
Blair said the west should engage with countries such as Egypt in the process of change “so that you weren’t left with what is actually the most dangerous problem in the Middle East, which is that an elite that has an open minded attitude but it’s out of touch with popular opinion, and popular opinion that can often – because it has not been given popular expression in its politics – end up frankly with the wrong idea and a closed idea.”
We Are Change Windsor’s Facebook Wall 2011-01-28 08:23:35
Gun-Control Effort Coming Soon From White House – Newsweekwww.newsweek.comObama intentionally did not mention gun control in his State of the Union, but aides say that in the next two weeks the administration will unveil a campaign to get Congress to t… Continue reading
Palestinian ambassador to UK’s office taken over by protesters
Palestinian students hold peaceful sit-in at Hammersmith office of general delegation to Britain over negotiations with IsraelThe offices of the Palestinian ambassador to the UK have been occupied by a group of students who are demanding new Palestinia… Continue reading
Palestinian ambassador to UK’s office taken over by protesters
Palestinian students hold peaceful sit-in at Hammersmith office of general delegation to Britain over negotiations with Israel
The offices of the Palestinian ambassador to the UK have been occupied by a group of students who are demanding new Palestinian national council elections.
At 1pm today, around a dozen Palestinian students from a number of British universities arrived at the Palestinian general delegation to the UK in Hammersmith, west London.
Although they had made an appointment to see the ambassador, Professor Manuel Hassassian, they arrived in large numbers and with computers and banners.
A spokesman for the students said they had been moved to stage a peaceful sit-in by the release of leaked Palestinian papers over the last few days.
“The documents confirmed what we had known all along — that they are out of touch with the people,” the spokesman said.
As well as calling for new elections, the students — from Oxford, SOAS, LSE, City and Westminster universities — are demanding a more inclusive political process that reflects and engages all Palestinians.
“We are ready to stay as long as necessary until our message has been received and understood,” he said.
The ambassador, whose office has been occupied, has asked the students to leave the room but has told them they are welcome to remain in the building.
“They told me they wanted to hold a sit-in in my office. I told them: ‘You’re welcome. This is your embassy. This is your home’,” he said.
Hassassian also said he had agreed to pass their demands on to the Palestinian government, but needed his office back if he was to relay them.
“We are being very hospitable and we hope that they respect our hospitality,” he said.
Two Metropolitan police officers entered the embassy a little after 4pm, and chatted to the ambassador and protesters.