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"Palestinians should now declare their independence" by Johann Hari
From time to time, the
Palestine Center distributes
articles it believes will enhance understanding
of the Palestinian political
reality. The following article by Johann Hari
was published in
The
Independent
on 12 March 2010. To view
this article online, please go to http://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/commentators/johann-hari/johann-hari-palestinians-should-now-declare-their-independence-1920130.html.
"Palestinians should now declare their
independence"
By Johann Hari
Could the Israeli government make it
any more obvious they have no intention of
sharing the Over-Promised Land with its other
inhabitants?
This week the Obama
administration – who give Israel $3bn a year,
more than they dole out to any other nation on
earth – made a meek and craven request for
Israelis to simply have a pause in seizing even
more land, and to sit down with the
Palestinians. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
responded with a big concrete slap: the
announcement of 1,600 more homes to be built on
occupied Palestinian land from which Arabs will
be forcibly kept out. He has made it plain he
will not loosen his grip by an inch,
announcing: "Even if [Palestinian President]
Abu Mazen comes along and says he's ready to
sign a peace deal on the spot, we will restore
settlement construction to its previous
levels." No compromise. Never.
How does
this look to the Palestinians? Their story is
so rarely explained without disinformation that
it still seems startling when it is stated
plainly. Until 1948, the Palestinians were
living in their own homes, on their own land –
until they were suddenly driven out in a war to
make way for a new state for people fleeing a
monstrous European genocide. They lived huddled
and dazed in the 20 per cent of their land they
were allowed to keep. They hardly fought back:
they wept and dreamed of return. Then in the
1967 war, even these small strips were
conquered with tanks and platoons.
Day
by day since then, the remaining Palestinian
land has been taken and given to fundamentalist
settlers who claim it was given to them by God.
They watched while Israeli Prime Ministers said
they didn't exist – "there are no
Palestinians", announced Golda Meir – or
described them as animals: Menachem Begin
called them "beasts walking on two legs", while
Yitzhak Shamir said they should be "crushed
like grasshoppers... heads smashed against the
boulders and walls." They tried peacefully
resisting, launching a programme of sit-downs
and civil disobedience. Yitzhak Rabin responded
by ordering the occupying Israeli army to
"break their bones." After decades of this
treatment, they fought back with violence –
some of it targeted horribly and unacceptably
at Israeli civilians.
And so today –
with the active support of the governments of
the Western world – the Palestinians live in a
permanent military headlock. They are split in
two. The Gaza Strip is blockaded on all sides,
its population of 1.5 million imprisoned in a
cramped, collapsing concrete maze the size of
the Isle of Wight. For nearly three years, the
essentials of life have been slowly choked off,
in a process one Israeli official described
with a chuckle as "putting the Palestinians on
a diet". The items blocked from coming in
include pasta and children's exercise books.
The UN has shown that 70 per cent of Gazans are
living on less than $1 a day, and 60 per cent
have no daily access to clean water. Every time
I go there, I think it can't be worse, yet it
is. They used to use cars. Now it's
donkeys.
On the West Bank, the
land-theft continues. To protect the settlers
and their programme of taking Palestinian land,
there is a huge military infrastructure, made
up of check-points and random searches and
settler-only roads. The Pulitzer Prize-winning
journalist Richard Ben Cramer offers one story
he witnessed that typifies and distils life on
the West Bank: "One school headmaster, a
dignified elder man, who passed the same
checkpoint on his way to school every morning,
was made to undress – not once but often – and
stand naked while his students passed by. This
was richly humorous [to the occupying
soldiers]."
There is a solution.
Everyone knows it: divide the land. There are
two peoples – the Palestinians and the
Israelis. Let them live in two states, with
1967 borders, with full compensation for the
victims of 1948. Although it is painful to
accept swathes of your own dispossession, the
Palestinian leadership has supported this
programme since 1978, and even Hamas – the ugly
fundamentalist group – tacitly accepts it. Yet
it has not been offered to the Palestinians.
Every time they have sat down to negotiate,
even more has been stolen from them: settler
numbers doubled during the Oslo "peace
process". It culminated in an offer of a series
of broken Batustans controlled forever by
Israel – one no Palestinian leader could
accept.
And now there is an endless
ratchet. Swathes of East Jerusalem are being
turned into biblical heritage theme parks and
settler-belts that cut the city off from the
West Bank. In 2008, 4,600 Palestinians lost
their residency papers and so were expelled
from the city, 20 times more than the year
before.
For a long time, I believed that
the Israeli people – with their own history of
unimaginable suffering – would change their
behaviour on their own. They would surely
reject life as eternal jailer, after the jail
cells they have end-ured. They would surely see
that this process of slow strangulation would
only make Palestinians more determined to fight
back. If nothing else, they would surely see
that the Palestinians would – because of their
higher birth-rate – soon be a majority between
the Jordan river and the sea, and there was no
future for Israel as a Jewish minority ruling
over a Palestinian majority like some 1980s
Afrikaaner tribute band.
While there are
some heroic Israelis who argue back – Gideon
Levy, David Grossman, Uri Avnery, Gush Shalom,
my military refusenik friends – they are
disappointingly few. It may be that surviving
the most horrific atrocities doesn't make you
compassionate, but more often makes you hard,
and paranoid. It may make you see the ghost of
your murderer even in your victims: Adolf
Hitler in a Gazan child. I think of the
survivors of the Rwandan genocide I have known,
who promptly charged off to pillage Congo,
killing millions.
There is very little
the Palestinians can do to change their
situation alone. They are virtually disarmed,
with a few rockets and some stone-throwing
kids, against the fourth most powerful army on
earth. But international pressure – applied
intelligently, without hyperbole – can
strengthen their hand, and the Palestinians are
considering a move that would catalyse it. They
are considering a unilateral declaration of
independence, and an appeal for the world to
recognise them as a state. It wouldn't cause
the occupation to vanish – but it would make
the situation plain for all to see. They are a
people; they deserve a state, as much as the
British or the Israelis. Netanyahu talks about
the dangers of Israel being wiped from the map,
yet Palestine is being wiped from the map every
day by his tanks and his guns. Why should they
have to "earn" their right to their own land by
proving obedience to an abusive foreign
power?
Western governments support this
erasure of Palestine: the EU with diplomacy and
arms sales and by providing Israel with its
largest markets, and the US with hard cash. A
declaration of Palestinian independence would
force them to either defend that position to
(mostly appalled) electorates, or change it.
Already, France's Foreign Minister, Bernard
Kouchner, has hinted that he would feel obliged
to support a declaration. Would Obama veto the
creation of a Palestinian state at the UN
Security Council?
Netanyahu is clearly
panicked. The negotiators would meet as one
head of state to another – rather than as a
broken supplicant appealing to his master. He
has angrily declared that the Palestinians will
face "consequences" if they choose this path,
including the annexation of settlement blocks.
Chief Palestinian negotiator Saed Erekat
replied: "The purpose of such a move is to keep
hope alive... We're fed up with your
time-wasting. We don't believe you really want
a two-state solution."
The Palestinians
want the same freedom that the Jews pined for –
a safe home of their own. They should declare
independence. Then it is up to us – the
watching billions – to pressure our governments
to make it real, rather than a howl in the
dark.
The
views
expressed in this article are those of the
author and do not necessarily
reflect
those of The Jerusalem Fund.
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