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"Deporting Gandhi from Palestine" by Jamal Dajani
From time to time, the
Palestine Center distributes
articles it believes will enhance understanding
of the Palestinian political
reality. The following article by Jamal Dajani
was
published in The Huffington Post
on 16 April 2010. To view
this article online, please go to http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jamal-dajani/deporting-gandhi-from-pal_b_540270.html.
"Deporting Gandhi from
Palestine"
By Jamal
Dajani
The Israeli government's
recent announcement of Army order No. 1,650 was
just the latest act of provocation in a series
of calculated measures to derail any possible
resumption of peace negotiations. Under this
new draconian measure, anyone who doesn't have
a "permit" to be in the West Bank is to be
considered an "infiltrator" and subject to
expulsion or risk up to seven years in
jail.
Expulsions and deportations are
not something new for the Israeli military
administrative system which was established in
1969, shortly after the occupation of the West
Bank, Gaza and the Golan Heights in the 1967
Six-Day War. At the time, the Israeli military
was given the legal power to expel
"infiltrators" without trial for various
unspecified "security reasons."
Two
particular Palestinian communities will be
impacted by order No. 1,650: Palestinians with
Gaza residencies and Palestinians with East
Jerusalem residencies, as well as foreign-born
residents of the West Bank. But many
Palestinian and Israeli experts believe that
it's the foreigners living amongst Palestinians
who are the real target of the Netanyahu
government. Many believe that this is part of
an ongoing Israeli effort to silence dissent
and crack down on international solidarity
members and activists who travel to Palestinian
areas to support protests and rallies, often
bringing with them the eyes of the outside
world.
Now that Israel has almost
completed its "Separation Wall", it wants to
build a "Wall of Silence" and control the flow
of information and limit the presence of
foreign-born eyewitnesses on the ground. The
question is, why now?
A "White Intifada"
has begun to take hold in the West Bank and
East Jerusalem. Every Thursday and Friday,
Palestinian peace activists, accompanied by
members of the Israeli Peace Now movement and
B'Tselem, as well as international supporters,
gather to demonstrate against what they term as
Israel's "Apartheid Wall" and land and home
confiscations in the villages of Bil'in,
Naalin, and the Sheikh Jarah neighborhood of
East Jerusalem.
Two months ago, I
witnessed a Friday demonstration in Sheikh
Jarah where settlers tried to provoke peaceful
demonstrators by harassing and spitting on them
while Israeli Police and border patrol units
watched from across the street. I was impressed
by the demonstrators' calm and unfazed
demeanor. Similarly, at the villages of Bil'in
and Naalin, peaceful demonstrators have been
brutally beaten and arrested by the Israeli
army. Nevertheless, more keep coming back every
week.
In February a Czech volunteer with
the International Solidarity Movement was taken
in the night from her house in Ramallah and
deported by Israeli forces. This new order will
give a blanket legal cover to the Israeli
police and army to instantly deport foreign
activists and aid workers spotted at
demonstrations. Last December, at another
demonstration I covered at Erez (Gaza-Israel
Crossing), Israeli police did not engage the
peaceful demonstrators who gathered calling for
an end of the siege on Gaza. Instead, policemen
were busy videotaping those who showed up,
especially foreign nationals. Interestingly
enough my Israeli Press Card was indefinitely
delayed for renewal after my coverage of that
story, but that's another subject on its
own.
For years I've been hearing the
popular question usually posed by Americans,
"Where is the Palestinian
Gandhi?"
During the past two trips that
I've made to the Palestinian territories and
Israel, I think that I discovered him/her in
the eyes of the many peaceful demonstrators
against the Israeli occupation. Nonviolent
resistance could be the biggest threat to
Israel's ability to justify it's continued
military aggression and occupation of
Palestinian lands. Order No. 1,650 is to
neutralize the movement by deporting
Gandhi.
Jamal Dajani is an
award-winning producer and Vice President of
International News at Link TV.
The
views
expressed in this article are those of the
authors and do not necessarily
reflect
those of The Jerusalem Fund.
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