June 2, 2011 - Issue 429 |
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On the Question
of Palestinian Statehood
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Following Israeli Prime Minister Benyamin Netanyahu’s speech before the U.S. Congress, it was clear that there will be no peace process between the Israelis and the Palestinians. And maybe that’s not such a bad thing, to know where things really stand. In
reality, the die was cast when the Likud government cast its lot with
the country’s anti-democratic elements, rather than forming a coalition
government with the liberal-centrist Kadima
Party. The result is a policy of expanding settlements and forcibly evicting
Palestinians from their homes, described by a UN investigator as ethnic
cleansing. For
AIPAC, the American neocons, and the Christian
evangelical Zionists waiting for the rapture to begin, Netanyahu was a
big hit in Congress. But his oratorical victory was a diplomatic
failure. The leader of the client state thumbing his nose at the leader
of the host state, in the absence of the latter no less,
provided a façade of courage and little else. In reality, Bibi
backed According
to Israeli defense minister, Ehud
Barak, his country faces a “diplomatic tsunami that the majority of
the country is unaware of.” Blaming Netanyahu, Barak said the prime minister’s
indecisiveness was “pushing And
so, the Palestinians will take their case for statehood to the United
Nations in September. And with no viable alternatives, a unilateral declaration
of statehood is viewed as the only thing to bring The
larger question is whether all human beings have a right to self-determination
and the right to determine their destiny, or whether the democratizing
effect of the Arab Spring applies only to Arabs who live outside of the
West Bank or Today
in As for Palestinians, who can exercise only limited democracy under an occupation, there is an opportunity to foster democracy and institution building. Nadia Hijab, American Palestinian author and human rights advocate, believes the Arab Spring has strengthened the Palestinian people’s hand, and has helped the decades-long nonviolent Palestinian movement. “Many of the Palestinian leadership have been stuck, they’ve been vested in a U.S.-led peace process that led nowhere,” Hijab recently said in a conversation with Jewish Fast for Gaza, a peace group founded by Rabbis Brant Rosen and Brian Walt. “It has now freed them to play a more authentic leadership role, and has given a very big boost to Palestinians who have been undertaking nonviolent resistance through the popular struggle against the wall, which has been going on for six years as villagers organize village by village to try and stop their land from being swallowed up, as well as they Boycott Divestment Sanctions Movement.” Hijab - who is the director of Al-Shabaka, the Palestinian Policy Network, and senior fellow
at the Institute for Palestine Studies - believes that the main concern
coming from Palestinian youth and civil society is not necessarily elections
in the territories, but the reconstituting of the Palestinian National
Council on the lines of the old PLO so that it represents all Palestinians.
“So now the rulers of the West Bank and in Peace
and security will come to both Israelis and Palestinians only if it is
based on a commitment to universal human rights. For Palestinians, this
means self-determination - whether as an independent state or with full
democratic rights in BlackCommentator.com Executive Editor, David
A. Love, JD is a journalist and human rights advocate based in |
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