MIFTAH
Thursday, 25 April. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

Palestinians were encouraged this week by yet another South American recognition of a Palestinian state along the 1967 borders. On December 17, Bolivian President Evo Morales made the announcement during a conference with regional leaders in his country.

“Bolivia recognizes the Palestinian state on the 1967 borders, like Brazil and Argentina,” Morales said, in reference to last week's recognitions of two other neighboring countries. The announcement was warmly welcomed by the Palestinians, first and foremost by President Mahmoud Abbas.

Furthermore, on December 15, Norway announced it would upgrade the Palestinian representative's office in Oslo to a diplomatic mission in support of Palestinian efforts toward building a state.

Unforunately, the Europeans didn't follow suit. After an encouraging 26-signature letter signed by former European officials last week calling for sanctions to be imposed on Israel should it not halt settlement construction, the European Union came out with a much more lax statement on December 13. One clause of the statement said that the "EU notes with regret that Israel has not extended the moratorium as requested by the EU, the US and the Quartet," after which it outlined its official stance on settlements, including in East Jerusalem. "They are illegal under international law and an obstacle to peace." There was no call for sanctions or for the recognition of a state, which the EU maintained should be reached as a result of peaceful negotiations. It added that it would recognize a Palestinian state when "appropriate".

A few days later, the Palestinians were delivered another blow by the US House of Representatives. On December 16, the House unanimously approved a resolution opposing the "unilateral declaration of a Palestinian state," outside an "agreement negotiated between Israel and the Palestinians."

The PLO delegation to the US said it was deeply disappointed over the resolution, maintaining that "The Palestinian right to freedom and self-determination is not contingent on the approval of the state of Israel." It also reminded that Israel came into being "unilaterally" in 1948.

“We have devoted ourselves to negotiations for nearly two decades and today we are trapped in a framework that thus far has not yet lifted the occupation," criticized Saeb Erekat, chief Palestinian negotiator. "While the United States can choose to withhold recognition of our state, it cannot obstruct other countries from exercising this sovereign right." Erekat was referring to the US's criticism of South American countries recognizing Palestine.

Meanwhile, United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said on December 17 that ending Israeli settlement construction in the West Bank including east Jerusalem would one of the UN's goals for 2011. He also said the goal included improving living conditions in the Gaza Strip. Ban stressed that Israel must fulfill its obligations vis-à-vis the settlements. Earlier this month, the UN chief berated Israel for refusing to extend its ten-month moratorium on settlement construction, calling it a snub to the international community.

On December 15, the Arab League voted unanimously to oppose any talks – direct or indirect – between Palestinians and Israelis unless the US takes a firm stance on the future borders of the Palestinian state. During a ministerial committee meeting in Cairo, the League came out with a statement calling for "a decision that confirms, among other things, the illegal nature of this [settlement] activity and that would oblige Israel to stop it.” Moreover, the Arab foreign ministers said they would resort to the UN Security Council for a resolution against settlement construction if all else failed.

US Envoy George Mitchell returned to the region on December 14 to try and breathe life into the moribund negotiations process. Mitchell is proposing parallel but separate talks for six weeks on final status issues after the US administration buckled under Israeli pressure last week to back out of its demand for an extension on the settlement freeze on December 13.

On that note, according to the Israeli movement Peace Now on December 14, Israeli municipal authorities approved the construction of 24 settlement homes in the Palestinian neighborhood of Suwwana in east Jerusalem. Israeli municipality sources justified the construction, saying that, "Jews have a right to live anywhere in the city and we will not allow anyone to impose restrictions on this right."

Also in Palestinian east Jerusalem, Israeli authorities demolished two homes in Ras al-Amud and Sour Baher.

In another section of the occupied city, Israeli border guards clashed with Issawiyeh residents on December 15 after border guards sprayed pepper spray in the face of a 14-year old boy. Apparently, the Palestinian boy did not have his birth certificate while traveling back into Jerusalem. At the checkpoint, Israeli soldiers ordered him off the bus when he could not produce his birth certificate or ID card since he is under-age. When he refused to get off, the soldier sprayed pepper spray in this face, causing several other passengers to disembark. The boy was taken to hospital with respiratory distress.

House demolitions were not restricted to Jerusalem this week, unfortunately. On December 13, 67 members of the Abu Eid family found themselves homeless after Israeli authorities demolished six homes in Lod inside the Green Line. The demolitions were part of a bigger plan to destroy thousands of illegal structures in the predominantly Arab Palestinian area.

On December 13, an Israeli legislative commission approved a new draft law that would deny Palestinian prisoners the right to lawyer visits for a period of one year. The current law allows a ban of up to three weeks.

Also on December 13, B'Tselem, an Israeli human rights organization released a report criticizing Israeli police for arresting and mistreating Palestinian minors in east Jerusalem. According to the report, at least 81 minors, some as young as 12 and one only five-years old, were arrested and detained in Silwan between November 2009 and October 2010 for throwing stones at Israelis. Some were released after paying fines and others were placed under house arrest for up to two months. According to B'Tselem, the arrest and interrogation of minors at night or without a parent is a violation of Israeli law.

 
 
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