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Monday, January 10, 2011

There can be no half-measures on Palestinian sovereignty By Mkhaimar Abusada

There can be no half-measures on Palestinian sovereignty
By Mkhaimar Abusada
Commentary by
Tuesday, January 11, 2011

The Arab Peace Initiative, which was adopted by the Arab League at its summit in Beirut in 2002, is a comprehensive peace initiative first proposed by then-Crown Prince Abdullah of Saudi Arabia, and re-endorsed at the Riyadh summit in 2007. The initiative attempts to end the Arab-Israel conflict, which means normalizing relations between the entire Arab world and Israel in exchange for a complete Israeli withdrawal from all Arab territories occupied in June 1967 and a “just solution” of the Palestinian refugee problem based on United Nations General Assembly Resolution 194.

One of the main elements of the Arab initiative stipulates: “The acceptance of the establishment of a sovereign independent Palestinian state on the Palestinian territories occupied since the 4th of June 1967 in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, with East Jerusalem as its capital.”

The issue of sovereignty and independence is of great interest and importance to Palestinians. They have not experienced independence or sovereignty in modern history. After World War I, Palestine fell under the British Mandate until 1948, and then Israel took control of 78 percent of Mandatory Palestine. The West Bank was then annexed by Jordan, and Gaza was administered by Egypt, both until 1967. As a result of the June 1967 war, Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza have been living under Israeli occupation.

The Oslo accords, signed in September 1993, led to the creation of the Palestinian Authority over parts of the West Bank and Gaza. They have deprived Palestinians of any elements of sovereignty or independence and kept the Palestinian Authority under total Israeli control. Movement from and into the Palestinian territories is subject to Israeli approval. Commercial exports and imports are also subject to Israeli laws and regulations according to the Paris Economic Protocol.

Sovereignty, according to the Encyclopedia Britannica, is the quality of having supreme, independent authority over a geographic area, such as a territory. The concept has been discussed and debated throughout history, from the time of the Romans through to the present day, where the notion of globalization has motivated new debates. Although the term has changed in its definition, concept and application, the current notion of state sovereignty is often traced back to the Treaty of Westphalia of 1648, which, in relation to states, codified the basic principles of territorial integrity, border inviolability and supremacy of the state. A sovereign is the supreme lawmaking authority within a specific jurisdiction.

Sovereignty means the right of the state of Palestine to become a full member of the United Nations General Assembly, adopt the U.N. Charter, and conform to international law, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and all other related U.N. documents. The state of Palestine will also be subject to its own constitution and legal norms.

“Sovereignty” for Palestinians means a total end to the Israeli occupation of the West Bank, Gaza Strip and East Jerusalem. It means that Palestinians alone will control their territory, air space, electromagnetic field, and water within their own territory. It means the ability to enact laws and implement them over its citizens.

It also means the right of the Palestinian state to form its army and define its national security needs to defend its territorial integrity. It means the ability to defend the territory from outside enemies and aggression. But Palestine will not need to enter into military alliances, an act that violates the terms of peace and normalization with Israel.

A sovereign Palestine means the right to establish and conduct foreign and diplomatic relations with other countries to pursue peace and prosperity. No country can live in isolation from the community of nations. Countries cooperate in political, economic, security and cultural aspects, and Palestine shall be given the right to develop and pursue its diplomatic relations with Arab and Islamic – as well as Western – countries.

It also means Palestine’s ability to administer and oversee the holy sites within its territory. Palestine is home to the three major religions, thus requiring it to respect and protect Jews, Christians and Muslims. Religious sites, especially those in East Jerusalem and Bethlehem, must be accessed by their respective observers. Palestine must establish a ministry to preach peace, tolerance and acceptance among all people.

Sovereign and independent Palestine will not live in a vacuum. It will be part of the community of nations that respects international law and human rights, and will do all it takes to pursue peace, security and prosperity in the region.


Mkhaimar Abusada is a professor of political science at Al-Azhar university in Gaza. This commentary first appeared at bitterlemons-api.org, a Web site publishing commentaries on the Arab Peace Initiative.

ATFP Expresses Grave Concerns over Demolition of Shepherd Hotel

Washington DC, Jan. 10 -- The American Task Force on Palestine (ATFP) today expressed grave concerns about the effects of Israel's demolition of the historic Shepherd Hotel in occupied East Jerusalem on prospects for peace. ATFP strongly agrees with Secretary of State Hilary Rodham Clinton that this provocative action is a “disturbing development [that] undermines peace efforts to achieve the two state-solution." She added that this action by the settler movement Ateret Cohanim, bankrolled by gambling billionaire Irving Moskowitz, "contradicts the logic of a reasonable and necessary agreement between the parties on the status of Jerusalem." Ateret Cohanim says it intends the new structure to be the beginning of a much larger Jewish settlement in the area, and appears to have the backing of local and municipal Israeli authorities in both the Shepherd Hotel and broader projects.

The Hotel is in the Arab neighborhood of Sheikh Jarrah in East Jerusalem, which was occupied in 1967, and has been the scene of numerous recent confrontations between settlers and Palestinians over control of various buildings. ATFP called on the United States government to ensure that such provocations cease. The Task Force welcomes Sec. Clinton's commitment to “continue to press ahead with the parties to resolve the core issues, including Jerusalem, in the context of a peace agreement." ATFP also strongly agrees with Sec. Clinton's observation that the continued failure to produce a two-state agreement "harms Israel, harms the Palestinians, and harms the U.S. and the international community."

ATFP pointed out that UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon observed that “inserting settlers into Palestinian neighborhoods in Jerusalem” strongly undermines prospects for peace.

The Task Force also noted that a formal report submitted to European Union diplomats in the region recommended that East Jerusalem be treated as the capital of a future Palestinian state. The report sent to 25 EU Consuls General in Jerusalem suggested that EU officials be present at demolitions such as the one recently carried out at the Shepherd Hotel, and at court hearings regarding the expulsion of Palestinians from their homes. It states, "Attempts to exclusively emphasize the Jewish identity of the city threaten its religious diversity and radicalize the conflict, with potential regional and global repercussions." It concludes that, "If current trends are not stopped as a matter of urgency, the prospect of east Jerusalem as the future capital of a Palestinian state becomes increasingly unlikely and unworkable."

ATFP calls on all parties to avoid all provocative unilateral actions that contradict stated US government policies, their own commitments under the Roadmap and Security Council resolutions and other aspects of international law, and that prejudice the outcome of negotiations on final status issues including Jerusalem. ATFP reiterated that the future of Jerusalem, a city central to two peoples and three faiths, can only be decided through negotiations, and not through unilateral actions, to ensure a lasting peace.

Honesty and Hypocrisy in Facing Terrorism:

For English, click here.

For Arabic, click here.

UN chief deplores razing of East Jerusalem hotel for new Israeli settlements

UN chief deplores razing of East Jerusalem hotel for new Israeli settlements

Embroidering A Life: Palestinian Women and Embroidery

This colourful book is based on stories told by Palestinian women interviewed in West Bank villages and refugee camps in Gaza, and Bedouin women from the Negev Desert.



The women express in their own words the cultural significance and the centrality of embroidery in their lives.
The book also contains graph patterns of the most common Palestinian embroidery motifs. 48 pages.
Producer: Sunbula

Jerusalem housing: Palestinian-American fights to buy Nof Zion housing project - latimes.com

If successful, Masri said, he plans to sell the remaining 300-plus units to Palestinian buyers. To date, Digal has completed the first phase of the project, and sold the units only to Jewish buyers, including many religious families.
Jerusalem housing: Palestinian-American fights to buy Nof Zion housing project - latimes.com

Sunday, January 9, 2011

Irving Moskowitz demolishes part of Jerusalem hotel to build settler housing

US millionaire's plans for 20 homes on historic Palestinian site will inflame already tense situation, say critics

Harriet Sherwood in Sheikh Jarrah

guardian.co.uk,

Heavy duty demolition equipment razed a section of the historic Shepherd Hotel in East Jerusalem today to make way for a new Jewish settlement in a move which opponents said further jeopardised the shaky prospects for peace.

Work began without warning in the early morning, and by 10am a wing of the hotel in the Palestinian neighbourhood of Sheikh Jarrah was reduced to rubble. The building, once the headquarters of Haj Amin al-Husseini, the former grand mufti of Jerusalem, has been the subject of controversial redevelopment plans since it was bought in 1985 by the US millionaire Irving Moskowitz, who is strongly pro-settlement. His ownership is contested by the Husseini family.

Both the US and UK governments have raised objections to the hotel's replacement by a Jewish settlement. East Jerusalem was annexed by Israel in 1967, and settlements there are illegal under international law. The hotel was declared "absentee property" after 1967. Approval was given last year by the Jerusalem district planning and building council to demolish part of the building to make way for 20 housing units.

Sheikh Jarrah has been targeted by hardline settlers over the past few years, and a number of Palestinian families have been evicted from their homes. Israel says Jews have the right to build and live anywhere in the city. The area has become a focal point for weekly protests by locals and leftwing Israelis.

"[Israel] is not looking for peace but to take more land," said Adnan Husseini, the Palestinian-appointed governor of Jerusalem, outside the gates of the hotel that were guarded by armed security personnel. "It's clear they are doing everything to violate the situation. They are disfiguring this area by building a settlement here."

Israeli actions, said resident Nasser Jawi, were "torpedoing the peace process".

Nasser Isa Hidmi, of the Jerusalem Committee Against Demolition and Deportation, said the international community should act to prevent Jewish settlers moving into Palestinian neighbourhoods: "We don't want sympathy – we want them to stop Israel from doing what it's doing."....READ MORE

Israeli forces demolish Shepherd Hotel

http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=349404JERUSALEM (Ma'an) -- Israeli bulldozers began demolishing the Shepherd Hotel in the Sheikh Jarrah neighborhood of occupied East Jerusalem on Sunday under the protection of a huge force of Israeli police and border guards.

Israeli authorities leveled the hotel to make way for a new settlement. The initial plan is to build 20 Jewish-only residential units, Ma'an's Jerusalem correspondent reported.

Secretary-general of the Palestinian National Initiative Mustafa Barghouthi described the demolition as further evidence of Israel's policy of ethnic cleansing, which he said exposed the real plots against Jerusalem.

The Israeli government was building new settlements in the occupied city to eradicate the Palestinian presence and to change Jerusalem into a Jewish-only city, Barghouthi added.

The displacement was the work of a "settlers' government," he said.

Jewish-American millionaire Irving Moskowitz purchased the hotel in 1985. In 2009 he announced plans to level the building which predates the 1948 creation of Israel. US President Barack Obama's administration urged Israel to stop the plan. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu refused the request.

Israeli-Palestinian negotiations relaunched on September 2 but collapsed by the end of the month over Israel's settlement expansion policy.

Netanyahu rejected calls from the US, UN and the EU to extend a partial freeze on settlement construction which expired on September 26.

On December 7, Washington admitted it had failed to convince Netanyahu to stop building on occupied land, a policy which contravenes international law and the Geneva Convention.

Israel captured East Jerusalem in the 1967 Six Day War and later annexed it in a move never recognized by the rest of the world.

Thursday, January 6, 2011

MIDDLE EAST: Can the region's Christians survive the 21st Century?

MIDDLE EAST: Can the region's Christians survive the 21st Century?

Clarifying why Arab and Muslim Americans should be smart rather than stupid

Ibishblog

An Ibishblog reader, who I respect greatly, writes:

Hussein, I agreed with much of what you said in your recent Huffington Post column, but this really puzzled me:

"In our own country, the most vociferous proponents of the Arab and Muslim victimization narrative, those who blame the West, especially America or "the white man," for all the ills that befall the Arabs and Muslims, and those who most loudly advocate against the legal and societal harassment of Arabs and Muslims in the United States, take full advantage, as they are entitled to, of the American system and find shelter in the comfort and security of its freedoms. The damage they do in being the loudest and most anti-American voices emanating from the vulnerable Arab and Muslim immigrant communities, who already feel besieged, is to provide ammunition to the demagogues and profiteers of racism and peddlers of hate and fear of Arab and American Muslims, and to empower and encourage the worst racist and chauvinistic tendencies in this country."

Who, exactly, are these groups? And are you suggesting that our discourses here should be restrained by the risk that our criticisms of the US can be appropriated by al-Qa'ida to justify their terrorism?

I'm glad you asked. First of all, I can only speak for myself in this case because the commentary in question was co-authored by my colleague, ATFP Pres. Ziad Asali. Indeed, the passage you cite from our collaboration was originally drafted by him, although I agree with and stand by every single word of it. But let me give you my own personal view of what I think we mean in this important passage.

The groups we are referring to are many and various, which is why we were not specific in naming them. They run the gamut from the Islamic religious right to the Arab nationalist left, and therefore cannot be placed in a straightforward ideological category or box. It's more an attitudinal issue: a way of looking at our country from a jaundiced point of view, with an attitude of hostility, unjustified hyper-criticism, an obsession with its faults and disregard for its virtues, and the knee-jerk reaction that blames everything that is wrong with the Arab or Muslim world on Western intervention alone. The fact is there are very loud voices among the Arab and Muslim Americans that not only blame the West in general and the United States in particular for everything that goes wrong in the Middle East, including much of which is plainly and unmistakably self-inflicted by the Arabs and the Muslims without any help from anybody else, and that these are influential voices. They sing the siren song that it's not our fault, that someone else is to blame, and that all we have to do is sit back and complain loudly enough and everything will ultimately be all right. If you're not familiar with such voices, you don't read the Arab blogosphere at all, because that's mainly what's in it.

The irony were getting to in this passage, I think, is how easy it is to vilify the West from the comforts of the West; to hypocritically take advantage of the financial and professional opportunities afforded by a country like the United States and, even more hypocritically of the political freedoms it provides, and yet to maintain an attitude of utter hostility towards it at every level and blame it for anything and everything, including the bad weather. This is a discourse that holds that even bad actors in the Arab world, whether it is the oppressive regimes or the demented and violent extremist groups are all either respectively acting at the behest of, or simply producing an inevitable and natural reaction to the policies of, the West. It's a set of arguments that essentially alleviates Arabs and Muslims from any responsibility for their predicament, and that reduces the Arab and Muslim American role to one of being almost entirely critical of our own country in a very unhealthy and unrealistic way, and in a manner that ensures political self marginalization and total and utter irrelevancy.

In other words, there is a tremendous degree of hypocrisy in the radical chic anti-American attitude expressed in so many online forums by younger (and older, for that matter) activists who sit in the comfort of US universities or other American places and spaces and fulminate against the evils of the United States day and night. It's not a question of love it or leave it. That's preposterous. But it is a question of having the minimal integrity of recognizing that the country you choose to live in obviously has something to offer you that you're taking advantage of, not least a degree of political freedom to castigate it without any potential repercussions of any serious variety. The fact that some people hide behind pseudonyms or do so anonymously only underscores their hypocrisy. There is a striking lack of personal, political and professional integrity at work here that deserves to be pointed out. It's not courageous, although it might be tragically hip. From a political point of view, it's completely self-defeating and while it may gain one fans in the online echo chamber of social media and the blogosphere, insofar as it has any influence at all, it helps consign the entire community to the political margins, which is where some people openly say they are determined to stay because the American political system is inherently corrupt and/or corrupting.

The damage such voices do to the Arab and Muslim American communities is almost incalculable, because not only do they encourage self-marginalization and determined, calculated irrelevancy, leaving an open field for our adversaries (something they have enjoyed for decades and continue to take full advantage of), but because by being reflexively, irrationally and unfairly anti-American they feed into the narrative that Arabs and Muslims in the United States are a potential fifth column. None of this is to say that principled opposition to misguided US foreign policies is not important or essential. Anyone who's followed my career over the past couple of decades will know that I have not hesitated to voice strong, passionate and sustained critiques of policies I thought were indefensible and damaging to the national interest such as the misguided, and indeed I think disastrous, invasion of Iraq. But the only attitude worth taking if one is in the least bit interested in political viability is that of the loyal opposition. It's one thing to make a patriotic critique of a policy on the grounds that it will not in fact strengthen the country or achieve consensus policy goals. It is another to denounce the entire political system of the country, imply that it needs to be overthrown, attempt to influence foreign policy by simply vilifying policymakers and the entire system of policymaking and stand militantly outside it waving real or virtual impotent placards, or to give our fellow citizens every reason to feel that we might be, as the anti-Arab racists and Islamophobes like to suggest, fundamentally disloyal.

Principled, patriotic, measured and sensible criticism of US foreign policy or other aspects of American behavior, conduct or culture is not only a useful thing: it's a patriotic duty. And I don't think there is the least danger that any such discourse can be “appropriated by Al Qaeda” to justify their violence. This certainly isn't what I think we were trying to suggest. But I do think it is essential for Arab and Muslim Americans to shed their tin ear -- their apparently chronic inability to hear how our words will sound to our fellow Americans -- and begin to pay serious attention to crafting a message that conveys our fundamental interests and concerns in a receivable manner that can have a positive impact rather than reinforcing the worst stereotypes and stoking the deepest fears of disloyalty. Angry people will probably regard such a suggestion as an appeal to kowtow to chauvinistic American attitudes or unreasonable expectations. I don't think that's the case at all.

All that is required is to embrace one's position as a loyal American with as much seriousness of purpose and sincerity as possible, and begin first and foremost always with the national interest at heart. From then it is a fairly simple matter to craft arguments centered around the national interest (and I mean as commonly understood, and not the alternative Dennis Kucinich left wing alternative version or the Ron Paul right-wing one) that advance issues we believe in such as the urgent need to end the Israeli occupation that began in 1967 and establish a Palestinian state alongside Israel. Or, for that matter, to have advocated against the Iraq war and in favor of its rapid drawdown. Or to advocate in favor of an intelligent and fast-tracked drawdown in Afghanistan. Or to oppose irrational and counterproductive “national security” measures that unfairly target Arab and Muslim Americans based on their identity. And so on and so forth. It's not terribly complicated, once you accept the proposition that we are Americans, that our first duty is to our own country, and that there is nothing we legitimately want that is incompatible with our American national interest.

But the truth is that the Arab and Muslim communities in the United States ARE vulnerable on many fronts, especially to charges of disloyalty. It's totally unfair and irrational, but it is the reality and we ignore it at our peril. Our point was that irresponsible, juvenile and unthinking rhetoric that plays into the hands of the anti-Arab racists and Islamophobes is something our community just can't afford, and yet many of the loudest voices on social media, the blogosphere and other decentralized forms of communication produce exactly that. This is a definite danger, because it gives ammunition to the worst of the racists and bigots. And, of course, politically it not only doesn't achieve anything, it makes matters worse. It's not a matter of declining to say something that really needs to be said out of fear of the reaction of others. It's a question of having a healthy respect for the sensitivities and sensibilities of our fellow Americans -- something we frequently and correctly demand Westerners and especially Americans show to Arabs and Muslims -- and trying to understand the difference between a receivable message that can have a positive impact as opposed to venting, preaching to the choir and providing the likes of Daniel Pipes, Robert Spencer and Pamela Geller with more ammunition to spread their fear and hatred. It's just a question of being smart rather than stupid.

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

"The government of Israel must take immediate steps to cease demolitions and evictions in the West Bank, including east Jerusalem."

http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20110104/wl_mideast_afp/israelpalestiniansconflicthousedemolitionsA Palestinian child stands in front of the rubble of his family house, which was demolished by Jerusalem municipality workers on November 24, 2010 in the occupied east Jerusalem neighborhood of Al-Tur. The final months of 2010 saw a sharp rise in the number of Israeli demolitions of Palestinian homes in east Jerusalem neighborhood of Al-Tur (AFP/File/Ahmad Gharabli)

In late December, Maxwell Gaylard, the UN Humanitarian Coordinator for the occupied Palestinian territory, called on Israel to cease demolitions of Palestinian homes immediately.

"These actions have a severe social and economic impact on the lives and welfare of Palestinians and increase their dependence on humanitarian assistance," he said.

"The government of Israel must take immediate steps to cease demolitions and evictions in the West Bank, including east Jerusalem."

E.Jerusalem home demolitions up: rights group

"It is important to emphasis that the issue of home demolitions in Jerusalem is not a neutral enforcement of the law, but rather part of a broad [Israeli] policy that seeks to weaken Palestinian civil society in east Jerusalem and drive them out." Ir Amim ...READ MORE