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Wednesday, September 28, 2011

A Bureaucratic Occupation By Julie Holm for MIFTAH

Traveling to Palestine through Israel for the first time can be quite the experience. Aware of this I was well-prepared, knew exactly what to say and do, what not to say and not to do, and remembered all the tips given to me by kind-hearted people before I left. Little did it help though, as it seemed the woman at the border control was having a bad day. Accordingly I only got an entry visa for a month. Since I was planning to stay for three or maybe even six months this meant that I had to go through a maze of Israeli bureaucracy even before I had reached my destination, Ramallah. Standing in line, early in the morning in front of the Ministry of Interior in Jerusalem I told myself that it was all part of the experience of traveling to and living in Palestine. After I had gone through security control just to stand in line twice again and finally being told that I could get an appointment three weeks later, it was hard not to get a little frustrated. I told myself, however, that it was nothing compared to what Palestinians go through every day.

This first encounter with Israeli bureaucracy opened my eyes to the realities of living in an occupied area. That realization is backed up every day by all the stories I hear of Palestinians fighting their way through the bureaucratic maze just to live and move around in their own country. I hear of citizens of east Jerusalem who get their residency status cancelled because the boundaries between Israel and Palestine run through their homes where it is a question of millimeters. This show how Israel uses laws and regulations to push the Palestinians out of their city and take away their rights. The bureaucratic occupation of everyday life makes Israel able to maintain their vigilant control over the Palestinian population. Further, it serves the purpose of slowly removing Palestinians from their land, making way for settlers. Through these bureaucratic procedures Israel continues to violate international law.

Another aspect of this is how the Israelis limit the movement of people and goods through a complex system of access restrictions to and from Gaza and the West Bank. Checkpoints, roadblocks and the separation wall (or “security fence”, depending on from which side you see it) are physical examples of the limited mobility experienced by many Palestinians. In addition are the restrictions on movement of goods, materials, products, equipment and tools.

Media coverage of Palestine is most often concerned with violence, and diplomatic fighting on an international stage. While that may draw attention to the area and the occupation, it is distracting the world from seeing the smothering bureaucratic control of everyday life that is an important aspect of the Israeli occupation.

Almost every day we hear how weapons, bombs, teargas and violence are used to enforce the Israeli occupation. Residency permits, application forms and population registers can be just as hard hitting instruments of occupation. Bureaucracy is infused in all aspects of everyday life in Palestine. Activities taken for granted most other places are restricted here. Not everyone is able to live with their spouse and children, and visiting family and relatives can be a difficult and sometimes impossible undertaking. Something as trivial as driving a car or going to work in another city often demands a range of permits only to be acquired though a strenuous process of filling out applications and standing in line.

After standing in line once again, this time with forms all filled out, letters of intent, passport photos, and everything else the Israeli bureaucracy wanted from me, I got my visa extended. For me it was just another experience, but for the Palestinians, having to find their way through the bureaucratic maze every day, it is a way for the occupation to affect every aspect of their relations, their mobility and their lives.

Julie Holm is a Writer for the Media and Information Department at the Palestinian Initiative for the Promotion of Global Dialogue and Democracy (MIFTAH). She can be contacted at mid@miftah.org.

My letter to the Washington Post RE Robert L. Bernstein's "Why do human rights groups ignore Palestinians’ war of words?"

RE: Why do human rights groups ignore Palestinians’ war of words?
http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/why-do-human-rights-groups-ignore-palestinians-war-of-words/2011/09/26/gIQAWU5y2K_story.html

Dear Editor,

Ending the Israel/Palestine conflict with a fair and just negotiated settlement allowing a fully sovereign Palestinian state to emerge will go a long ways towards curbing the hate speech, bigotry, ignorance and religious extremism on both sides.

A fully secular two state solution really is the best hope for creating a just and lasting peace for the people of Israel and the people of Palestine, and all their neighbors.

A fully secular two state solution in line with international law- and fully respecting basic human rights on all sides of every border is an excellent investment.... What a shame that Mr Robert L. Bernstein, the former president and chairman of Random House, chairman of the group Advancing Human Rights and founding chairman emeritus of Human Rights Watch choses instead to do what he can to exasperate tensions and the continuation of the Israel/Palestine conflict. You'd think with so many impressive titles he'd have some thing more impressive and helpful to say.

Sincerely,
Anne Selden Annab


Notes
"Today a group of UN human rights experts called for an immediate end to the demolitions of Palestinian-owned houses and other structures in the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, and urged Israeli authorities to prevent attacks by settlers against Palestinians and their property.

“The impact and discriminatory nature of these demolitions and evictions is completely unacceptable. These actions by the Israeli authorities violate human rights and humanitarian law and must end immediately,” said the three independent experts who work on the rights to adequate housing, water and sanitation, and food.

Given the human cost of the ongoing conflict, Mr. Pascoe also said it is essential that all sides impress on their security forces and civilian population the need to act responsibly. “They must do their utmost to avoid escalation, and take early action to defuse possible tensions,” he said, adding that extremists on both sides must not be allowed to inflame the situation.

Turning to Gaza, he condemned the continued firing of rockets from the area into Israel, while also calling on Israel to show maximum restraint in their response. He also called for the further easing of Israeli closure measures on Gaza, particularly in regard to imports of construction materials, exports, and freedom of movement of people."

UN political chief urges Israelis and Palestinians to give diplomacy a chance


"Where, after all, do universal human rights begin? In small places, close to home - so close and so small that they cannot be seen on any maps of the world. Yet they are the world of the individual person; the neighborhood he lives in; the school or college he attends; the factory, farm, or office where he works. Such are the places where every man, woman, and child seeks equal justice, equal opportunity, equal dignity without discrimination. Unless these rights have meaning there, they have little meaning anywhere. Without concerted citizen action to uphold them close to home, we shall look in vain for progress in the larger world." Eleanor Roosevelt

Arabic Calligraphy

CSM: One Gaza family celebrates Palestinian statehood bid despite Hamas ban

http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Middle-East/2011/0925/One-Gaza-family-celebrates-Palestinian-statehood-bid-despite-Hamas-ban

One Gazan couple named their daughter after the month during which Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas presented his request for Palestinian statehood to the United Nations.

By Kristen Chick, Correspondent / September 25, 2011

Though it was forbidden to celebrate President Mahmoud Abbas's request to the UN for recognition of a Palestinian state, the parents of Ayloul Abu Asser celebrated by naming their girl Ayloul, meaning September. Kristen Chick/The Christian Science Monitor

Gaza City, Gaza

When Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas went to the United Nations to ask for recognition of a Palestinian state Friday, Gaza residents weren’t allowed to celebrate in the streets like Palestinians in the West Bank.

Yet one Gazan family found its own way to celebrate. They named their newborn daughter after the occasion. Ayloul Abu Asser was born Sept. 21, as the UN General Assembly was preparing for Mr. Abbas’s request. It was also the same day that Gaza’s Hamas government, a political rival of Mr. Abbas’s Fatah faction, announced that public celebrations of the statehood bid were forbidden.

That didn’t stop Hamad Nasr Abu Asser and Reda Abu Asser from naming their daughter after the month during which Abbas presented his request. Ayloul is the Arabic name for September.

“Hamas prevented any action in the street, so we decided to celebrate in our own way,” says Hamad, Ayloul’s father. The couple supports Fatah, and are were hopeful that Abbas’s speech may bring their dream of statehood closer.

And their daughter’s unusual name is not just a celebration of the occasion, but also a reminder. They hope that Ayloul will be able to grow up in an independent Palestinian state. But if that doesn’t happen, she will keep the dream alive for the next generation.

“If we don’t establish a state, her generation will carry on the project,” says Reda, Ayloul’s mother. Her baby is wrapped in a Palestinian kuffeiyah, and wears a headband in the black, white, and green of the Palestinian flag.

“One day she will ask why her name is Ayloul,”...READ MORE

Hussein Ibish: The speech Yasser Arafat never gave

http://www.nowlebanon.com/NewsArticleDetails.aspx?ID=315757
The speech Yasser Arafat never gave
Hussein Ibish, September 27, 201
Palestinians in Ramallah hold pictures of PA President Mahmoud Abbas, after his historic UN speech requesting statehood. (AFP photo/Ahmad Gharabli)

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas’ moving speech before the United Nations General Assembly on Friday was certainly the high point of his career. His address will be forever remembered because Abbas was able to do what no Palestinian leader has ever done in the past: make the moral case for Palestinian independence in a clear, coherent, reasonable manner at the highest international forum.

Most importantly, Abbas’ message was internationally receivable. Only the most recalcitrant supporters of the Israeli occupation could fail to have been moved by his words. Many in the room, including some jaded individuals, were left in tears....READ MORE


Hussein Ibish is a senior research fellow at the American Task Force on Palestine and blogs at www.Ibishblog.com.

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

VOANews: World Leaders Condemn New Israeli Settlement Building Plan

Posted Tuesday, September 27th, 2011 at 5:15 pm

U.S., European and Palestinian leaders have condemned Israel's plan to construct 1,100 new housing units in east Jerusalem, a move that could raise already heightened tensions after last week's Palestinian bid to seek United Nations membership.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton Tuesday called Israel's decision “counter-productive” to reviving stalled Mideast peace talks. She said both sides should avoid provocative actions that undermine trust, particularly in Jerusalem.

EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton said Israel's decision to move ahead with new settlement construction in the city's contested Gilo neighborhood “threatens the viability” of a two-state solution and “should be reversed.”

British Foreign Secretary William Hague noted that settlement expansion is “illegal under international law, corrodes trust and undermines the basic principle of land for peace.”

Palestinians oppose Israeli building on land they want as part of a future state. Chief Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat said Israel's decision amounts to “1,100 no's to the resumption of peace talks.”

The Israeli Interior Ministry said construction could begin after a mandatory 60-day public comment period – a process it called a formality.

Peace talks between Israel and the Palestinians broke down last year after an Israeli freeze on West Bank settlement construction expired.

The impasse in talks prompted Palestinians to seek U.N. statehood recognition last week. The U.N. Security Council is set to formally consider the Palestinians' request for statehood and full U.N. membership on Wednesday.

The Middle East Quartet, which includes the U.S., EU, U.N. and Russia, has proposed a resumption in negotiations between the two sides.

On Monday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said his country would not renew a construction freeze in order to get Palestinians to agree to the Quartet's plan for new talks. He told the Jerusalem Post that Palestinian insistence on the settlement issue shows a lack of interest in negotiations.

On Sunday, Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas told supporters in Ramallah that he would resume peace talks only if Israel stopped building settlements in occupied territory.

The Quartet's plan calls for a preliminary meeting between Israel and the Palestinians within a month. The meeting would be followed by a return to regular talks, and progress on security and borders within 90 days. It envisions the completion of a peace deal no later than the end of 2012.

UN political chief urges Israelis and Palestinians to give diplomacy a chance

"Today a group of UN human rights experts called for an immediate end to the demolitions of Palestinian-owned houses and other structures in the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, and urged Israeli authorities to prevent attacks by settlers against Palestinians and their property.

“The impact and discriminatory nature of these demolitions and evictions is completely unacceptable. These actions by the Israeli authorities violate human rights and humanitarian law and must end immediately,” said the three independent experts who work on the rights to adequate housing, water and sanitation, and food.

Given the human cost of the ongoing conflict, Mr. Pascoe also said it is essential that all sides impress on their security forces and civilian population the need to act responsibly. “They must do their utmost to avoid escalation, and take early action to defuse possible tensions,” he said, adding that extremists on both sides must not be allowed to inflame the situation.

Turning to Gaza, he condemned the continued firing of rockets from the area into Israel, while also calling on Israel to show maximum restraint in their response. He also called for the further easing of Israeli closure measures on Gaza, particularly in regard to imports of construction materials, exports, and freedom of movement of people."

UN political chief urges Israelis and Palestinians to give diplomacy a chance

My letter to Obama (etc): Diplomatic efforts regarding ending the Israel/Palestine conflict once and for all, with a just and lasting peace.

http://www.congress.org/congressorg/bio/userletter/?id=3181&letter_id=7379907141&content_dir=congressorg
Subject: Diplomatic efforts regarding ending the Israel/Palestine conflict once and for all, with a just and lasting peace.

Dear President Obama,

Please tell Hilary Clinton (and any one else you know who weighs in on the Israel/Palestine conflict) that Jerusalem is not yet the official capital of Israel: The international community does not recognize Jerusalem as Israel's capital and the city hosts no foreign embassies.

Zionists and their supporters like to say "Jerusalem" as short hand for Israel's diplomatic efforts, while referring to Palestine's diplomatic efforts as "Ramallah". What is good for the goose really should be good for the gander. Either also say Jerusalem (or perhaps East Jerusalem) for Palestine's diplomatic efforts, acknowledging both Israel and Palestine's claims, or use the more diplomatic "Tel-Aviv & Ramallah" as short hand for the two sides.

Furthermore, please do all you can to try to help end the Israel/Palestine conflict by supporting the emergence of a fully sovereign Palestinian state. Not a prison camp for the native non-Jewish population of the Holy Land but a real nation state where people are free and respected citizens.

Yes, I know direct negotiations between the two parties are the only way to actually end the Israel/Palestine conflict, but we can all do our part to help calm things down by better understanding the actual conflict, and taking care not to exasperate existing tensions with what we say and do.

The proposed American veto of Palestine's UN Bid is already being used to fuel angry anti-American rhetoric and many distracting commentaries and conjectures. All the world is watching- and the very real plight of the persecuted, impoverished and displaced Palestinians continues to grow more and more dire.

Did you listen carefully to Abbas' UN Bid speech.... Hussein Ibish of the American Task Force on Palestine did and he sums it up quite well in a recent article by pointing out that: "Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas’ moving speech before the United Nations General Assembly on Friday was certainly the high point of his career. His address will be forever remembered because Abbas was able to do what no Palestinian leader has ever done in the past: make the moral case for Palestinian independence in a clear, coherent, reasonable manner at the highest international forum." http://www.nowlebanon.com/NewsArticleDetails.aspx?ID=315757

Ibish wisely keeps his eye on the ball and concludes "Now is the time to move beyond the theatrics at the UN and return to what is achievable. This means continuing to build the basis of a Palestinian state through international support and providing funding for institution-building. It also means serious work by all parties to lay the groundwork for successful negotiations, so that domestic political dynamics in the key societies involved can be aligned with their stated policies of seeking a genuine two-state solution."

A fully secular two state solution to once and for all end the Israel/Palestine conflict really is a worthy goal and an excellent investment- for everyone's sake.

Sincerely,
Anne Selden Annab
American homemaker & poet

NOTES
Help Build A Golden Rule Peace for the Holy Land

GROWING GARDENS FOR PALESTINE

The Arab Peace Initiative


"Where, after all, do universal human rights begin? In small places, close to home - so close and so small that they cannot be seen on any maps of the world. Yet they are the world of the individual person; the neighborhood he lives in; the school or college he attends; the factory, farm, or office where he works. Such are the places where every man, woman, and child seeks equal justice, equal opportunity, equal dignity without discrimination. Unless these rights have meaning there, they have little meaning anywhere. Without concerted citizen action to uphold them close to home, we shall look in vain for progress in the larger world." Eleanor Roosevelt

"Palestinian refugees must be given the option to exercise their right of return (as well as receive compensation for their losses arising from their dispossession and displacement) though refugees may prefer other options such as: (i) resettlement in third countries, (ii) resettlement in a newly independent Palestine (even though they originate from that part of Palestine which became Israel) or (iii) normalization of their legal status in the host country where they currently reside. What is important is that individual refugees decide for themselves which option they prefer – a decision must not be imposed upon them." http://plodelegation.us/palestine/core-issues/

Monday, September 26, 2011

“Abbas succeeded in strengthening his standing among Palestinians...

...and his ideology of achieving statehood diplomatically against the challenge from the Islamist right represented by Hamas,” said Hussein Ibish, senior research fellow with the American Task Force on Palestine, a nonpartisan Washington-based group that advocates a peaceful two-state solution."

One Step Closer to Palestine By Joharah Baker for MIFTAH

The high felt by Palestinians everywhere as President Mahmoud Abbas held up his application for full membership at the UN last week is long overdue. The elation was well deserved for more than one reason. For one, Palestinians saw before them a man – usually deemed as weak – defy the world’s strongest nation and paint a portrait of Israel’s occupation that was by any standards, the closest picture to reality than we’ve heard for a long time.

Another reason was that Palestinians were basking in the fact that for the first time in years, their leadership was taking proactive measures instead of waiting for someone else to call the shots. The UN bid, whether it reaps any tangible results or not – was our bid, our decision and our move. That is something we can be proud of.

Alas, as sobriety sets in the “morning after”, there is much more to consider besides the satisfying performance of the president before the UN General Assembly. The prospect of membership in the United Nations is an appealing one, no doubt – first and foremost because it puts Palestine on the same level as the world’s nations – but also because it will give us the opportunity to hold Israel accountable for at least some of the ills it has caused us for so many years. Palestine – our state among states – will also be recognized as an occupied country, which believe it or not is a feat in itself. If a vote goes through, there will (hopefully) be no talk of “disputed lands” but of an occupied Palestine on which illegal settlements are built.

That is still a far off destination, but if the leadership does what it says, it is a one-way street from here. The first step has been taken, so to say, which is standing up to the United States, Israel and a considerable number of other countries that have been trying to talk Abbas out of the bid for months.

Nonetheless, we should not get ahead of ourselves, something we Palestinians tend to do in times like these. While Abbas did tell the adoring crowds that “The journey is long and there are many obstacles,” this did not put a damper on the thousands who would hail him as a hero.

All Palestinians, regardless of where they live, dream and hope for freedom and an independent state in their rightful homeland. We are all in consensus that peace and Israel’s occupation cannot coexist and peace will never come without justice for the Palestinians. President Abbas’ words rung poignantly true for many of us when he said during his General Assembly address that “in the absence of absolute justice, we decided to adopt the path of relative justice - justice that is possible and could correct part of the grave historical injustice committed against our people.” He was, of course, referencing the Palestinian decision to accept a two-state solution on 22 percent of historical Palestine after the majority of the homeland was lost during the Nakba of 1948.

We did make a major concession by accepting a two-state solution and this is something Abbas has made clear in no uncertain terms. But the Palestinians know that even this is a distant reality at this point, what with Israel’s settlement projects, the separation wall and the hundreds of checkpoints that dissect the State of Palestine in every direction possible. But the leadership still adheres to it, whether or not it believes it can be achieved on the ground.

All in all, the PLO’s move was a good one. It put Palestine – not the PLO, not the PA, not the “Palestinian Territories” – back in the game of international diplomacy with the Palestinians themselves making the first moves. It has been a long time since this has happened and it is a relief for the people that their faith in the leadership’s strength has been restored at least for now.

President Abbas is no hero. But on Friday, September 23, he assumed the title we Palestinians have often been wary of bestowing upon him. He became a leader.

Joharah Baker is Director of the Media and Information Department at the Palestinian Initiative for the Promotion of Global Dialogue and Democracy (MIFTAH). She can be contacted at mid@miftah.org.

Sunday, September 25, 2011

EXCELLENT ABC Christiane Amanpour Interview with Palestine's Hanan Ashrawi

A top Palestinian negotiator on prospects for Mideast peace talks.
video platformvideo managementvideo solutionsvideo player

Paris-based Palestinian composes anthem for homeland: Ahmad Dari... مستني دولة بأيلول. أحمد داري

"Mestani Dawla be Aylol" -- "I Am Waiting for a State in September"


Paris-based Palestinian composes anthem for homeland
http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=422029

PARIS (Reuters) -- A Palestinian living in France has come up with what has become an unwitting anthem for his homeland's bid for nationhood at the United Nations meeting later this week.

Ahmed Dari, who until recently worked for the United Nations' Educational, Social and Cultural Organisation, is the author of "Mestani Dawla be Aylol" -- "I Am Waiting for a State in September" -- a hit song that is played from Ramallah to Rafah.

The song, written and performed in a light-hearted, almost tongue-in-cheek manner, has had tens of thousands of views on social networking sites. Dari says it aims to give hope to Palestinians in the run-up to President Mahmoud Abbas' bid to have Palestinian nationhood recognized by the UN's Security Council -- a move that America has vowed to veto.

"There are several major points in this song. I evoke the question of the Palestinian refugees, a crucial question. I talk about the probable American veto at the UN on the recognition of Palestine. I'm also interested in the view of Palestinians, who are split between optimism and pessimism about the future," he told Reuters Television in his small house perched on the outskirts of Paris.

Dari, who has recently become an advisor to the Palestinian Authority, is bemused by the success of the song. Created with his friend, two computers and a handful of instruments, it uses a tortoise to symbolize a slow progress towards statehood.

To create the clip, Ahmed Dari used images from the internet. There is also a woman, a symbol of life.

Dari says the song is much more effective than a political message.

''I felt that my clip reached a very broad Palestinian audience, particularly the young and even the old. The song works better than a political message. The song and the clip are very simple. The words are simple, the music is simple, there are lots of colors in the clip and that works."

His friend and fellow musician Youssef Zayed hopes the Palestinian bid for United Nations recognition will succeed.

''I am optimistic, though I know that there are obstacles. I do not know how long it will take, it will perhaps not be our generation that will see it. That doesn't matter, Palestine will live, we will wait, if God wills it."

Meanwhile, Dari is pursuing his career as a diplomat and singer. He is also an accomplished Arabic calligrapher. He will travel to New York this week and has already composed a new song. Its theme will be the difficult relationship between Palestinians and Israelis.

Dr. Aref Assaf: Whether Palestine... "We have a dream too: a place to call a homeland"


"A banner at a recent pro Palestine demonstration at the UN summed it up: "We have a dream too: a place to call a homeland".

Related: The official Palestinian position on the UN vote bid is contained in a 35-page booklet that was given to every United Nations delegation. Titled "Recognizing Palestine: An Investment in Peace" it lists four reasons the Palestinians have taken this course: acts by Israel that undermine peace, international responsibility toward the Palestinians, the growth of Jewish settlements and intensifying Israeli designs on East Jerusalem. Click here for the link. (It may take a while to download)

Full transcript of President Abbas speech at UN General Assembly http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/full-transcript-of-abbas-speech-at-un-general-assembly-1.386385 According to a recent survey more than 80% of Palestinians support the push for Statehood recognition. http://www.pcpsr.org/survey/polls/2011/p41ejoint.html A plurality of Americans (42%) than oppose (26%) the United States recognizing Palestine as an independent nation, while nearly a third (32%) express no opinion. http://people-press.org/2011/09/20/palestinian-statehood-mixed-views-low-visibility/ "