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An untenable state of affairs |
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By Khaled Diab With neither a two-state or bi-national solution imminent, Palestinians and their Israeli allies should attend to civil rights. |
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September 2008 US
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice is due
back in the Middle East this week for a last-ditch attempt to shore up a
peace deal between the Israelis and the Palestinians. But the Bush
administration’s “too little, too late” efforts are almost certain to
collapse. As a sign
of the pessimistic mood, Ahmed Qurei, the Palestinians’ chief negotiator
sparked controversy with his threat that, if the Annapolis process fails to
meet its deadline and deliver an independent Palestine by the end of 2008,
“We will call for the alternative solution for the Palestinian people and
their leadership – that is a single bi-nationalist state,” he
said. This
stance is all the more surprising given that Abu Ala’a, as he is more
popularly known, was one of the chief architects of the Oslo Accords and one
of the most prominent Palestinian advocates of the two-state solution. If he,
too, has lost hope in the oxymoronic ‘peace process’, then what chance is
there that a workable resolution will come to pass. The
remark was widely criticised in Israel. “Inevitably, the vast majority of
Jewish Israelis will view any talk about a one-state solution as a threat –
even as an existential threat,” Petra Marquardt-Bigman wrote
on CiF. The
veteran peace activist Uri Avnery fears
that putting the bi-national solution on the table would unleash widespread
panic in Israel and leave the settler movement with a free hand to accelerate
their settlement activity and push for ‘transfer’. “The real choice is,
therefore: the ‘two-state solution’ or the ‘ethnic-cleansing solution,” he
warned. This is
highly unlikely alarmism, as most Israelis can tolerate a low-intensity
conflict, but any attempt to ethnically cleanse the Palestinian territories
would meet with such domestic and international outrage that it would
galvanise the Israeli moderates out of their stupor and run the risk of
international intervention or, at the very least, make Israel’s international
isolation complete. Besides,
Revisionist and Religious Zionists, who seem to hold the balance of power,
believe that the Jewish identity of the land is more important than the
Jewish identity of the population. That is why, in December 1977, unwilling
to cede control of the West Bank and Gaza as part of a comprehensive peace
deal being offered by Egypt, Menachem Begin drafted an autonomy plan, which
was later shelved, which offered the Palestinians in the occupied territories
Israeli citizenship and the right to purchase land and settle in Israel. On the
Palestinian side, the reaction has been divided. Fatah’s main political
rival, Hamas, has roundly
condemned Abu Ala’a’s idea, and effectively accused the Palestinian
Authority of collaboration and of selling out the Palestinian cause. Some, particularly
secular
activists, favour the switch in strategy and others fear that it might
set back their cause. “In spite of eloquent and articulate views and analyses
by Palestinian intellectuals,” observes
Ghassan Khatib, the vice-president of
Bir Zeit University, “the vast majority of the public, according to
public opinion polls, and the majority of the political elite consider the
idea of a bi-national state a dangerous alternative strategy.” Personally,
I think Qurei may be on to something, if approached correctly. Both the
two-state and bi-national solution seem like distant and utopian
possibilities at the moment. Just as Israel is talking about a ‘shelf
agreement’ until they deem the Palestinians to be ready for peace, it is time
for the Palestinians to shelve their aspirations for nationhood until the
time is ripe. This
means that they should temporarily abandon their national struggle and,
instead, campaign for their civil rights, leaving the complexion of an
eventual resolution to a more amenable future or more visionary leadership. When the
Annapolis talks were launched, I did not hold out much hope that they would
succeed and proposed that, if they fail, the Palestinians, and the Israeli
peace movement, should
launch a civil rights movement. “The
Palestinians cannot continue to live in such dire conditions for much longer
in the vain hope of fulfilling their national aspirations,” I wrote. “There
must come a time when they decide that individual dignity is more important
than the deceptive trappings of nationhood.” Unlike
the Palestinians who fell within Israel’s 1948 borders and obtained
citizenship and equal civil rights, the Palestinians of the West Bank and
Gaza have been disenfranchised for four decades. However, as long as Israel
controls the territory on which they live, it is obliged to grant them their
civil rights. Moreover,
the bread-and-butter issues of civil liberties – such as freedom of movement,
the right to live in security and safety, the right to education and
employment, the right to vote, the right to citizenship – are issues that can
be tackled one at a time and in an incremental fashion. They are
also more concrete and pressing than the elusive notion of nationhood, and
easier to build public sympathy for. “We want the right to visit our families
in other villages and towns… We want the right to work,” are demands that tap
into people’s common humanity, rather than their nationalistic differences. Sari
Nusseibeh, the progressive president of al-Quds University in Jerusalem, has suggested that
the holy city could be the launch pad for such a civil rights movement, if
its Palestinian residents reverse their boycott of the city’s municipal
elections and run their own candidates. This column appeared in The Guardian
Unlimited’s Comment is
Free section on 26 August 2008. Read the related
discussion. |
ă2008
– Khaled Diab. Unless otherwise stated, all the content on this website is the
copyright of Khaled Diab.