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following news reports are summaries from original sources. They may
also include corrections of Arabic names and political terminology.
Comments are in parentheses. |
Confronting Israeli Dispossession of the Palestinian People
By Karen Abu Zayd
Confronting dispossession
Ma'an, 09/12/2009 09:36
Sixty years ago today the United Nations General Assembly voted into
existence a temporary body known as UNRWA, the United Nations Relief and
Works Agency.
UNRWA’s task was to deal with the humanitarian
consequences of the dispossession of some three quarters of a million
Palestine refugees forced by the 1948 Middle East war to abandon their
homes and flee their ancestral lands. Just two decades later, the
Six-Day War generated another spasm of violence and forced displacement,
culminating in the occupation of Palestinian territory.
Today,
anguished exile remains the lot of Palestinians and Palestine refugees.
The occupation of Palestinian land persists, there is no Palestinian
state and the human rights and fundamental freedoms to which
Palestinians are entitled under international law do not exist.
The occupation, now over 40 years old, becomes more entrenched with
every infringement of human rights and international law in the occupied
Palestinian territory. Political actors hold in their hands the power to
redress the travesties Palestinians endure. Yet, the approach has been,
at best, to equivocate over the minutiae of the occupation – a
checkpoint here, a bag of cement there – or, at worst, to look the other
way, to acquiesce in or even support the measures causing Palestinian
suffering.
From my perspective as the head of the agency mandated
to assist and protect Palestine refugees, it is particularly vexing that
the prevailing approach fails – or refuses – to accord the refugee issue
the attention it deserves. Over 60 years, dispossession has faded from
the focus of peace efforts. The heart of where peace should begin is
absent from the international agenda, pushed aside as one of the “final
status” issues, one which belongs to a later stage of the negotiation
process.
As forced displacements continue across the West Bank,
as Palestinians are evicted from their homes in East Jerusalem, I ask a
simple question. Is it not time for those engaged in the peace process
to muster the will and the courage to address the Palestine refugee
question?
On this regrettable 60th anniversary of the agency
which I shall leave in less than one month, I wish to refocus the debate
on the displaced and dispossessed, to put the refugees at the center of
peace-making efforts. Make no mistake, not a single conflict of
contemporary times has been resolved, no durable peace achieved, unless
and until the voices of the victims of those conflicts were heard, their
losses acknowledged and redress found to injustices they experience. The
precedents of recent peace-making efforts and the methodology of
contemporary conflict resolution affirm that giving high priority to
resolving dispossession and the plight of refugees is a necessity, an
international obligation and a humanitarian imperative.
The
Israeli-Palestinian confrontation is uniquely complex. Among its myriad
dimensions, all of which require attention, the unresolved refugee issue
is one of those most profoundly linked to the uncertainties of the
regional situation and to the persistence of the conflict. Addressing it
is, therefore, a sine qua non for making progress toward a negotiated
solution.
Failing to engage with the refugee issue and
consciously shunting it to one side has served only to disavow the
refugees’ significance as a constituency with a prominent stake in
delivering and sustaining peace. This has left many with a dangerous
cynicism about the peace process, thus strengthening the hands of those
who argue against peace itself.
I refuse, however, to conclude my
time in office on a pessimistic note. Instead I urge that we take steps
to engage the marginalized. Let us confound the cynics. Let us create
alternative realities to disarm those who favor violence. I call on the
peacemakers to acknowledge, in their rhetoric and their policies, the
need to address Palestinian dispossession. Let symbolism and rhetoric
give way to substance.
On the 60th anniversary of UNRWA, I call
on the international community and the parties to the conflict to
acknowledge the 60-year-old injustice as a first step toward addressing
the consequences of that injustice. Let us build facts in the mind to
create facts of a just and durable peace on the ground.
The
author is UNRWA’s outgoing commissioner-general.
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