UN Resolution 194, Passed on December 11th 
		1948, Calls for Return and Compensation of Palestinian Refugees
		Palestinian Group Marks 63rd Anniversary Of UN Resolution Calling For 
		Right Of Return Of Refugees
		IMEMC, Sunday December 11, 2011 02:57 by BADIL
		
On the 63rd anniversary of UN General Assembly Resolution 194, 
		the BADIL Resource Center for Residency and Refugee Rights issued a 
		statement to bring the attention of the international community to the 
		enduring denial of the Palestinian right to reparation, rehabilitation 
		and in particular to their right to return. Their statement follows:
		
Resolution 194, passed on 
		December 11th 1948, and reaffirmed every year since then, 
		mandates that:
“…the [Palestinian] 
		refugees wishing to return to their 
		homes and live at peace with their neighbors should be permitted to do 
		so at the earliest practicable date, and that 
		compensation should be paid for the property of those choosing 
		not to return and for loss of or damage to property which, under 
		principles of international law or in equity, should be made good by the 
		Governments or authorities responsible.”
The right to return to 
		one’s country is customary law and is enshrined in several international 
		instruments, including Article 13(2) of the Universal Declaration of 
		Human Rights; Article 5 (d)(ii) of the International Convention on the 
		Elimination of all forms of Racial Discrimination; Article 12(4) of the 
		International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. Significantly, the 
		International Convention on the Suppression and Punishment of the Crime 
		of Apartheid includes the denial of “the right to leave and to return to 
		their [members of a racial group/s] country, the right to a nationality, 
		the right to freedom of movement and residence,...” as constitutive 
		factors demonstrating the crime against apartheid. Under this legal 
		framework, the ongoing denial of the Palestinian right to return is an 
		act of apartheid, which is a crime against humanity. The right is also 
		well established through international relations practice/State practice 
		as evidenced by the comprehensive return of refugees to Bosnia, East 
		Timor, Kosovo, and Rwanda in the aftermath of military conflict.
		Nonetheless, Israel has intransigently rejected its application and 
		scope. Israel considers the right of Palestinian refugees to return to 
		their place of habitual residence as an "act of Suicide" because the 
		influx of millions of Palestinian refugees would disrupt its tenuous 
		Jewish majority. In an attempt to evade legal accountability, Israel 
		cites UN Security Council Resolutions 242 and 338, which mandate a 
		political solution to achieve a just settlement to the refugee problem, 
		as authoritative. De-coupled from Resolution 194, Resolutions 242 and 
		338 subject the resolution of the refugee problem to political 
		expediencies without consideration of human rights norms and principles 
		of justice.
The removal of the refugee question from an 
		international platform and its confinement to bilateral negotiations has 
		had devastating repercussions for refugees. The contested notion of 
		“justice,” coupled with the triumph of political expediency over two 
		decades of the Oslo Peace Process, has made nearly every aspect of the 
		inalienable individual and collective right to return a matter of 
		controversy. Israel denies all moral responsibility for the refugee 
		problem and argues that it is the responsibility of the international 
		community and Arab States to integrate or resettle them outside of its 
		borders and to compensate refugees for their material loss. Israel 
		considers the right to return to their place of habitual residence as a 
		matter of privilege rather than right. Such proposals infringe upon the 
		well-established principle of voluntariness, which guarantees every 
		refugee his/her right to choose freely one of the durable solutions 
		(return, integration or resettlement).
The Peace Process has also 
		failed to address the protection gaps endured by Palestinian refugees. 
		In its enactment of Resolution 194, UNGA created a unique regime for 
		protecting Palestinian refugees to whom it owed special responsibility. 
		Accordingly, it established the UNCCP with the mandate to provide 
		Palestinian refugees with both comprehensive international protection 
		and a durable solution to the refugee problem. Unable to find a durable 
		solution acceptable to all parties, the UNCCP ceased its operation in 
		the early fifties, signalling the failure of the special regime. 
		Although UNRWA is still providing Palestinian refugees with humanitarian 
		relief in its five operational areas, no other agency has hitherto been 
		empowered to provide legal protection to Palestinian refugees and to 
		find a durable solution. This has had devastating consequences for 
		vulnerable refugee populations who are left without the protection to 
		which they are entitled.
Stripped of the legal authority and the 
		moral underpinnings of international law, the right of return, which 
		impacts on the humanitarian conditions of 6.5 million Palestinians, and 
		the collective self-determination of the Palestinian people, has been 
		severely compromised.
Inspired by the Arab Spring, on Nakba day 
		this year, Palestinian refugees in Syria, Jordan , Egypt and Lebanon, as 
		well as those within the Occupied Territory, marched towards their 
		respective borders with their homeland, in an expression of their 
		determination to see their right to return implemented. This show of 
		steadfastness was met with Israeli aggression, resulting in dozens of 
		fatalities and hundreds of injuries. This protest at their forcible 
		displacement and exclusion was repeated less than a month later, on 
		Naksa day, June 15th. These events are illustrative of the demand of 
		Palestinian refugees for their right of return and the urgency of its 
		implementation.
On this 63rd anniversary of Resolution 194, BADIL 
		calls upon the international community to affirm the right of return by 
		resurrecting mechanisms aimed at its implementation and at bridging the 
		outstanding protection gaps regarding refugees, as steps towards a 
		durable solution. Badil calls upon the PLO to activate Arab League 
		Resolution 5414/1994, aimed at reviving the UNCCP in order to close the 
		protection gaps and establish mechanisms for implementing UNGA Res. 194.
		
		 
      
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