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Palestinians Take the Fight to their Occupiers:How 20 Palestinian Tents Rocked Israel
By Jonathan Cook
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, January 16, 2013
When the Palestinian leadership won their upgrade to non-member observer
status at the United Nations in November, plenty of sceptics on both sides
of the divide questioned what practical benefits would accrue to the
Palestinians. The doubters have not been silenced yet.
Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas has done little to capitalize
on his diplomatic success. There have been vague threats to “isolate”
Israel, hesitant talk of “not ruling out” a referral to the International
Criminal Court, and a low-key declaration by the Palestinian Authority of
the new “state of Palestine”.
At a time when Palestinians hoped for a watershed moment in their struggle
for national liberation, the Fatah and Hamas leaderships look as mutually
self-absorbed as ever. Last week they were again directing their energies
into a new round of reconciliation talks, this time in Cairo, rather than
keeping the spotlight on Israeli intransigence.
Direct action
So instead, it was left to a group of 250 ordinary Palestinians to show how
the idea of a “state of Palestine” might be given practical meaning. On 11
January, they set up a tent encampment that they intended to convert into a
new Palestinian village called Bab al-Shams, or Gate of the Sun.
On 13 January, in a sign of how disturbed Israel is by such acts of popular
Palestinian resistance, Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu had the
occupants removed in a dawn raid – despite the fact that his own courts had
issued a six-day injunction against the government’s “evacuation” order.
Intriguingly, the Palestinian activists not only rejected their own leaders’
softly-softly approach but also chose to mirror the tactics of the hardcore
Jewish settlers.
… the encampment indicates that ordinary Palestinians are better placed to
find inventive ways to embarrass Israel than the hidebound Palestinian
leadership.
First, they declared they were creating “facts on the ground”, having
understood, it seems, that this is the only language Israel speaks or
understands. Then, they selected the most contentious spot imaginable for
Israel: the centre of the so-called E-1 corridor, 13 square-kilometres of
undeveloped land between East Jerusalem and Israel’s strategic
city-settlement of Maale Adumim in the West Bank.
For more than a decade, Israel has been planning to build its own settlement
in E-1, though on a vastly bigger scale, to finish the encirclement of East
Jerusalem, cutting off the future capital of a Palestinian state from the
West Bank.
The US had stayed Israel’s hand, understanding that completion in E-1 would
signal to the world and the Palestinians the end of a two-state solution.
But following the UN vote, Netanyahu announced plans to build an additional
4,000 settler homes there as punishment for the Palestinians’ impertinence.
The comparison between the Bab al-Shams activists and the settlers should
not be extended too far. One obvious difference is that the Palestinians
were building on their own land, whereas Israel is breaking international
law in allowing hundreds of thousands of settlers to move into the West
Bank.
Another is that Israel’s response towards the two groups was preordained to
be different. This is especially clear in relation to what Israel itself
calls the “illegal outposts” – more than 100 micro-settlements, similar to
Bab al-Shams, set up by hardcore Jewish settlers since the mid-1990s, after
Israel promised the US it would not authorize any new settlements.
Despite an obligation to dismantle the outposts, successive Israeli
governments have allowed them to flourish. In practice, within days of the
first Jewish caravans appearing on a West Bank hilltop officials hook up the
“outposts” to electricity and water, build them access roads and redirect
bus routes to include them. The spread of the settlements and outposts has
been leading inexorably to Israel’s de facto annexation of most of
the West Bank.
In stark contrast, all access to Bab al-Shams was blocked within hours of
the tents going up and the next day Netanyahu had the site declared a closed
military zone. As soon as the Jewish Sabbath was over, troops massed around
the camp. Early on the morning of 13 January they stormed in.
In establishing Bab al-Shams, we declare that we have had enough of
demanding our rights from the occupier – from now on we shall seize them
ourselves. (Mohammed Khatib, encampment organizer)
Netanyahu was clearly afraid to allow any delay. Palestinians started using
social media over the weekend to plan mass rallies at road-blocks leading to
the camp site.
However futile the activists’ efforts prove to be on this occasion, the
encampment indicates that ordinary Palestinians are better placed to find
inventive ways to embarrass Israel than the hidebound Palestinian
leadership.
Senior Palestine Liberation Organization official Hanan Ashrawi extolled the
activists for their “highly creative and legitimate non-violent tool” to
protect Palestinian land. But the failure of PA officials, including Saeb
Erekat, to make it to the site before it was cordoned off by Israel only
heightened the impression of a leadership too slow and unimaginative to
respond to events.
Netanyahu’s fear
By establishing Bab al-Shams, the activists visibly demonstrated the
apartheid nature of Israel’s rule in the occupied territories. Although one
brief encampment is unlikely by itself to change the dynamics of the
conflict, it does show Palestinians that there are ways they themselves can
take the struggle to Israel.
Following the Israeli raid, that point was made eloquently by Mohammed
Khatib, one of the organizers. “In establishing Bab al-Shams, we declare
that we have had enough of demanding our rights from the occupier – from now
on we shall seize them ourselves.”
That, of course, is also Netanyahu’s great fear. The scenario his officials
are reported to be most concerned about is that this kind of popular mode of
struggle becomes infectious. If Palestinians see popular non-violent
resistance, unlike endless diplomacy, helping to awaken the world to their
plight, there may be more Bab al-Shamses – and other surprises for Israel –
around the corner.
It was precisely such thinking that led Israel’s attorney-general, Yehuda
Weinstein, to justify Netanyahu’s violation of the injunction on the grounds
that the camp would “bring protests and riots with national and
international implications”.
What Bab al-Shams shows is that ordinary Palestinians can take the fight for
the “state of Palestine” to Israel – and even turn Israel’s own methods
against it.
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