Palestine Spring in the making?
By JAMAL KANJ *
Thursday, February 28, 2013
A THIRD Palestinian uprising is simmering slowly, fuelled by the
denigrating policies of Benjamin Netanyahu's government.
With the chances for a political resolution steadily diminishing, and
lacking other options, the conditions are ripe for a new Palestinian Intifada.
While the Palestinian leadership has repeatedly committed to a peaceful
settlement, Israeli governments in parallel are building "Jewish
only" settlements and taking steps to undermine the prospects for an
independent, viable Palestinian state.
A combination of internal and external Palestinian factors could result
in the street hijacking the endless process and ending the de facto peace for
Israelis.
Internally, the peace process has produced a class of VIP Palestinians
who appear to have lost touch with the public's pulse. Externally, and after 20
years of perpetual negotiations, Palestinians have seen their land disappearing
before their own eyes - more so than when they started what was supposed to be
an interim peace process.
Since the Oslo accords, Israeli governments without exception have been
in a race to create "Jewish only" facts on the ground - making any
future Palestinian state physically and economically unliveable.
The Palestinian economy has become subordinate to the Israeli economy
and Palestine is becoming a nation surviving on the conditionality of foreign
aid and taxes collected by its enemy.
Last month's Israeli vote for a new anti-peace government hammered the
last nail into the coffin of an already comatose peace process.
The deteriorating health conditions of hunger-striking administrative
detainees and the recent death of a prisoner could ignite the spark,
transforming long-suppressed frustrations into an outright anger on the
streets.
Longest hunger-striking prisoner Samer Al Issawi was released as part of
prisoner exchange between Israel and Hamas last year, but soon afterwards was
re-arrested for ostensibly violating his release terms by travelling outside
his hometown of East Jerusalem.
Al Issawi has refused food for more than 200 days and his weight has
dropped to 48kg. Three other administrative detainees joined in the hunger strike
90 days ago.
There are approximately 200 Palestinians - including several elected
parliamentarians - incarcerated under the misnomer of "administrative
detention".
This term is used illegally to deny prisoners basic rights to due
process in violation of international law.
Israel misuses it to circumvent its own judicial system by holding
Palestinian prisoners indefinitely without charge, refusing them an opportunity
to defend themselves in court.
Earlier this week, Arafat Jaradat died in an Israeli jail.
He was arrested on midnight of February 18 when the Israeli army raided
the house of the 32-year-old father-of-two for throwing stones at cars driven
by Israeli colonists in a small village near Hebron.
He was led to the interrogation unit at Megiddo prison.
Last Thursday he told his attorney he was suffering from back pain as a
result of being hung up for several hours and beaten during interrogation
(physical torture is a court-sanctioned practice in Israeli jails).
His attorney asked the court to look into his allegations and to provide
him with proper medical attention.
Two days later, Israeli prison authorities announced that Mr Jaradat had
died of cardiac arrest.
An autopsy conducted in Israel in the presence of Palestinian officials
concluded that extreme torture was the likely cause of Mr Jaradat's death.
Medical examiners revealed that the deceased suffered six broken bones
in his neck, spine, arms and legs.
At least 207 prisoners have died while in Israeli custody.
The international community's gutless stance on the continued building
of "Jewish only" colonies in Palestine - combined with daily racist
humiliations at the hand of illegal settlers, Israeli checkpoints, torture and
extra-judicial detention - means it is only a matter of time before the
Palestinian street takes matters into its own hands and starts managing
relations between occupied and occupier itself.
* Mr Kanj (www.jamalkanj.com) writes weekly newspaper column and publishes on
several websites on Arab world issues. He is the author of “Children of
Catastrophe,” Journey from a Palestinian Refugee Camp to America. A version of
this article was first published by the Gulf Daily News newspaper. |