Palestinian
lost opportunities
By JAMAL KANJ
Tuesday, December 03, 2013
Just over a
week ago Palestine had a chance to cast its first vote at the UN General
Assembly appointing a Judge on the International Criminal Tribunal for the
Former Yugoslavia.
Palestinian
President Mahmoud Abbas first submitted the UN membership application on
September 23, 2011. The vote was delayed for a year providing time for the
Obama administration to persuade Israel to cease construction of the illegal
Jewish-only colonies on occupied Palestinian land.
On November
29, 2012 and after a year lost, the international community overwhelmingly
granted seat number 194 to Palestine as a non-member observer state at the UN
General Assembly. But what did that mean? For the last year it meant naught.
Palestinian
leadership was forced to backpedal agreeing last summer to negotiate over the
"pie" while Israel continues gulping it.
The US even
acceded to Israeli conditions limiting American participation to less than an
observer and appointing Israeli firster Martin Indyk as the US Special Envoy
for Israeli-Palestinian negotiations.
Mr Indyk was
deputy research director for the strongest foreign lobby, American Israel
Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) in the 1980s, and was the first ever US
ambassador to have his security suspended while serving in Tel Aviv. According
to American mediators, Palestinians promised to freeze efforts to join UN
organisations, like the International Court of Justice (ICJ) during the nine
months negotiation schedule. By now the negotiation has reached almost halfway
mark and the talks haven't moved an iota under the guidance of the US appointed
former AIPAC's employee.
As part of
the deal, Israel agreed to release around 100 Palestinian prisoners. To secure
continued Palestinian participation in this futile exercise, Israel decided to
release the prisoners in four or five groups. Each release has been preempted
by an announcement of more illegal Jewish-only homes.
Israel is
holding the prisoners' hostage to force Palestinians stay the course for the
nine months sham public relation exercise. Gaining more time to build
Jewish-only colonies making it that much more difficult to reach amicable
outcome at the negotiation table.
Since its
ascendance to the new status a year ago, the government of Palestine has not
taken full advantage of its membership, contented instead with meaningless
timid international condemnations of Israel's intransigence.
To
paraphrase Israeli diplomat Abba Eban, the Palestinian leadership has never
lost an opportunity to lose an opportunity to hold Israel accountable for its
flagrant violations of international law.
Case and
point, earlier this month an independent Swiss lab identified Polonium-210 the
cause for Yasser Arafat's death and whereas Israel was a country with the
motive and the proven capability to produce the radioactive substance, but
since Palestine was not a member in the World Court, the Swiss findings was
dead on arrival.
In 2009 it
failed to pursue UN Human Rights investigation - Goldstone report - which
accused Israel of war crimes for targeting civilians in Gaza between December
27, 2008 and January 18, 2009. In 2004, ICJ found Israel's separation wall and
its associated regime unlawful. A ruling that remained locked in the court's
cabinets.
The
Palestinian leadership has been very successful at condemning Israel and
investigating its crimes, but chronically fails to take advantage of its
diplomatic gains, eviscerating international findings from any value.
There is no
guarantee that Palestine's application for the World Court would not face
strong opposition, but waiting for another nonproductive US/Israeli public
relation exercise before joining ICJ is great political blunder.
Unlike
stealing land for Jewish only homes, joining UN organizations - symbol of
international harmony - couldn't be counterproductive to peace negotiations.
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