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3 mars 2017 5 03 /03 /mars /2017 09:45
Publish Date: 2017/03/02
Israeli army ransacks Bethlehem printing shop, arrests youth
 
 
 

BETHLEHEM, March 2, 2017 (WAFA) – Israeli forces broke into and ransacked a printing shop in Deheisheh refugee camp in Bethlehem on Wednesday night and confiscated some of its content, according to Palestinian security sources.

They told WAFA that Israeli soldiers raided Dozan printing shop and ransacked it and seized some of its equipment.

The incident came only one day after Israeli forces raided Ibn Khaldoun printing shop in Tulkarm, one of the big printers in the city in the north of the occupied West Bank, seizing equipment and destroying everything else.

The security sources also said Israeli forces raided as well the outskirts of Deheisheh camp and detained a number of young Palestinians

Soldiers also detained a 12-year-old Palestinian minor from Aida refugee camp, north of Bethlehem.

M.N./M.K.

 

http://english.wafa.ps/page.aspx?id=yN1HdHa56170558554ayN1HdH

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3 mars 2017 5 03 /03 /mars /2017 09:44
Publish Date: 2017/03/02
Israeli army ransacks Bethlehem printing shop, arrests youth
 
 
 

BETHLEHEM, March 2, 2017 (WAFA) – Israeli forces broke into and ransacked a printing shop in Deheisheh refugee camp in Bethlehem on Wednesday night and confiscated some of its content, according to Palestinian security sources.

They told WAFA that Israeli soldiers raided Dozan printing shop and ransacked it and seized some of its equipment.

The incident came only one day after Israeli forces raided Ibn Khaldoun printing shop in Tulkarm, one of the big printers in the city in the north of the occupied West Bank, seizing equipment and destroying everything else.

The security sources also said Israeli forces raided as well the outskirts of Deheisheh camp and detained a number of young Palestinians

Soldiers also detained a 12-year-old Palestinian minor from Aida refugee camp, north of Bethlehem.

M.N./M.K.

 

http://english.wafa.ps/page.aspx?id=yN1HdHa56170558554ayN1HdH

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2 mars 2017 4 02 /03 /mars /2017 08:09
Publish Date: 2017/03/01
Israeli forces raid Tulkarm printing shop, destroy equipment
 
 
 

 

 

Damage caused to Ibn Khaldoun printing shop in Tulkarm after the Israeli army raid.

TULKARM, March 1, 2017 (WAFA) – Israeli forces raided early Wednesday Ibn Khaldoun Printing and Publishing Shop in Tulkarm, one of the big printers in the city in the north of the occupied West Bank, seizing equipment and destroying everything else, according to the owner.

Abdul Rahim Badawi said soldiers raided two branches of his printing shop, one in the city of Tulkarm and the other in Shweikeh neighborhood to the north of the city.

He said the soldiers seized electronic devices including computers and destroyed everything else, estimating losses in the hundreds of thousands of dollars.

The Palestinian Ministry of Information denounced in a statement the raid saying that “it was another example of Israel’s terrorism against Palestinian media.”

It said Israel targeted seven printing shops throughout the West Bank last year and committed 408 violations against journalists and media outlets.

Israel claims the raids against printing shops were due to publishing what it described as “inciting” material, which Palestinians say is a very broad term that can include almost everything.

K.T./M.K.

 

http://english.wafa.ps/page.aspx?id=Ne0eJba56159137518aNe0eJb

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2 mars 2017 4 02 /03 /mars /2017 08:04
Israeli authorities turn away thousands waiting to register for Negev land
Feb. 28, 2017 7:17 P.M. (Updated: Feb. 28, 2017 7:56 P.M.)
 
 
 
 
 
NEGEV (Ma'an) -- Thousands crowded into Israel’s Bedouin Development Authority office in Beersheba to register to buy land in a new neighborhood in the nearby town of Rahat on Tuesday morning, only to be turned away and find that the registration was cancelled.

The incident came as the latest development in a severe housing crisis that has seen scores of homes razed to the ground in unrecognized Bedouin communities in Israel’s Negev region, as the Israeli state seeks to transfer them to government-zoned townships in order to make room for the expansion of Jewish Israeli housing on the evacuated Bedouin land.

The Israeli government has plans to evacuate tens of thousands of Bedouin residents to officially recognized Bedouin townships, one of which is Rahat.

Thousands had been waiting outside the office since the early predawn hours to register to buy land in the new area of Rahat, known as Compound 6.

"This is fiasco for the Rahat municipality, who completely failed to take the slightest interest in the registration process," a local resident who was waiting for registration told Ma'an.

"They should have shown some respect to the residents and brought the registration officers to the building. Instead, all municipality officials are sitting in their offices watching how we fight for a residence."

However, Israeli news site Arab48 reported that registration was called off for a week due to the high numbers of residents that arrived to register. The number of applicants was estimated to be around 4,000 young couples.

Arab48 quoted head of the Rahat municipality Talal al-Qreinawi as saying that the first phase of registration for Compound 6 would be for 900 applications and some 455 applications for the second phase.

The ongoing attempts at transferring the Bedouins originated from the Prawer Report, a document outlining expulsion plans for the unrecognized Bedouin community. It was officially adopted by the Israeli government in 2013.

According to Israeli human rights group Adalah, the plan would “result in the destruction of 35 ‘unrecognized’ Arab Bedouin villages, the forced displacement of up to 70,000 Arab Bedouin citizens of Israel, and the dispossession of their historical lands in the Negev.”

Bedouin communities in the Negev have been the target of a heightened demolition campaign in recent weeks, following Israeli leaders publicly expressing their commitment to demolish Palestinian structures lacking difficult to obtain Israeli-issued building permits across Israel and occupied East Jerusalem in response to the Israeli-court sanctioned evacuation of the illegal Amona settler outpost.

A raid to demolished homes in the unrecognized Bedouin community of Umm al-Hiran last month left two people killed, including a local math teacher, sparking widespread outrage among Bedouins and the wider Palestinian community.

A group of Bedouin reservist soldiers recently announced that they would refuse to report for duty, citing “betrayal” by the Israeli state and a wider cultural of racial discrimination.

According to the Association for Civil Rights in Israel (ACRI), more than half of the approximately 160,000 Negev Bedouins reside in unrecognized villages.

While Bedouins of the Negev are Israeli citizens, rights groups have claimed that the demolition of unrecognized Bedouin villages is a central Israeli policy aimed at removing the indigenous Palestinian population from the Negev and transferring them to government-zoned townships to make room for the expansion of Jewish Israeli communities.

The classification of their villages as “unrecognized” prevents Bedouins from developing or expanding their communities, as their villages are considered illegal by Israeli authorities.

Israeli authorities have also refused to connect unrecognized Bedouin villages to the national water and electricity grids, while excluding the communities from access to health and educational services, and basic infrastructure.

Many of the Bedouins were forcibly transferred to the village sites during the 17-year period when Palestinians inside Israel were governed under Israeli military law, which ended shortly before Israel's military takeover of Gaza and the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, in 1967.

Now more than 60 years later, the villages have yet to be recognized by Israel and live under constant threats of demolition and forcible removal.

 
 
 
 
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2 mars 2017 4 02 /03 /mars /2017 07:52
 
 
 
Publish Date: 2017/03/01
Two Arab homes in Naqab demolished
 
 
 

NAQAB, March 1, 2017 (WAFA) – Israeli bulldozers accompanied by police demolished on Wednesday two Palestinian-owned homes in the town of Rahat and the village of Ksefeh in the Naqab region south of Israel under the pretext they were built without permit, according to witnesses.

They said a large police force raided Rahat and cordoned off the area of the targeted house before proceeding with the demolition.

On January 10, Israeli bulldozers demolished 10 houses in the Arab city of Qalansawe in Israel also under the pretext they were built without a permit. Later, Israel demolished eight residences in the Bedouin village of Umm al-Hiran in the Naqab also for building without permit.

M.N./M.K.

 

http://english.wafa.ps/page.aspx?id=GTGgbQa56161041024aGTGgbQ

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1 mars 2017 3 01 /03 /mars /2017 03:40

Human rights groups working in Israel: Border control not thought control

Published:
24 Feb 2017

We, human rights organizations from Israel, consider Israel’s refusal to allow Omar Shakir of Human Rights Watch (HRW) to enter the country a cause of grave concern. We stand in solidarity with him and our colleagues at HRW.

Israel seeks to portray itself as a card-carrying member of the club of democratic countries. Yet what is democracy without free speech, robust public debate and open criticism? A state that defines itself as democratic cannot turn its border control into a thought police.

Neither closing Israel’s borders to human rights organizations and activists nor other measures by the Israeli government against organizations that criticize the occupation will deter us from continuing to report human rights violations in the territories controlled by Israel. Attempts to silence the messenger will not suppress our message.

Adalah Center

Akevot

Amnesty International Israel

Bimkom

Breaking the Silence

B’Tselem

Coalition of Women for Peace

Emek Shaveh

Gisha

Hamoked: Center for the Defense of the Individual

Haqel-Jews and Arabs in Defense of Human Rights

Human Rights Defenders Fund

Machsom Watch

Negev Coexistence Forum for Civil Equality

Physicians for Human Rights Israel

The Public Committee Against Torture in Israel

Yesh Din

 

http://www.btselem.org/press_releases/20170224_hrw

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1 mars 2017 3 01 /03 /mars /2017 03:28
Uri Avnery's Column
 
 
The Great Rift

 

I BELIEVE I was the first to recommend that the soldier Elor Azaria, the killer of Hebron, be granted a pardon.

But this recommendation was conditional on several requirements: first, that the soldier openly and unconditionally confess his crime, that he apologize and that he be sentenced to many years in prison.

Without these conditions, any request for a pardon by the soldier would mean an approval of his act and an invitation for more war crimes.

Sergeant Azaria, a medic in a combat unit, appeared on the scene after an incident in the center of the Jewish enclave in the ancient town of Hebron. Two young Palestinians had attacked an army control point with knives and been shot. We don't know how the first one died, but the second was filmed by a camera provided to the locals by the wonderful Israeli anti-occupation organization B'Tselem.

The camera shows the assailant lying on the ground, heavily wounded, motionless and bleeding. Then, some 12 minutes later, Azaria, who had not been present, appears on the screen. He stands less than a meter from the wounded Arab and shoots him point-blank in the head, killing him outright.

The photographic evidence, made public at once on Israeli TV (a fact not to be forgotten), left the army no choice. Killing a helpless enemy is a crime in any civilized military. Azaria was accused of manslaughter - not murder.

All over the right wing, he at once became a national hero. Politicians, including Binyamin Netanyahu and the present Minister of Defense, Avigdor Lieberman, hastened to adopt him.

Azaria was found guilty. In a sharply worded judgment, the military court stated that his testimony consisted of sheer lies.

The judgment aroused a storm of protest all over the right wing. The court was cursed and became the real accused. Facing this storm, the court buckled and this week sentenced Azaria to a ridiculous prison term of 18 months, the usual penalty for an Arab juvenile stone-thrower who has not hit anybody.

Azaria has not apologized. Far from it.

Instead, he, his family and his admirers stood up in the courtroom and broke into the national anthem.

THIS COURTROOM scene became the picture of the day. It was clearly a demonstration against the military court, against the high command of the Israeli army and against the entire democratic structure of the state.

But for me it was much, much more.

It was the Declaration of Independence of another Israeli people. It was the breaking up of Israeli society into two parts, the tensions between which have been growing more acute from year to year.

The two parts have less and less in common. They have entirely different attitudes toward the state, its moral foundations, its ideology, its structure. But until now, it was accepted that at least one almost sacred institution stood above the fray, beyond any controversy: the Israeli army.

The Azaria affair demonstrates that this last bond of unity has now been broken.

WHO ARE these camps? What is the most profound element of this division?

There is no way around it: it is the ethnic factor.

Everybody tries to evade this fact. Mountains of euphemism have been erected to hide it. Everybody is fearful, even frightened, of the consequence of it. Hypocrisy is an essential defense mechanism.

There are now two Jewish-Israeli peoples. They dislike each other intensely.

One is called Ashkenazi, a derivative of an old Hebrew term for Germany. It encompasses all Israelis of European and American origin, who adhere or pretend to adhere to Western values.

The other is called Mizrahi ("eastern"), They used to be called - erroneously - Sephardim ("Spaniards"), but only a small fraction of them are actually the descendants of the Jews expelled from Spain some 700 years ago. The great majority of these expellees chose to go to Muslim countries, instead of Europe.

The Mizrahi community encompasses all the Israelis whose families came from countries extending from Morocco to Iran.

Historically, Jews were often mistreated in Europe, and rarely so in Islamic countries. But Ashkenazim are proud of their European heritage, while in fact growing more and more estranged from it, while for the Mizrahim there is no greater insult than comparing them to Arabs.

How did the rift start? The Zionist movement was created mainly by Ashkenazim, who constituted the overwhelming majority of the world's Jews before the Holocaust. Naturally, they were also the main contributors to the new Zionist community in Palestine, though there were also some outstanding Mizrahi figures.

The deep division started right after the 1948 war. As I have often mentioned, I was one of the first who saw it coming. As a squad-leader in the war, I commanded a group of volunteers from Morocco and other Mediterranean countries (who, by the way, saved my life when I was wounded). I witnessed the beginning of the split and warned the country in a series of articles, dating from 1949.

Who was to blame? Both sides. But since the Ashkenazim controlled all aspects of life, their share of the guilt is surely larger.

Coming from two great but very different civilizations, it was perhaps inevitable for the two communities to differ on many aspects of life. But at the time everybody was befuddled by the Zionist world of myths, and nothing was done to avoid the disaster.

Nowadays, the Mizrahim see themselves as "the people", the real (Jewish) Israelis, despising the Ashkenazim as the "elites". They also believe that they are the great majority.

This is quite wrong. It is more or less an even split, with Russian immigrants, ultra-orthodox Jews and Arab citizens constituting separate entities.

An intriguing question concerns intermarriages. There are a lot, and once I believed that they would automatically heal the rift. That did not happen. Rather, every pair joins one or other of the two communities.

The lines are not drawn clearly. There are many Mizrahi professors, medical doctors, architects and artists who have joined the "elites" and feel part of them. There are many Ashkenazi politicians (especially in the Likud) who behave as if they belonged to "the people", hoping to attract votes.

The Likud ("unification") party is a phenomenon by itself. The preponderant mass of its members and voters are Mizrahim. Indeed, it is the Mizrahi party per excellence. But almost all its leaders are Ashkenazim. Netanyahu pretends to be both.

BACK TO Azaria.

Public opinion polls tell us that for the large majority of Mizrahim, killing a seriously wounded "terrorist" is the right thing to do. After the singing in court, his father kissed him and cried out: "You are a hero!" For many Ashkenazim, it was a despicably cowardly act.

One casualty of the affair is the Chief-of-Staff, Gadi Eizenkot. Until recently, he was the most popular person in the country. Now he is cursed by the Mizrahim as a contemptible lackey of the Ashkenazi "elites". Yet, in spite of his German-sounding name, Eizenkot is of Moroccan descent.

(A personal note. In the 1948 war, I saw with my own eyes many acts of real heroism: soldiers who sacrificed their lives to save a comrade or who fought on in desperate situations. I remember the deed of Natan Elbaz, a full-fledged Mizrahi, who threw himself on an activated hand-grenade to save the lives of his comrades. I feel insulted when a soldier is crowned with this title after cold-bloodedly shooting a wounded enemy.)

For more than 40 years now, the army has not fought a real war against a real military. It has deteriorated into a colonial police force, the instrument of a system of oppression of another people. In the performance of this role, many acts of brutality are committed every day.

Quite recently, an innocent Arab teacher, a Bedouin citizen of Israel, got involved by accident in an incident, when policemen clashed with the local population. They shot the teacher, in the erroneous belief that he was about to run them over.

The man was severely wounded and bleeding, with policemen all around him. They did not call the medics. He slowly bled to death. It took 20 minutes.

Only a soldier of the highest human quality, who grew up in a sound human family, can withstand this brutalizing effect. Fortunately, there are many.

I BELIEVE that it is there that the solution lies. We must get rid of the occupation, by all available means, the quicker the better.

Every true friend of Israel around the world must help.

Only then can we devote our mental and social resources to mending the Great Rift and become the people many of us would like to be.

And sing our national anthem with a clear conscience.

 
 
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28 février 2017 2 28 /02 /février /2017 10:26
Palestinian children attend class in the street after Israel shuts down school
Feb. 26, 2017 2:46 P.M. (Updated: Feb. 27, 2017 10:24 A.M.)
 
 
JERUSALEM (Ma'an) -- After Israeli authorities shut down a Palestinian elementary school in the occupied East Jerusalem town of Sur Bahir last Thursday over alleged “incitement” in its study materials, students attended class in the street on Sunday and protested against Israel’s decision to close the school.

Children who were enrolled at al-Nukhba (“the elite” in Arabic) arrived to the campus with their parents in an action organized by the parent committees of Sur Bahir’s schools, holding posters expressing support for al-Nukhba and denouncing Israel's closure of educational institutions as “tyrannical.”

Last Thursday, head of the school Luay Jamal Bkirat and the school’s financial manager Nasser Hamed were summoned to an Israeli police station for interrogation, when Israeli intelligence officials informed them that the school was being shut down for carrying inciting content in the teaching materials used at the school.

 
 
"I won’t give up on al-Nukhba.”

Bkirat denied the claims, saying that al-Nukhba school was “teaching the Palestinian curriculum used in all schools in Jerusalem and that no one of the faculty had ever been summoned for interrogation before over incitement.”

He added that the school -- which serves 250 boys from kindergarten to grade six -- was opened last year and gained a temporary operating license from the Jerusalem municipality, and that the license was revoked in November for unknown reasons.

Bkirat condemned the decision and said that he would “conduct procedures to stop this decision which aims to destroy education.”

The Times of Israel reported that the school was shut down for being a “Hamas front,” after a months-long joint probe by Israel’s Education Ministry, Jerusalem police, and Israeli intelligence, the Shin Bet.

 

 
 
"The closure of educational institutions is a tyrannical decision. I sympathize with al-Nukhba."

Israeli authorities from the education ministry claimed the school was established by Hamas with the aim of teaching “content that undermines the sovereignty of Israel,” and that the school’s aims were “consistent with the ideology of the terror organization, which calls for the destruction of Israel,” the Times of Israel said.

According to the Israeli news outlet, the ministry ordered the school not to open in September “and when it continued to operate, issued the closure order.”

 

 

 

Israeli Jews and Palestinians study in separate school systems in occupied East Jerusalem, with the Palestinian schools run by either Israel’s Jerusalem municipality, the Islamic Waqf and administered by the Palestinian Ministry of Education, private institutions, or UNRWA, the UN agency responsible for Palestinian refugees.

According to the Palestinian Ministry of Education, Palestinian children suffer from routine Israeli interference and political pressure to replace Palestinian curricula with an Israeli one in occupied East Jerusalem, where full Israeli military and civil control deprives students from proper and secure educational services.

 

 

A 2016 report by Israeli daily Haaretz also said that Palestinian schools in occupied East Jerusalem received less than half the funds that the Jerusalem municipality transferred to Jewish schools in West Jerusalem.

Though Sur Bahir lies beyond the periphery of occupied East Jerusalem, the town remained under full Israeli security and civil control within Israel’s Jerusalem municipality after the territory was illegally annexed in 1967.

A 2011 report by the Applied Research Institute - Jerusalem (ARIJ) said a lack of some levels of education in Sur Bahir, many students were forced to attend schools in neighboring villages.

 
 
 
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28 février 2017 2 28 /02 /février /2017 10:14
Protesters organize sit-in at Khan al-Ahmar school slated for demolition
 
 
 
Feb. 23, 2017 10:14 P.M. (Updated: Feb. 24, 2017 12:54 P.M.)
 
 
 
 
BETHLEHEM (Ma’an) -- The Palestinian Authority (PA) Ministry of Education organized Thursday a sit-in protest inside a school in the Bedouin village of Khan al-Ahmar in the occupied West Bank, against the impending Israeli government order to demolish the school and the entire village.

Protesters condemned the Israeli order to demolish Khan al-Ahmar school -- which services 150 female and male students -- and expressed their anger towards the Israeli army for targeting a school for kids and for “trying to ban them from their right of education.”

Minister of education Sabri Sedim called upon all Palestinians “to resist and face the Israeli plans and violations against education and Bedouin societies that reveal the ugly face of occupation,” adding that the ministry would “conduct all possible efforts to stop Israeli practices and expose them in media and courts.”

 

 

 

 

 

Over the past week, Israeli authorities delivered demolition notices to the village's 40 homes and elementary school, including stop-work orders targeting various structures in the village, which is located in Area C -- the more than 60 percent of the West Bank under full Israeli control and the site of frequent Israeli demolitions.

Locals told Ma’an at the time that Israeli forces imposed a military closure on the area before delivering the demolition warrants, as faculty and students of the school were prevented from accessing the building.

Despite the fact that the community, and the school in particular, has been threatened with demolition by the Israeli government for years, locals said the issuing of demolition warrants to every single house was an unprecedented blow.

UN officials visited the Bedouin community on Wednesday and called the situation “unacceptable.”

“Khan al-Ahmar is one of the most vulnerable communities in the West Bank, struggling to maintain a minimum standard of living in the face of intense pressure from the Israeli authorities to move to a planned relocation site,” Coordinator for Humanitarian Aid and UN Development Activities for the occupied Palestinian territory Robert Piper said in a statement, adding that “this is unacceptable and it must stop.”

Khan al-Ahmar, like other Bedouin communities in the region, is under threat of relocation by Israel for being located in the contentious “E1 corridor” set up by the Israeli government to link annexed East Jerusalem with the mega settlement of Maale Adumim.

Israeli authorities plan to build thousands of homes for Jewish-only settlements in E1, which would effectively divide the West Bank and make the creation of a contiguous Palestinian state -- as envisaged by the two-state solution to the Palestinian-Israeli conflict -- almost impossible.

Rights groups and Bedouin community members have sharply criticized Israel's relocation plans for the Bedouin residing near the illegal Israeli settlement of Maale Adumim, claiming that the removal would displace indigenous Palestinians for the sake of expanding Israeli settlements across the occupied West Bank in violation of international law.

 
 
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28 février 2017 2 28 /02 /février /2017 10:08
Trump, Netanyahu meet
 
 
 
Trump’s welcome to Israel’s prime minister in Washington was an exercise in fawning, fantasy, and anti-Palestinian incitement, ultimately coming to naught
 

Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu’s meeting with US President Donald Trump was overshadowed by dramatic and unsettling events that preceded and followed their perfectly bizarre press conference.

The week began with the forced resignation of White House National Security Adviser Michael Flynn and revelations of extensive communications between Trump campaign aides and Russian intelligence — revealing a White House in disarray, operating under a dark cloud of suspicion. The day after the Trump/Netanyahu joint press event was dominated by reactions to Trump’s solo press conference — an unprecedentedly incoherent and, at times, paranoid affair that left many commentators questioning the president’s frame of mind.

As a result of growing concerns with Trump’s Russian connections and his out-of-control behaviour when challenged by reporters or other American institutions (intelligence services, judiciary or political opponents), the Netanyahu visit became a one-day news story and the content of the Trump/Netanyahu press event escaped needed scrutiny.

Their press conference was, as expected, a love fest. During Netanyahu’s time as prime minister he has had to deal with Democratic presidents (Clinton and Obama) who have pressed him (albeit, ever so gently) to make concessions in order to advance peace with the Palestinians. Now he has a Republican president who he has every reason to believe sees eye to eye with him on most issues. For his part, Trump, who made opposition to what he characterised as Obama’s “weak” policies towards Israel, Iran and Islam major issues in his campaign’s foreign policy agenda, sees Netanyahu as a “soul mate”.

The press event featured an excess of embarrassing fawning. US leaders often heap praise on Israel, committing themselves to an “unbreakable”, “unshakable” bond. Trump upped the ante referring to Israel as “a cherished ally”, “an open democracy” that has “advanced the causes of human freedom, dignity and peace” and claimed that the US and Israel are “two nations that cherish the value of human life”.

Netanyahu repaid the unwarranted compliments with undeserved tributes. He praised Trump’s dealing with “Islamic extremism”, saying “you’ve shown great clarity and courage in confronting this challenge head on.” And, in response to a question about the extent to which Trump’s presidential campaign was supported by and gave a platform to anti-Semitic elements, Netanyahu absolved the US president, saying: “There is no greater supporter of the Jewish people and the Jewish State than President Donald Trump.”

After this shameless exercise in “log-rolling”, the two settled down to presenting their views of the future of peace in the region — a discussion that included equal doses of hallucination, fantasy and anti-Palestinian incitement.

Trump insisted that he wants to make a “great deal” that will bring peace to the region. He was initially vague about what that would entail, but after being coaxed by Netanyahu it became clear that both leaders believe that they can convert the Arab world’s concern with Iran and the Islamic State group into an alliance that would create a regional peace agreement. Both suggested that some Arab states are already working covertly with Israel to confront both threats. This being the case, they posited that this shared interest can be transformed into an open alliance that would make peace with Israel, on Israel’s terms.

This is sheer fantasy. While it is true that Arabs are concerned with both threats, hatred or fear of Iran or the Islamic State group does not translate into an overt alliance with Israel over the backs of the Palestinian people. Such an arrangement has long been an Israeli dream, but it ignores, as former Secretary of State John Kerry has noted, deeply felt Arab attachment to the legitimate rights of the Palestinian people.

As my polling clearly demonstrates, Israeli behaviour towards the Palestinians has not only increased Arab antipathy towards Israel, it has also significantly eroded the Arab people’s support for the Arab Peace Initiative. Given this, it is more likely that Arab cooperation with Israel, that is perceived to undercut Palestinian rights, would more likely play into the hands of Iran and extremist movements who would use it to inflame passions against such an arrangement.

Much was made of President Trump’s statement that he didn’t care whether peace involved two-states or one state. Not enough attention was given to why it was said and what it would ultimately mean. Netanyahu has no interest in seeing the creation of an independent Palestinian State. He has ambitions for a Greater Israel, but wants to proceed gradually by taking more land, building more settlements and discrediting and weakening moderate Palestinian leadership in order to make annexation an eventual “fact”.

While he has succeeded, to some extent, in these efforts, the Palestinian people’s aspirations for justice, freedom and self-determination have not been extinguished. Nor has Arab support for the Palestinians been diminished.

Netanyahu has so empowered the Israeli right that he has become its captive. As much as he resented Obama’s pressure, he was able to use it to tame the more extreme impulses of his far right coalition partners. With the election of Trump, Israel’s right feels that the pressure is off. Calls for immediate annexation are now heard. And the Knesset recently passed a bill “legalising” the theft of Palestinian owned land. Before leaving to the US, Netanyahu’s coalition partners warned him that should he publicly commit to two states he would face a rebellion at home. In ducking the two state formula, Trump was saving Netanyahu from his domestic foes.

For his part, Netanyahu maintained the fiction that he could accept two states but on two conditions: That Palestinians accept Israel as a “Jewish State” and would give Israel permanent security control of the land to the west of the Jordan River. The first of these two conditions would permanently disenfranchise Palestinians inside Israel. The second would leave Palestinians in the West Bank, Gaza and East Jerusalem living under Israeli military rule with no freedom or access and egress to the outside world. Both are obviously non-starters. This is not a two-state solution; rather it is an outcome that would merely formalise the apartheid system that currently exists.

To justify his intransigence, Netanyahu used his time at the podium to accuse the Palestinians of incitement and violence using language that was, itself, a shameless act of incitement. However, because this narrative has become so accepted in the US, no questions were raised about whether the charges are true or how whatever the Palestinians say or do compares with Israel’s incitement against Palestinians, documented instances of Israeli violence against innocent Palestinians, and the daily humiliation, brutality and violence of the occupation.

With all of the questions that should have been raised, it was disturbing that the only real discussion that followed the visit focussed on warnings that a one state solution would produce a state with an Arab majority compromising Israel’s Jewish character, with no attention paid to the issues of justice or the rights of the Palestinian people.

In any case, at the trip’s end, Netanyahu returned home to new revelations of corruption charges being levelled against him and new challenges from his far right “partners”. Back in Washington, Trump faced challenges of his own: More signs of a White House in disarray and more self-inflicted wounds of an out of control president. As a result, whatever expectations might have been created by the visit were left unmet. This exercise in fawning, fantasy and incitement was for naught. Peace was not advanced, nor was the understanding of what real peace would require or how or what Trump and Netanyahu would contribute to that goal.


The writer is president of the Arab American Institute.

 

http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/News/19725.aspx

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