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| January, 2010
Volume 35, Issue 1
MARIN
COUNTY'S NEWS MONTHLY - FREE PRESS
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Abbas and the Goldstone Report- Our Shame Is Complete By Ramzy Baroud
The
Goldstone report is the most comprehensive, and transparent
investigation as of yet into what happened in Gaza during the 23-day
war. A new war might be awaiting besieged Gaza. Time is running out,
notes Ramzy Baroud. Our Shame is Complete. As
Israeli bombs fell on the Gaza Strip during its one-sided war between
December 27, 2008 and January 18, 2009, millions around the world took
to the streets in complete and uncompromising outrage. The level of
barbarity in that war, especially as it was conducted against a poor,
defenseless and physically trapped nation, united people of every
color, race and religion. But among those who seemed utterly unmoved,
unreservedly cold were some Palestinian officials in the West Bank.
Mahmoud Habbash, the PA Minister of Social Affairs is but one of those
individuals. His appearances on Aljazeera, during those fateful days
were many. On one half of the screen would be screaming, disfigured
children, mutilated women, and search parties digging in the dark for
dead bodies, at times entire families. On the other, was Habbash,
spewing political insults at his Hamas rivals in Gaza, repeating the
same message so tirelessly parroted by his Israeli colleagues? Every
time his face appeared on the screen, I cringed. Every unruly shriek of
his reinforced my sense of shame. Shame, perhaps, but never confusion.
Those who understand how the Oslo agreement of September 1993 morphed
into a culture that destroyed the very fabric of Palestinian society
can fully appreciate the behavior of the Palestinian Authority in the
West Bank during the Gaza war, before it and today. But especially today.
Those who hoped that the Israeli atrocities in Gaza would rekindled a
sense of remorse among the egotistical elites in Ramallah, were surely
disappointed when the PA withdrew its draft resolution supporting
recommendations made by South African Judge Richard Goldstone. The
Goldstone report is the most comprehensive, and transparent
investigation as of yet into what happened in Gaza during the 23-day
war. It decried Israeli terror, and chastised Palestinians as well. But
the focus on Israel undoubtedly and deservingly occupied much of the
nearly 600-page report. The next step was for the Human Rights Council
to send the report for consideration to the United Nations Security
Council, which was to study the findings for a possible referral of the
case to the International Criminal Court e in The Hague. Such a move
would have been historic. Knowing the full implications of such a
possibility, Hamas accepted the report's recommendations in full.
Israel, backed by its traditional US ally, rejected it, leveling all
sorts of accusations and insults on the world-renowned Jewish judge.
The draft resolution - condemning Israel and calling for the transfer
of the report to the UNSC - was due for a vote at the Council on
October 2. Alas, it was withdrawn at the behest of the Palestinian
Authority and its president Mahmoud Abbas himself. Palestinian friends
and allies at UNHRC were shocked, but obliged. They were equally
disappointed when they watched PA envoys discussing the matter, not
with the Asian, African or other traditional allies at the Council, but
with US and European diplomats, who seemed to have a greater sway over
Palestinian political action than those who have for decades supported
Palestinian rights at every turn. Something went
horribly wrong. How could a leader of an occupied and suffering nation
commit such a 'mistake', deferring an urgent vote and discussion on a
report pertaining to the death of over 1,400 people, the maiming and
wounding of thousands more, to a later date, six months from today?
Theories flared. Israeli and other media argued that US pressure on PA
president Mahmoud Abbas was the main reason behind the supposedly
unanticipated move. A positive vote on the resolution would jeopardize
the 'peace process', therefore any action must be stifled for the sake
of giving the 'peace process' a chance, was the rationale.
Amira Hass of Haaretz opined, "The chronic submissiveness is always
explained by a desire to 'make progress.' But for the PLO and Fatah,
progress is the very continued existence of the Palestinian Authority,
which is now functioning more than ever before as a subcontractor for
the IDF, the Shin Bet security service and the Civil Administration."
Jonathan Cook, however, offered another view: "Israel warned it would
renege on a commitment to allot radio frequencies to allow Wataniya, a
mobile phone provider, to begin operations this month in the West Bank.
The telecommunications industry is the bedrock of the Palestinian
economy, with the current monopoly company, PalTel, accounting for half
the worth of the Palestinian stock exchange."
"No blood for mobile phones," should perhaps be the new chant in
Palestine. But it's that sad fact that held the Palestinian will
hostage for too many years. However, it's not just mobile companies
whose interests triumph over Gaza's agony. Indeed, the post-Oslo
culture has espoused a class of contractors. These are businessmen who
are either high-ranking officials in the PA and the Fatah party, or
both, or closely affiliated with them. Much of the billions of dollars
of international aid that poured into Palestine following the signing
of Oslo found its way into private bank accounts. Wealth generated more
wealth and "export and import" companies sprung up like poison ivy
amidst the poor dwelling of refugees throughout the occupied
territories. The class of businessmen, still posing as revolutionaries,
encroached over every aspect of Palestinian society, used it,
controlled it, and eventually suffocated it. It espoused untold
corruption, and, naturally, found an ally in Israel, whose reign in the
occupied territories never ceased. The PA became
submissive not out of fear of Israeli wrath per se, but out of fear
that such wrath would disrupt business, the flow of aid thus contracts.
And since corruption is not confined by geographical borders, PA
officials abroad took Palestinian shame to international levels.
Millions marched in the US, in Europe, in Asia, South America and the
rest of the world, chanting for Gaza and its victims, while some PA
ambassadors failed to even turn out to participate. When some of these
diplomats made it to public forums, it was for the very purpose of
brazenly attacking fellow Palestinians in Hamas, not to garner
international solidarity with their own people.
Readily blaming 'American pressure' to explain Abbas' decision at the
UNHRC no longer suffices. Even the call on the 74-year-old Palestinian
leader to quit is equally hollow. Abbas represents a culture, and that
culture is self-seeking, self-serving and utterly corrupt. If Abbas
exits, and considering his age, he soon will, Mohammed Dahlan could be
the next leader, or even Mahmoud Habbash, who called on Gaza to rebel
against Hamas as Israel was blowing up Palestinian homes and schools
left and right. Palestinians, who are now calling
for change following the UN episode, must consider the Oslo culture in
its entirety, its 'revolutionary' millionaires, its elites and
contractors. A practical alternative to those corrupt must be quickly
devised. The Israeli wall is encroaching on Palestinian towns and
villages in the West Bank, and a new war might be awaiting besieged
Gaza. Time is running out, and our collective shame is nearly complete.
Ramzy Baroud is an author and editor of PalestineChronicle.com. His
work has been published in many newspapers, journals and anthologies
around the world. His latest book is, The Second Palestinian Intifada:
A Chronicle of a People's Struggle (Pluto Press, London), and his
forthcoming book is, My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza The Untold
Story (Pluto Press, London), which is now available for pre-orders at
Amazon.
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