25 oct 2014
By Khalid Amayreh in occupied Jerusalem
The seemingly totally unjustified recent killing of several Palestinian children in Jerusalem by the Israeli occupation force has already infuriated the Palestinian community in a peculiarly ominous manner.
According to reliable sources in Jerusalem, the age of the four Jerusalem boys murdered by Israeli troops and messianic Jewish settlers in the span of the past few weeks didn't exceed 14 years. The killings didn't occur by mistake and the lives of the murderers, whether settlers or crack soldiers, were not put at risk.
In other words, the Zionist killers murdered the four kids in cold blood, irrespective of Israeli disinformation.
But what now seems to be an evolving uprising in Jerusalem has more to do with the killing of a few more Palestinians by the Israeli killing machine. Since the beginning of 2014, Israel killed more than 2200 Palestinians, injured around 10,000, and partially or completely destroyed more than 50,000 homes, especially in the Gaza Strip. These figures caricature a genocidal onslaught by Israel against a thoroughly tormented people seeking survival in the face of relentlessly nefarious Israeli Nazism.
Indeed, Israel's no-holds-barred approach to the Palestinian people has convinced most Palestinians that Israel is effectively seeking their physical liquidation as a people. Israel is ruled by an extreme right-wing government which has much in common with Germany's Third Reich. The fact that numerous Jewish-influenced and Jewish-controlled media in Europe and North America say otherwise, doesn't alter the basic facts.
But there is a key difference between the two regimes - Israel and Nazi Germany. In Israel's case, messianic Jewish groups are having an immense influence on the government of Binyamin Netanyahu. These people hold a decidedly criminal and infinitely racist ideology that views the rest of mankind as quasi animals who should either be destroyed or effectively accept enslavement by the "master-Jewish race."
According to the nefarious ideology of these religious Zionists, the Palestinian people are descendants of an ancient people called the Amalek or Amalekites, who, according to the Bible, must be physically exterminated.
Hence, the ongoing Israeli policy of gradual extermination against the Palestinians.
Gradual seizure of Aqsa Mosque
Israel has always coveted the seizure of the al-Masjidul Aqsa of Jerusalem, considered the third holiest Islamic shrine.
In recent months, however, Israel dramatically escalated its provocations at the Noble Sanctuary, known in Arabic as Haram al-Sharif.
These provocations included allowing fanatical Jews to hold Talmudic rituals, barring Muslims below the age of 50 from accessing the holy place and taking control over the gates of the holy place.
Now, the Israeli parliament or Knesset is slated to discuss partitioning the exclusively holy Islamic site between Muslims and Jews.
The vast bulk of Muslims in occupied Palestine and abroad are now convinced that a possible Jewish takeover of the Aqsa Mosque is only a matter of time and that Israel is awaiting the opportune time to carry out its long-standing designs. Muslims view this prospect as nothing short of a declaration of war on Islam itself.
This is the view of Ikrema Sabri, the former Mufti of Jerusalem and Imam of the Aqsa Mosque.
"I say so because the very existence of Muslims in this land is inextricably entwined with the al-Aqsa Mosque. Our existence in Palestine would be meaningless without the Aqsa Mosque. Hence, a Jewish takeover of this paramount Muslim holy place, which is an integral part of our faith as Muslims, would be an earth-shaking event by any standard."
A Jewish takeover of the Aqsa Mosque would also obliterate the so-called peace process and seriously weaken the Palestinian Authority (PA). Indeed, the PA would be in no position to suppress the overwhelming indignation amongst Palestinians, triggered by an Israeli folly of this magnitude.
Relations between Israel on the one hand and both Egypt and Jordan on the other hand, would also suffer significantly.
More to the point, the current alliance between the U.S. and certain Arab regimes, e.g. Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, against ISIS would come under immense pressure as a brazen Israeli provocation at the Aqsa Mosque would seriously embarrass America's Arab allies and redraw Arab sympathies toward the extremists.
In short, if Israel is to have its way in Jerusalem, the entire Middle East will be on fire. Even the internecine Sunni-Shiite confrontation would take a backseat as both Sunnis and Shiite forces would strive to display their indignation at the United States and Israel.
Finally, an Israeli takeover of the Aqsa Mosque would also likely set off a campaign of violence in many parts of the world. In short, another serious escalation at the Haram al-Sharif of Jerusalem wouldn't be just another event in the Middle East. It would most likely be a game-changer in many respects.
Khalid Amayreh is a veteran journalist and political commentator living in occupied Palestine
The seemingly totally unjustified recent killing of several Palestinian children in Jerusalem by the Israeli occupation force has already infuriated the Palestinian community in a peculiarly ominous manner.
According to reliable sources in Jerusalem, the age of the four Jerusalem boys murdered by Israeli troops and messianic Jewish settlers in the span of the past few weeks didn't exceed 14 years. The killings didn't occur by mistake and the lives of the murderers, whether settlers or crack soldiers, were not put at risk.
In other words, the Zionist killers murdered the four kids in cold blood, irrespective of Israeli disinformation.
But what now seems to be an evolving uprising in Jerusalem has more to do with the killing of a few more Palestinians by the Israeli killing machine. Since the beginning of 2014, Israel killed more than 2200 Palestinians, injured around 10,000, and partially or completely destroyed more than 50,000 homes, especially in the Gaza Strip. These figures caricature a genocidal onslaught by Israel against a thoroughly tormented people seeking survival in the face of relentlessly nefarious Israeli Nazism.
Indeed, Israel's no-holds-barred approach to the Palestinian people has convinced most Palestinians that Israel is effectively seeking their physical liquidation as a people. Israel is ruled by an extreme right-wing government which has much in common with Germany's Third Reich. The fact that numerous Jewish-influenced and Jewish-controlled media in Europe and North America say otherwise, doesn't alter the basic facts.
But there is a key difference between the two regimes - Israel and Nazi Germany. In Israel's case, messianic Jewish groups are having an immense influence on the government of Binyamin Netanyahu. These people hold a decidedly criminal and infinitely racist ideology that views the rest of mankind as quasi animals who should either be destroyed or effectively accept enslavement by the "master-Jewish race."
According to the nefarious ideology of these religious Zionists, the Palestinian people are descendants of an ancient people called the Amalek or Amalekites, who, according to the Bible, must be physically exterminated.
Hence, the ongoing Israeli policy of gradual extermination against the Palestinians.
Gradual seizure of Aqsa Mosque
Israel has always coveted the seizure of the al-Masjidul Aqsa of Jerusalem, considered the third holiest Islamic shrine.
In recent months, however, Israel dramatically escalated its provocations at the Noble Sanctuary, known in Arabic as Haram al-Sharif.
These provocations included allowing fanatical Jews to hold Talmudic rituals, barring Muslims below the age of 50 from accessing the holy place and taking control over the gates of the holy place.
Now, the Israeli parliament or Knesset is slated to discuss partitioning the exclusively holy Islamic site between Muslims and Jews.
The vast bulk of Muslims in occupied Palestine and abroad are now convinced that a possible Jewish takeover of the Aqsa Mosque is only a matter of time and that Israel is awaiting the opportune time to carry out its long-standing designs. Muslims view this prospect as nothing short of a declaration of war on Islam itself.
This is the view of Ikrema Sabri, the former Mufti of Jerusalem and Imam of the Aqsa Mosque.
"I say so because the very existence of Muslims in this land is inextricably entwined with the al-Aqsa Mosque. Our existence in Palestine would be meaningless without the Aqsa Mosque. Hence, a Jewish takeover of this paramount Muslim holy place, which is an integral part of our faith as Muslims, would be an earth-shaking event by any standard."
A Jewish takeover of the Aqsa Mosque would also obliterate the so-called peace process and seriously weaken the Palestinian Authority (PA). Indeed, the PA would be in no position to suppress the overwhelming indignation amongst Palestinians, triggered by an Israeli folly of this magnitude.
Relations between Israel on the one hand and both Egypt and Jordan on the other hand, would also suffer significantly.
More to the point, the current alliance between the U.S. and certain Arab regimes, e.g. Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, against ISIS would come under immense pressure as a brazen Israeli provocation at the Aqsa Mosque would seriously embarrass America's Arab allies and redraw Arab sympathies toward the extremists.
In short, if Israel is to have its way in Jerusalem, the entire Middle East will be on fire. Even the internecine Sunni-Shiite confrontation would take a backseat as both Sunnis and Shiite forces would strive to display their indignation at the United States and Israel.
Finally, an Israeli takeover of the Aqsa Mosque would also likely set off a campaign of violence in many parts of the world. In short, another serious escalation at the Haram al-Sharif of Jerusalem wouldn't be just another event in the Middle East. It would most likely be a game-changer in many respects.
Khalid Amayreh is a veteran journalist and political commentator living in occupied Palestine
Member of Hamas Movement’s political bureau Ezzat al-Resheq said Friday on his Facebook page that Israel is scared of the outbreak of a third intifada (uprising) in occupied Jerusalem. The state of tension prevailing in occupied Jerusalem over the past week has increased fears among senior Israeli officials of the outbreak of a new Palestinian uprising in occupied Jerusalem, said Resheq.
He pointed out that Israeli officials have repeatedly called for intensifying security restrictions in the occupied city in accordance with their theory: “what is not achieved by force, can be achieved by greater force.”
Israeli crimes will never achieve security, he continued. “The Palestinian people have the right to defend themselves, their land and their holy sites,” he stressed.
For his part, spokesman for the Movement Hossem Badran said that Israeli occupation will pay a heavy price for its crimes and violations in occupied Jerusalem.
The occupied city of Jerusalem has been witnessing a real intifada for several months in response to the Israeli daily arrests, raids, and resultant casualties.
The coming period is expected to witness further escalation of tension as Israeli officials threaten to intensify security measures, he warned.
Widespread violent clashes, described as unprecedented since the second intifada, have been raging since Thursday morning in east Jerusalem between Palestinian young men and Israeli troops in protest at the killing of 20-year-old Abdul-Rahman Shalludi by Israeli guards at the railroad station in Sheikh Jarrah neighborhood.
He pointed out that Israeli officials have repeatedly called for intensifying security restrictions in the occupied city in accordance with their theory: “what is not achieved by force, can be achieved by greater force.”
Israeli crimes will never achieve security, he continued. “The Palestinian people have the right to defend themselves, their land and their holy sites,” he stressed.
For his part, spokesman for the Movement Hossem Badran said that Israeli occupation will pay a heavy price for its crimes and violations in occupied Jerusalem.
The occupied city of Jerusalem has been witnessing a real intifada for several months in response to the Israeli daily arrests, raids, and resultant casualties.
The coming period is expected to witness further escalation of tension as Israeli officials threaten to intensify security measures, he warned.
Widespread violent clashes, described as unprecedented since the second intifada, have been raging since Thursday morning in east Jerusalem between Palestinian young men and Israeli troops in protest at the killing of 20-year-old Abdul-Rahman Shalludi by Israeli guards at the railroad station in Sheikh Jarrah neighborhood.
A curfew was imposed Friday evening in the Old City in occupied Jerusalem while Israeli forces intensified presence throughout its neighborhoods as part of Israeli measures to suppress the ongoing and escalated clashes in the occupied city. The Old City has been witnessing along the past week widespread violent clashes, described as unprecedented since the second intifada, which resulted in the injury of an Israeli officer in his face after being stoned by angry protesters.
Dozens of Jerusalemites were also injured with rubber bullets during the clashes while others suffered breathing problems after inhaling tear gas bombs.
Two youths were nabbed during the clashes after being brutally attacked and severely beaten.
In the same context, Israeli police stormed the mourning tent of the martyr Abdul Rahman Shalludi in Silwan neighborhood which led to the outbreak of clashes between angry youths and IOF soldiers.
The clashes extended to the neighboring areas including Ein Loza, Ras Amoud, Beit Hanin, and Shufat neighborhoods, while armed clashes were reported to the north of Qalandia checkpoint.
Meanwhile, nearly 30 people were shot and injured by rubber bullets while hundreds suffered breathing problems after inhaling tear gas on Friday evening during clashes that broke out in Issawiya town.
Seven members of Hamdan and Jamjoum families were injured when Israeli forces heavily fired tear gas bombs inside their homes during the clashes.
Along the same line, a woman among two citizens was injured by rubber-coated metal bullets while dozens suffered breathing difficulties during clashes in Sawana neighborhood in occupied Jerusalem.
Meanwhile, the IOF soldiers arrested the Jerusalemite field researcher Ahmad Sub Abu Laban while practicing his work in documenting clashes in the Old City.
Eyewitnesses confirmed that Abu Laban was subjected to brutal attack and assault before his detention.
Dozens of Jerusalemites were also injured with rubber bullets during the clashes while others suffered breathing problems after inhaling tear gas bombs.
Two youths were nabbed during the clashes after being brutally attacked and severely beaten.
In the same context, Israeli police stormed the mourning tent of the martyr Abdul Rahman Shalludi in Silwan neighborhood which led to the outbreak of clashes between angry youths and IOF soldiers.
The clashes extended to the neighboring areas including Ein Loza, Ras Amoud, Beit Hanin, and Shufat neighborhoods, while armed clashes were reported to the north of Qalandia checkpoint.
Meanwhile, nearly 30 people were shot and injured by rubber bullets while hundreds suffered breathing problems after inhaling tear gas on Friday evening during clashes that broke out in Issawiya town.
Seven members of Hamdan and Jamjoum families were injured when Israeli forces heavily fired tear gas bombs inside their homes during the clashes.
Along the same line, a woman among two citizens was injured by rubber-coated metal bullets while dozens suffered breathing difficulties during clashes in Sawana neighborhood in occupied Jerusalem.
Meanwhile, the IOF soldiers arrested the Jerusalemite field researcher Ahmad Sub Abu Laban while practicing his work in documenting clashes in the Old City.
Eyewitnesses confirmed that Abu Laban was subjected to brutal attack and assault before his detention.
24 oct 2014
A senior Israeli police officer said Thursday that the police might not be able to entirely stop the current Palestinian intifada (uprising) in occupied Jerusalem, but it would attempt to reduce its severity.
He stated in press remarks on Thursday that the Israeli police could decrease the tension and impose a period of relative calm in the holy city by intensifying its presence in its neighborhoods and using extreme force against protestors.
Widespread violent clashes, described as unprecedented since the second intifada, have been raging since Thursday morning in east Jerusalem between Palestinian young men and Israeli troops in protest at the killing of 20-year-old Abdul-Rahman Shaludi by Israeli guards at the railroad station in Sheikh Jarrah neighborhood.
Meanwhile, the Israeli police declared a number of entry restrictions on Muslims’ access to the Aqsa Mosque on Friday.
A large number of Israeli security forces have been deployed since the early morning hours in the vicinity of the Old City and the Aqsa Mosque.
He stated in press remarks on Thursday that the Israeli police could decrease the tension and impose a period of relative calm in the holy city by intensifying its presence in its neighborhoods and using extreme force against protestors.
Widespread violent clashes, described as unprecedented since the second intifada, have been raging since Thursday morning in east Jerusalem between Palestinian young men and Israeli troops in protest at the killing of 20-year-old Abdul-Rahman Shaludi by Israeli guards at the railroad station in Sheikh Jarrah neighborhood.
Meanwhile, the Israeli police declared a number of entry restrictions on Muslims’ access to the Aqsa Mosque on Friday.
A large number of Israeli security forces have been deployed since the early morning hours in the vicinity of the Old City and the Aqsa Mosque.
19 june 2014
A senior Hamas official said Thursday that the group is capable of starting an Intifada, warning of the consequences of continuing pressure on Palestinians.
"We are capable of igniting a third Intifada which is an irrevocable right that will go off when more pressure is exerted on the Palestinian people," Hamas official Salah Bardawil said during a solidarity rally for the director of al-Aqsa TV network, who was detained in Ramallah on Wednesday.
Hamas will not sit on its hands as Israel "continues with its crimes in the West Bank," he added.
Israel's ongoing arrest campaign aims to break the resistance and prevent a new Intifada, he said, adding that "nobody can foil reconciliation because our people insist on unity and on liberating land and prisoners."
Over the past six days, Israeli troops have turned properties upside-down and arrested more than 240 Palestinians in the West Bank in the search for three Israelis who disappeared while hitchhiking on Thursday.
Over 200 of those arrested are affiliated with Hamas.
"We are capable of igniting a third Intifada which is an irrevocable right that will go off when more pressure is exerted on the Palestinian people," Hamas official Salah Bardawil said during a solidarity rally for the director of al-Aqsa TV network, who was detained in Ramallah on Wednesday.
Hamas will not sit on its hands as Israel "continues with its crimes in the West Bank," he added.
Israel's ongoing arrest campaign aims to break the resistance and prevent a new Intifada, he said, adding that "nobody can foil reconciliation because our people insist on unity and on liberating land and prisoners."
Over the past six days, Israeli troops have turned properties upside-down and arrested more than 240 Palestinians in the West Bank in the search for three Israelis who disappeared while hitchhiking on Thursday.
Over 200 of those arrested are affiliated with Hamas.
21 may 2014
By Al-Shabaka
Al-Shabaka is an independent non-profit organization whose mission is to educate and foster public debate on Palestinian human rights and self-determination within the framework of international law.
This policy brief is authored by Jamil Hilal, an independent Palestinian sociologist and writer who has published many books and numerous articles on Palestinian society, the Arab-Israeli conflict, and Middle East issues.
The repeated failure of bilateral negotiations brokered by the United States to halt and reverse Israel's aggressive colonialism regularly fuels speculation about a third intifada (uprising) against the Israeli occupation.
However, a third intifada depends on the interaction of two sets of processes: the collective repressive and dehumanizing conditions of life under occupation, on the one hand, and, on the other, the changes that have taken place within Palestinian society in the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip, as well as the overall Palestinian political movement.
Processes Driving a Third Intifada
Under cover of the Oslo Accords, Israel has engineered a tight apartheid system in the West Bank and Gaza Strip marked by the national subjugation of Palestinians, the denial of their collective rights, their humiliation, and the pauperization of an increasing number.
The mechanisms used to maintain this collective subjugation are well known: control and colonization of land and other natural resources; control of borders, external trade, and the supply of water and electricity; daily violence by Israeli settlers against Palestinian civilians and their property; and disregard of the sanctity of the Muslim and Christian holy places, among others.
In addition, as a settler colonial state, Israel has annexed Jerusalem and its environs and is emptying both Jerusalem and the Oslo-created Area C of its indigenous Palestinians while settling them with Israeli Jews. Twenty years after Oslo, one in every four persons in the West Bank is a settler.
Israel has and continues to deliberately fragment the West Bank and Gaza Strip into "Bantustans" through its system of Israeli-only bypass roads connecting Israeli settlements directly to Israeli cities and towns within the Green Line, the construction of the separation wall, checkpoints and roadblocks, and the remorseless siege on Gaza.
The Israeli occupation has also created and maintained conditions of economic and financial dependency of the West Bank and Gaza Strip on external aid and transfers, and by so doing enforced a rentier economy on the two Palestinian self-governing authorities in the West Bank and Gaza Strip along with high rates of unemployment.
Palestinians are continuously exposed to high risk situations, including restrictions on movement, home demolitions, curfews and closures, detention and imprisonment, assassinations, military incursions, and outright invasions, as happened in the West Bank in 2002 and in the Gaza Strip in 2008-2009 and again in 2012. The 1.8 million Palestinians imprisoned in Gaza also face cuts in electricity supply, scarcity of potable water, and severe restrictions on the supply of fuel, basic construction materials, medicines, and other goods and services needed for basic survival.
These processes have forced Palestinians within and outside historic Palestine to recognize that, for the foreseeable future, no real prospect exists of an independent sovereign state with East Jerusalem as its capital or any form of meaningful self-determination, let alone a significant implementation of the right of return for Palestinian refugees to their original homeland -- a realization reinforced by the ignominious failure in April 2014 of the negotiations brokered by US Secretary of State John Kerry.
It should be noted that the Oslo Accords did not mark a change in Israeli policy towards the Palestinian people in the territories occupied in 1967. Rather, they proved to be a continuation of Israel's colonial policy after its creation in 1948 and the Israeli practices of depopulating the indigenous Palestinian population and settling of Israeli Jews, home demolitions, and other human rights violations on both sides of the Green Line.
The processes described above would seem to create the conditions for a third intifada. However, other powerful inter-related processes in the West Bank and Gaza Strip counteract them: The spread of individualism (or individualization), the decline of political mobilization, and the accentuation of socio-economic inequalities.
Individualism and the Loss of a Political Anchor
Al-Shabaka is an independent non-profit organization whose mission is to educate and foster public debate on Palestinian human rights and self-determination within the framework of international law.
This policy brief is authored by Jamil Hilal, an independent Palestinian sociologist and writer who has published many books and numerous articles on Palestinian society, the Arab-Israeli conflict, and Middle East issues.
The repeated failure of bilateral negotiations brokered by the United States to halt and reverse Israel's aggressive colonialism regularly fuels speculation about a third intifada (uprising) against the Israeli occupation.
However, a third intifada depends on the interaction of two sets of processes: the collective repressive and dehumanizing conditions of life under occupation, on the one hand, and, on the other, the changes that have taken place within Palestinian society in the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip, as well as the overall Palestinian political movement.
Processes Driving a Third Intifada
Under cover of the Oslo Accords, Israel has engineered a tight apartheid system in the West Bank and Gaza Strip marked by the national subjugation of Palestinians, the denial of their collective rights, their humiliation, and the pauperization of an increasing number.
The mechanisms used to maintain this collective subjugation are well known: control and colonization of land and other natural resources; control of borders, external trade, and the supply of water and electricity; daily violence by Israeli settlers against Palestinian civilians and their property; and disregard of the sanctity of the Muslim and Christian holy places, among others.
In addition, as a settler colonial state, Israel has annexed Jerusalem and its environs and is emptying both Jerusalem and the Oslo-created Area C of its indigenous Palestinians while settling them with Israeli Jews. Twenty years after Oslo, one in every four persons in the West Bank is a settler.
Israel has and continues to deliberately fragment the West Bank and Gaza Strip into "Bantustans" through its system of Israeli-only bypass roads connecting Israeli settlements directly to Israeli cities and towns within the Green Line, the construction of the separation wall, checkpoints and roadblocks, and the remorseless siege on Gaza.
The Israeli occupation has also created and maintained conditions of economic and financial dependency of the West Bank and Gaza Strip on external aid and transfers, and by so doing enforced a rentier economy on the two Palestinian self-governing authorities in the West Bank and Gaza Strip along with high rates of unemployment.
Palestinians are continuously exposed to high risk situations, including restrictions on movement, home demolitions, curfews and closures, detention and imprisonment, assassinations, military incursions, and outright invasions, as happened in the West Bank in 2002 and in the Gaza Strip in 2008-2009 and again in 2012. The 1.8 million Palestinians imprisoned in Gaza also face cuts in electricity supply, scarcity of potable water, and severe restrictions on the supply of fuel, basic construction materials, medicines, and other goods and services needed for basic survival.
These processes have forced Palestinians within and outside historic Palestine to recognize that, for the foreseeable future, no real prospect exists of an independent sovereign state with East Jerusalem as its capital or any form of meaningful self-determination, let alone a significant implementation of the right of return for Palestinian refugees to their original homeland -- a realization reinforced by the ignominious failure in April 2014 of the negotiations brokered by US Secretary of State John Kerry.
It should be noted that the Oslo Accords did not mark a change in Israeli policy towards the Palestinian people in the territories occupied in 1967. Rather, they proved to be a continuation of Israel's colonial policy after its creation in 1948 and the Israeli practices of depopulating the indigenous Palestinian population and settling of Israeli Jews, home demolitions, and other human rights violations on both sides of the Green Line.
The processes described above would seem to create the conditions for a third intifada. However, other powerful inter-related processes in the West Bank and Gaza Strip counteract them: The spread of individualism (or individualization), the decline of political mobilization, and the accentuation of socio-economic inequalities.
Individualism and the Loss of a Political Anchor
The spread of individualism means that more and more Palestinians are legitimating, promoting, and protecting their personal interests and concerns above the collective interests and concerns of the community. This is the outcome of a number of factors.
The first is the adoption of a neoliberal economic regime by the Palestinian Authority, which comes as no surprise because the PA was established at the height of global neoliberal era and was promoted by the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund. The neoliberal approach won the support of the PA's major donors as well as many Palestinian NGOs that depend on foreign aid.
Under the neoliberal regime, the private sector was granted the determining role in shaping the Palestinian economy and the PA's dependency on external aid and on Israeli tax transfers was cemented. This dependency has made the PA vulnerable to political pressure and made the employees of its large public sector wary of any change that could jeopardize their sources of livelihood.
Individualism has also been the outcome of the enlarged role of NGOs in the West Bank and Gaza Strip in the wake of the establishment of the PA in 1994. Many NGOs, particularly the larger NGOs, are dependent for their functioning on donor money despite its clear neoliberal political bias and donor priorities to maintain the Oslo-generated "peace process" at any cost. The significant expansion of the number and types of NGOs has meant, in most cases, the substitution of representative and voluntary associations by professionalized associations with no mandate to represent the interests of any specific constituency.
A third factor related to the process of individualization has been the decline in the influence and credibility of political organizations and the buildup of the PA bureaucracy and formal institutions under the illusion that this would soon lead to an independent Palestinian state. The largely egalitarian political culture "of brothers and comrades" and the relatively easy access to leaders by the rank and file that existed before the Oslo Accords has been replaced by pseudo-state institutions with their rigid hierarchical structures and discourse.
There are now ministers, director generals, and other civilian and military ranks, each with its own special privileges and job description. This has significantly diminished the capacity of political organizations -- including the largest two Palestinian movements, Fatah and Hamas -- for popular mobilization on national issues. Most of the cadres of Fatah and Hamas have been absorbed into the formal bureaucratic institutions established by both movements in the West Bank and Gaza.
The marginalization of Palestinian national institutions is most clearly seen in the outright sidelining of the Palestine Liberation Organization institutions that had previously represented the Palestinian communities inside and outside of historic Palestine. The loss of PLO institutions included most, if not all, popular organizations and trade unions that have now been estranged from much of their rank and file constituencies in the West Bank and Gaza Strip and among other Palestinian communities.
Not only have Palestinians lost the PLO as their all-embracing, representative national institution, they have ended up with a divided PA with two self-governing authorities under settler-colonial occupation and a suffocating siege. In effect, the Palestinians have played into and suffered from the Israeli strategy of fragmentation of the Palestinian people, geographically and institutionally.
The net result is the loss of a political anchor and a mobilized population that could lead a new intifada against the settler-colonial state.
The political organizations, trade unions, and mass organizations were essential to the outbreak of the First Intifada, and the ability of the population to sustain it and their loss undermines the potential for a third intifada.
The New Middle Class and the Workers: No Intifada in Sight
The first is the adoption of a neoliberal economic regime by the Palestinian Authority, which comes as no surprise because the PA was established at the height of global neoliberal era and was promoted by the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund. The neoliberal approach won the support of the PA's major donors as well as many Palestinian NGOs that depend on foreign aid.
Under the neoliberal regime, the private sector was granted the determining role in shaping the Palestinian economy and the PA's dependency on external aid and on Israeli tax transfers was cemented. This dependency has made the PA vulnerable to political pressure and made the employees of its large public sector wary of any change that could jeopardize their sources of livelihood.
Individualism has also been the outcome of the enlarged role of NGOs in the West Bank and Gaza Strip in the wake of the establishment of the PA in 1994. Many NGOs, particularly the larger NGOs, are dependent for their functioning on donor money despite its clear neoliberal political bias and donor priorities to maintain the Oslo-generated "peace process" at any cost. The significant expansion of the number and types of NGOs has meant, in most cases, the substitution of representative and voluntary associations by professionalized associations with no mandate to represent the interests of any specific constituency.
A third factor related to the process of individualization has been the decline in the influence and credibility of political organizations and the buildup of the PA bureaucracy and formal institutions under the illusion that this would soon lead to an independent Palestinian state. The largely egalitarian political culture "of brothers and comrades" and the relatively easy access to leaders by the rank and file that existed before the Oslo Accords has been replaced by pseudo-state institutions with their rigid hierarchical structures and discourse.
There are now ministers, director generals, and other civilian and military ranks, each with its own special privileges and job description. This has significantly diminished the capacity of political organizations -- including the largest two Palestinian movements, Fatah and Hamas -- for popular mobilization on national issues. Most of the cadres of Fatah and Hamas have been absorbed into the formal bureaucratic institutions established by both movements in the West Bank and Gaza.
The marginalization of Palestinian national institutions is most clearly seen in the outright sidelining of the Palestine Liberation Organization institutions that had previously represented the Palestinian communities inside and outside of historic Palestine. The loss of PLO institutions included most, if not all, popular organizations and trade unions that have now been estranged from much of their rank and file constituencies in the West Bank and Gaza Strip and among other Palestinian communities.
Not only have Palestinians lost the PLO as their all-embracing, representative national institution, they have ended up with a divided PA with two self-governing authorities under settler-colonial occupation and a suffocating siege. In effect, the Palestinians have played into and suffered from the Israeli strategy of fragmentation of the Palestinian people, geographically and institutionally.
The net result is the loss of a political anchor and a mobilized population that could lead a new intifada against the settler-colonial state.
The political organizations, trade unions, and mass organizations were essential to the outbreak of the First Intifada, and the ability of the population to sustain it and their loss undermines the potential for a third intifada.
The New Middle Class and the Workers: No Intifada in Sight
The establishment of the PA led to significant class transformations in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. Structural inequalities sharpened between regions, cities, villages, camps, and individual families.
A sizable middle class emerged [PDF] that largely depends on employment in the PA's various ministries and security apparatuses, donor agencies, NGOs, and the increasingly influential profit-oriented private sector, including in new economic sectors, such as communications, electronics, insurance, banking and finance, advertisement, and marketing. This coincided with a huge expansion in the field of education at all levels and in health care, in addition to a noticeable increase in the number of professionals, such as lawyers, engineers, and architects, among others.
This new middle class has an obvious interest in not rocking the boat. An increasing proportion of the new middle class is now entangled in bank loans taken out for new homes, cars, furniture, and the like. Any stoppage in salaries from the PA or other employers will leave this large segment of the population highly exposed as has happened on more than one occasion since the Second Intifada.
Much of the Palestinian middle class in the West Bank and Gaza Strip will be reluctant to engage in an uprising so long as it fears that it has its livelihood to lose.
This does not of course mean that lower income workers in the West Bank and Gaza Strip are in a position to launch an intifada as the Tunisian workers had done through their powerful trade union movement in 2011. True, like Tunisians before the uprising, they have less job security, lower wages, few of the social entitlements of the new middle class, and higher unemployment rates than any other group other than university graduates.
But more crucially, Palestinian workers are scattered amongst tens of thousands of small and very small enterprises, and the majority of them are not unionized; in fact, the middle class (e.g. teachers, lawyers, engineers, public employees, UNRWA employees) is more unionized than the working class. Moreover, about 10 percent of the labor force in the West Bank continues to be employed in Israel and its settlements as manual labor, according to Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics.
It is worth noting that class and status distinctions based on wealth and position have never been as glaring as they have come to be in recent years, nor has the conspicuous consumption of expensive cars, villas, shops, restaurants, and five star hotels. In the First Intifada, the glaring distinctions were largely between the occupier and the occupied. Now, they are very noticeable between different segments of the occupied and besieged population.
Some analysts believe that the collapse of the PA, whether as a result of a Palestinian decision to dissolve it or under the impact of Israeli and US pressures, will lead to a new intifada. Other analysts [PDF] have assessed the repercussions of a PA collapse and provided recommendations to deal with different scenarios. It remains an open question as to whether a PA collapse would eventually lead to another intifada or rather to deliberate actions to challenge and reverse the limitations on collective action.
An intifada against the PA itself in its West Bank and Gaza Strip configurations is unlikely, partly because the national question continues to predominate over dealing with local matters. Polls suggest the existence of public support for a continuation of the PA despite the mixed feelings of those polled. A majority of Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip believe that Palestinian institutions are corrupt: 77 percent for institutions in the West Bank and 68 percent for institutions in the Gaza Strip. However, most do not want to see the PA's dissolution.
What we are more likely to see is a continuation of demonstrations and other attempts to exert pressure on the two self-governing authorities, such as protests against high prices, unemployment, and delays in salary payments. These are not likely to accelerate into a new intifada against the two Palestinian authorities.
For one thing, such action will be seen as playing into the hands of Israel, and for another, both authorities are well equipped (security-wise) to repress such attempts. It is worth noting that the two rival authorities have encouraged protests in each others' territory despite many agreements to end their division. As for the outcome of the 2014 April agreement to end the division, that is still anybody’s guess.
How Bleak Is the Future?
A sizable middle class emerged [PDF] that largely depends on employment in the PA's various ministries and security apparatuses, donor agencies, NGOs, and the increasingly influential profit-oriented private sector, including in new economic sectors, such as communications, electronics, insurance, banking and finance, advertisement, and marketing. This coincided with a huge expansion in the field of education at all levels and in health care, in addition to a noticeable increase in the number of professionals, such as lawyers, engineers, and architects, among others.
This new middle class has an obvious interest in not rocking the boat. An increasing proportion of the new middle class is now entangled in bank loans taken out for new homes, cars, furniture, and the like. Any stoppage in salaries from the PA or other employers will leave this large segment of the population highly exposed as has happened on more than one occasion since the Second Intifada.
Much of the Palestinian middle class in the West Bank and Gaza Strip will be reluctant to engage in an uprising so long as it fears that it has its livelihood to lose.
This does not of course mean that lower income workers in the West Bank and Gaza Strip are in a position to launch an intifada as the Tunisian workers had done through their powerful trade union movement in 2011. True, like Tunisians before the uprising, they have less job security, lower wages, few of the social entitlements of the new middle class, and higher unemployment rates than any other group other than university graduates.
But more crucially, Palestinian workers are scattered amongst tens of thousands of small and very small enterprises, and the majority of them are not unionized; in fact, the middle class (e.g. teachers, lawyers, engineers, public employees, UNRWA employees) is more unionized than the working class. Moreover, about 10 percent of the labor force in the West Bank continues to be employed in Israel and its settlements as manual labor, according to Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics.
It is worth noting that class and status distinctions based on wealth and position have never been as glaring as they have come to be in recent years, nor has the conspicuous consumption of expensive cars, villas, shops, restaurants, and five star hotels. In the First Intifada, the glaring distinctions were largely between the occupier and the occupied. Now, they are very noticeable between different segments of the occupied and besieged population.
Some analysts believe that the collapse of the PA, whether as a result of a Palestinian decision to dissolve it or under the impact of Israeli and US pressures, will lead to a new intifada. Other analysts [PDF] have assessed the repercussions of a PA collapse and provided recommendations to deal with different scenarios. It remains an open question as to whether a PA collapse would eventually lead to another intifada or rather to deliberate actions to challenge and reverse the limitations on collective action.
An intifada against the PA itself in its West Bank and Gaza Strip configurations is unlikely, partly because the national question continues to predominate over dealing with local matters. Polls suggest the existence of public support for a continuation of the PA despite the mixed feelings of those polled. A majority of Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip believe that Palestinian institutions are corrupt: 77 percent for institutions in the West Bank and 68 percent for institutions in the Gaza Strip. However, most do not want to see the PA's dissolution.
What we are more likely to see is a continuation of demonstrations and other attempts to exert pressure on the two self-governing authorities, such as protests against high prices, unemployment, and delays in salary payments. These are not likely to accelerate into a new intifada against the two Palestinian authorities.
For one thing, such action will be seen as playing into the hands of Israel, and for another, both authorities are well equipped (security-wise) to repress such attempts. It is worth noting that the two rival authorities have encouraged protests in each others' territory despite many agreements to end their division. As for the outcome of the 2014 April agreement to end the division, that is still anybody’s guess.
How Bleak Is the Future?
For the near future, Palestinians under occupation will continue to be buffeted by the need for collective action for freedom, self-determination, and sovereignty and the counter-forces created by the neoliberal economy, aid dependency, and social and political atomization.
This reality is supported by the divergent views expressed [PDF] by political elites as well as the general public. For example, a public opinion poll in November 2013 showed that 60 percent of those surveyed in the West Bank and Gaza Strip expected a third intifada in the near future, but only 29 percent said that they would support it.
As for an uprising against the PA, a September 2013 poll of Palestinian youth -- the sector expected to be most in favor of an uprising -- revealed that only 30 percent of Gaza youth said they supported the outbreak of such an uprising in the Gaza Strip, while 63 percent said that they opposed it. In the West Bank, only 21 percent of youth supported an uprising against the PA there while 72 percent opposed it.
Israel's repression, discrimination, and humiliation of Palestinians, and its pillage and denial of their historic, national, and civic rights have never been as great as they are today. Meanwhile, negotiations have reached a dead end and military resistance has shown its limits.
Nevertheless, it is clear from the above analysis that the geographic and political fragmentation of the Palestinian people, the growth of individualism, the heightened inequalities in the West Bank and Gaza Strip promoted by the neoliberal economy, and the dependence on external aid and transfers greatly constrain the emergence of the collective action that is necessary to help end the Israeli occupation.
We are more likely to see a continuation of the protest and resistance pattern witnessed in the last two or three years: Localized confrontations with the colonial power and its settlers in the West Bank and intermittent military confrontations in the Gaza Strip, along with outbreaks of outrage against the overall situation in both territories. The situation will remain highly volatile and explosive but lacking the organizing agency necessary for a mass uprising.
A change in the present dynamic can only come through the possession of organizational instruments for collective action against the settler-colonial power by Palestinians living under occupation as well as the Palestinian citizens of Israel and Palestinian refugees and exiles.
This requires a democratic and representative process aimed at rebuilding [PDF] Palestinian national institutions, particularly those of the PLO and its popular and professional organizations. It also requires the development of a clear national strategy that engages all parts of the Palestinian people and transcends the logjam created by the narrow-minded focus on negotiations and/or military confrontation as the only avenues available to further Palestinian rights.
Indeed, Palestinians must understand resistance to mean a holistic strategy that goes beyond military resistance and covers all forms of engagement, including legal, diplomatic, political, cultural, and economic avenues, as well as measures to boycott, divest from and sanction Israel as advocated by the BDS movement. As for the private sector, it needs be oriented so that it promotes an economy capable of functioning under and resisting the Israeli occupation while meeting the needs of the West Bank and Gaza Strip Palestinians in their struggle for survival.
There is also an obvious and urgent need for a strategy to dismantle, without hesitation, the colonial power structures created by Oslo and to radically redefine the functions of the PA -- if a national decision is taken to keep it in one form or another -- and, in particular, the role and functions of its security forces, in line with a comprehensive national strategy guided by a reformed and restructured PLO. Moreover, Palestinian political parties need to regain their representativeness and ability to mobilize the capabilities of the Palestinian people.
If there is to be a new intifada, its objectives, strategies, forms, and locations must be the subject of national deliberation and support for it to achieve its aims.
Originally published on Al-Shabaka's website on May 20, 2014.
This reality is supported by the divergent views expressed [PDF] by political elites as well as the general public. For example, a public opinion poll in November 2013 showed that 60 percent of those surveyed in the West Bank and Gaza Strip expected a third intifada in the near future, but only 29 percent said that they would support it.
As for an uprising against the PA, a September 2013 poll of Palestinian youth -- the sector expected to be most in favor of an uprising -- revealed that only 30 percent of Gaza youth said they supported the outbreak of such an uprising in the Gaza Strip, while 63 percent said that they opposed it. In the West Bank, only 21 percent of youth supported an uprising against the PA there while 72 percent opposed it.
Israel's repression, discrimination, and humiliation of Palestinians, and its pillage and denial of their historic, national, and civic rights have never been as great as they are today. Meanwhile, negotiations have reached a dead end and military resistance has shown its limits.
Nevertheless, it is clear from the above analysis that the geographic and political fragmentation of the Palestinian people, the growth of individualism, the heightened inequalities in the West Bank and Gaza Strip promoted by the neoliberal economy, and the dependence on external aid and transfers greatly constrain the emergence of the collective action that is necessary to help end the Israeli occupation.
We are more likely to see a continuation of the protest and resistance pattern witnessed in the last two or three years: Localized confrontations with the colonial power and its settlers in the West Bank and intermittent military confrontations in the Gaza Strip, along with outbreaks of outrage against the overall situation in both territories. The situation will remain highly volatile and explosive but lacking the organizing agency necessary for a mass uprising.
A change in the present dynamic can only come through the possession of organizational instruments for collective action against the settler-colonial power by Palestinians living under occupation as well as the Palestinian citizens of Israel and Palestinian refugees and exiles.
This requires a democratic and representative process aimed at rebuilding [PDF] Palestinian national institutions, particularly those of the PLO and its popular and professional organizations. It also requires the development of a clear national strategy that engages all parts of the Palestinian people and transcends the logjam created by the narrow-minded focus on negotiations and/or military confrontation as the only avenues available to further Palestinian rights.
Indeed, Palestinians must understand resistance to mean a holistic strategy that goes beyond military resistance and covers all forms of engagement, including legal, diplomatic, political, cultural, and economic avenues, as well as measures to boycott, divest from and sanction Israel as advocated by the BDS movement. As for the private sector, it needs be oriented so that it promotes an economy capable of functioning under and resisting the Israeli occupation while meeting the needs of the West Bank and Gaza Strip Palestinians in their struggle for survival.
There is also an obvious and urgent need for a strategy to dismantle, without hesitation, the colonial power structures created by Oslo and to radically redefine the functions of the PA -- if a national decision is taken to keep it in one form or another -- and, in particular, the role and functions of its security forces, in line with a comprehensive national strategy guided by a reformed and restructured PLO. Moreover, Palestinian political parties need to regain their representativeness and ability to mobilize the capabilities of the Palestinian people.
If there is to be a new intifada, its objectives, strategies, forms, and locations must be the subject of national deliberation and support for it to achieve its aims.
Originally published on Al-Shabaka's website on May 20, 2014.
24 apr 2014
Israeli military analyst Amos Harel warned of an imminent crisis triggered by the violent confrontations that have recently recurred in the Aqsa Mosque between Israeli police forces and Palestinian worshipers. In Harel’s view such clashes are very likely to “hit the ceiling” and trigger a third intifada in the event the current political stalemate persisted.
Harel spoke against any potential Israeli step to swap control over the Aqsa Mosque from its approved trusteeship. “Any unilateral action is very likely to anger half a billion Muslims. It is a harbinger of acute tensions with Islamic countries and the West as well.”
For his part, Nir Hasson, Israeli news reporter in the Occupied Palestinian territories, indicated that such clashes are omens of a forthcoming crisis-outbreak.
Israeli police sent a large number of troops to uphold security and restore calm out of fear of an approaching Palestinian Intifada, Hasson said.
Harel spoke against any potential Israeli step to swap control over the Aqsa Mosque from its approved trusteeship. “Any unilateral action is very likely to anger half a billion Muslims. It is a harbinger of acute tensions with Islamic countries and the West as well.”
For his part, Nir Hasson, Israeli news reporter in the Occupied Palestinian territories, indicated that such clashes are omens of a forthcoming crisis-outbreak.
Israeli police sent a large number of troops to uphold security and restore calm out of fear of an approaching Palestinian Intifada, Hasson said.
5 feb 2014
Thomas Friedman a columnist for ‘The New York Times'
Thomas Friedman, New York Times columnist predicted on Wednesday that Israel is facing third Intifada. "Being here( he means Ramallah), it’s obvious that a Third Intifada is underway. It’s the one that Israel always feared most — not an intifada with stones or suicide bombers, but one propelled by nonviolent resistance and economic boycott,” he said.
Friedman explained that the Intifada will be led "by the European Union in Brussels and other opponents of the Israeli occupation of the West Bank across the globe. Regardless of origin, though, it’s becoming a real source of leverage for the Palestinians in their negotiations with Israel."
He mentioned two examples of the economic boycott represented in the withdrawal of the Netherlands' largest pension fund management company, PGGM, of all its investments from Israel’s five largest banks because they have branches in the West Bank and/or are involved in financing construction in the settlements.
In addition to Denmark's largest bank which decided to blacklist Bank Hapoalim because of its involvement in the funding of settlement construction.
Friedman remarks that current calls by Israel for measures of security may be falling on deaf ears as this intifada employs a "strategy of making Israelis feel strategically secure but morally insecure."
He stated that If Israel really wanted to slow down the boycott campaign, it would declare that as long as Kerry is trying to forge a deal, and there is hope for success, Israel will freeze all settlement activity to give peace its best chance.
Thomas Friedman, New York Times columnist predicted on Wednesday that Israel is facing third Intifada. "Being here( he means Ramallah), it’s obvious that a Third Intifada is underway. It’s the one that Israel always feared most — not an intifada with stones or suicide bombers, but one propelled by nonviolent resistance and economic boycott,” he said.
Friedman explained that the Intifada will be led "by the European Union in Brussels and other opponents of the Israeli occupation of the West Bank across the globe. Regardless of origin, though, it’s becoming a real source of leverage for the Palestinians in their negotiations with Israel."
He mentioned two examples of the economic boycott represented in the withdrawal of the Netherlands' largest pension fund management company, PGGM, of all its investments from Israel’s five largest banks because they have branches in the West Bank and/or are involved in financing construction in the settlements.
In addition to Denmark's largest bank which decided to blacklist Bank Hapoalim because of its involvement in the funding of settlement construction.
Friedman remarks that current calls by Israel for measures of security may be falling on deaf ears as this intifada employs a "strategy of making Israelis feel strategically secure but morally insecure."
He stated that If Israel really wanted to slow down the boycott campaign, it would declare that as long as Kerry is trying to forge a deal, and there is hope for success, Israel will freeze all settlement activity to give peace its best chance.
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