MIFTAH
Sunday, 30 June. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

On January 19, Arab states submitted a draft resolution to the UN Security Council that condemns Israeli settlements in the West Bank and Jerusalem even though a vote on the resolution is not expected before next month. Over 100 nations co-sponsored the draft resolution, mostly Arab and non-aligned countries.

The Palestinians, who propelled the Arabs to submit the proposal, are waiting on the Obama Administration to see if it will veto the resolution or not. So far, the United States has been very clear in its opposition to taking the issue of settlements to the UN. On January 20, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton reiterated her government's position by saying the Palestinian-Israeli conflict should be resolved through direct negotiations and not through draft resolutions at the UN.

"We don't see action in the United Nations or any other forum as being helpful in bringing about that desired outcome," she said even while acknowledging that the United States considers settlements to be illegal.

PLO Executive Committee member Hanan Ashrawi, anticipating resistance from the US, put the issue in perspective. “You cannot take international law out of the negotiations. Nor can you set one up in opposition to the other," Ashrawi said on January 20. "Negotiations are not a substitute for international law and the rights of Palestinians. Yet this is the message the US administration seems to be sending in its opposition to a Security Council Resolution reaffirming the illegality of Israeli settlements.”

For his part, UN Secretary General Ban ki-Moon was very vocal in his condemnation. On January 21 he criticized Israel for refusing to halt settlements in the West Bank, saying this "seriously hampered peace talks with the Palestinians."

"Settlements in the occupied Palestinian territory are illegal under international law, contravene the Road Map obligations of Israel, undermine confidence, prejudge the outcome of the permanent status negotiations and hamper efforts at bringing the parties back to the negotiating table," Ban told a UN committee on Palestinian issues, adding that he was "very concerned at the lack of progress towards peace."

France, meanwhile, said on January 20 that it would vote for a Security Council resolution on Israeli settlements if "it is moderate and does not halt a resumption of peace talks," according to its foreign minister Michele Alliot-Marie. The minister made her statement during a four day trip to the region where she met with both Israeli and Palestinian leaders in addition to visiting Egypt and Jordan.

Unfortunately, the newly-appointed French foreign minister ran into a bit of bad luck in the Gaza Strip on January 21 when she was misquoted and subsequently misunderstood by Hamas leaders and families of Gazan prisoners. Apparently, Israel's army radio misquoted Alliot-Marie, saying she had said during a meeting with Gilad Shalit's father that the EU should "condemn the war crime Hamas is committing by keeping Gilad Shalit in captivity." In actuality, the request was made by the Israeli soldier's father to the foreign minister, asking her to demand that the EU condemn his son's captivity as a war crime.

At the Erez crossing families of prisoners and citizens threw eggs and shoes at Alliot-Marie's car and told her to "get out of Gaza". Alliot-Marie not only dismissed the discourteous welcome as "not very serious" she later called on Israel to end the siege of Gaza. "The blockade of Gaza breeds poverty and fuels violence. In the spirit of the values of freedom and dignity that we share, France calls on Israel to stop it," Ms Alliot-Marie said.

On January 18 during a visit to Jericho, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev reiterated Moscow's position in recognizing an independent Palestinian state. In 1988 when late president Yasser Arafat first declared a state in the West Bank, Gaza and Jerusalem, the then-USSR was the first to recognize it. "We supported and continued to support the Palestinians' right to statehood," he said.

Palestinians were further encouraged by the sight of the Palestinian flag flying for the first time over the PLO mission in Washington DC. While the flag did not change the PLO status in the US, according to head of the PLO mission Maen Erekat, "It's about time that this flag that symbolizes the struggle of the Palestinian people for self-determination and statehood is raised in the United States."

Meanwhile, settlements continue to expand, especially in and around Jerusalem. On January 17, the West Jerusalem municipality ratified the construction of 122 new Jewish homes in the Talpiot and Pisgat Zeev regions of east Jerusalem. A day earlier, new plans by private contractors were announced for the settlement of Gilo where an additional 1,400 homes will be added over the next few years.

On January 17, the Israeli army announced it would complete the construction of the separation wall around Jerusalem within the coming year. Final work is being completed around Qalandiya, Shufat and the settlement of Gilo. According to former PLC head of the Jerusalem file, Hatem Abdel Qader, over 100,000 Palestinian Jerusalemites will be excluded from the city once the wall is finished.

European heads of mission and the UN Office for Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, OCHA both voiced concerns over the increasing oppression of Palestinian residents of Jerusalem. The EU and European representatives have reiterated their position that east Jerusalem is occupied territory and that home demolitions and evictions are a "growing humanitarian concern for Palestinians," noting that Israeli authorities demolished 15 Palestinian structures in the city on December 29 alone.

On January 20, 28-year old Jalal Al Masri was shot in the head at a flying Israeli checkpoint north of Hebron. Israeli military sources say Al Masri did not stop. Al Masri died of his wounds.

On the same day, Salem Al Samoudi from Yamoun near Jenin was shot and killed during a reported exchange of fire with Israeli forces at a checkpoint. On January 18, Amjad Sami Az-Za’aneen, 20, was killed by an Israeli shell near Beit Hanoun while two others were injured. That same day, 23-year old Zaher Ahmad Jarghoun from Hamas' Izzedin Qassam Brigade was killed by Israeli forces in Khan Younis.

 
 
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