About us | Advertising | Contact | Get Home Delivery | Archive
Mar 22, 2010 Homepage
News
World
Business
Interviews
Columnists
Op-Ed
Arts & Culture
Expat Zone
Features
Travel
Leisure
Life
Cartoons
Women
Health Briefs
Weird But True
Sports
Turkish Press Review
Today's think tanks
Turkey in Foreign Press


News World

Palestine: A turning point?

One day before the first anniversary of the barbaric Israeli assault on Gaza that massacred 1,434 Palestinians, the Israeli armed forces killed six Palestinians in two separate incidents in Gaza and the West Bank.

Today's interactive toolbox
Bookmark and Share
Video Photo Audio
Send to print Send to my friend
Post your comments
Read comments
The 1.5 million people of Gaza continue to be under one of the most inhuman, unjust sieges in recent times -- a siege that began 18 months before the assault on Gaza on Dec. 27, 2008. From all accounts, every day is a struggle to survive; the most basic necessities of life are not readily available to the vast majority of the populace.

This Israeli-imposed blockade will now be tightened through the construction of a bombproof steel wall by the Egyptian authorities along the Gaza border. The wall, demanded by Israel, is being built with the assistance of US money and the US Army Corps of Engineers.

The situation in the West Bank is also grim. The multitude of checkpoints remains. For all intents and purposes, Israeli settlements are expanding and the wall that attempts to separate Israeli settlements and the West Bank aquifers from the Palestinians is as formidable as ever. To make matters worse, Fatah, in charge of the West Bank, and Hamas, dominant over Gaza, are still at loggerheads.

If there is a silver lining, it comes in the form of the systematic exposé of Israeli inhumanity and the injustices perpetrated against the Palestinians contained in two highly regarded reports presented to the UN in the course of the last nine months. In March 2009, Richard Falk, the UN’s special rapporteur for the Occupied Palestinian Territories, described Israel’s Gaza assault as “a war crime of the greatest magnitude under international law,” in a report to the UN Human Rights Council. Richard Goldstone, who headed a UN fact-finding mission to Gaza, criticized Israel’s collective punishment of the people of Gaza during the 22-day assault in his September report.

Though the UN General Assembly endorsed the Goldstone Report, there has been no action against Israel at the international level. The reason is obvious. The United States government and its European allies are determined to ensure that the Israeli government will never be in the dock. Other powers with some clout, obsessed as they are with their own interests, are not prepared to stick their neck out for the Palestinian cause. Most Arab and Muslim governments -- rhetoric and UN votes aside -- are afraid to antagonize the US partly because they are so dependent upon the latter for their political survival or their economic well-being. This is why at the end of the day we have to rely upon elements within global citizenry to carry the Palestinian cause forward. After Gaza, groups such as the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), Oxfam and Amnesty International have become much more vocal in their condemnation of Israel’s ruthless behavior in occupied Palestine. Individual journalists have also adopted a principled position in articulating the rights of the Palestinians. Malaysia’s Shahanaaz Habib is one such journalist.

In Britain, the Sussex University Students’ Union has voted to boycott Israeli goods. This is part of the international Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions campaign directed at forcing Israel to end the occupation of Palestine. It is the first time that a student body in Britain has made such a move. Even in Israel, groups like Physicians for Human Rights and Breaking the Silence, comprised of veteran Israeli soldiers, have accused their government of violating international law and transgressing the Geneva Conventions in the Gaza assault. However, the most significant citizens’ initiatives since Gaza have come from the Gaza Freedom March (GFM) and the Viva Palestina convoy to Gaza. The first, comprised of 1,400 individuals from more than 40 countries, plans to march to the Erez border-crossing between Israel and Gaza to demand an end to the siege. The second, made up of 220 vehicles, hopes to deliver ambulances, food, medicines and other supplies to the people of Gaza. Two brave young Malaysians, Juana Jaafar and Ram Kathigesu, are part of the convoy. In both instances, the Egyptian government is proving to be a hurdle.

Whether the two initiatives succeed or not, they may emerge as a critical turning point in the Palestinian struggle for liberation. They may set into motion an array of other moves aimed at mobilizing and galvanizing the people of the world behind one of the noblest causes of our time.

*Dr. Chandra Muzaffar is the president of the International Movement for a Just World (JUST), Malaysia.

30 December 2009, Wednesday

DR. CHANDRA MUZAFFAR  TODAY’S ZAMAN
Comments on this article

Akram Khan , Dec 30 2009 22:39, Wednesday
Yes,"They know how to kill".Atleast there is a real muslim country who speak for Plastine.But western countries want to ...
M.M , Dec 30 2009 19:02, Wednesday
The writer is correct in that governments are either hostile to the Palestinian issue or others look after their own wel...
Muse , Dec 30 2009 08:18, Wednesday
Egyptian government should focus on reality and humanity not only on money and greed.

Click to read the details of comments

   

The most read articles of this category

Approval of Turkey-Armenia protocols given slim chance
Democratic initiative yields peaceful Nevruz this year
Chief of General Staff Gen. Başbuğ passes judgment: Gen. Berk is innocent
Long-awaited reform package to be unveiled today
Volcano erupts in Iceland, hundreds flee
US State Department official angers diaspora
Indictment: Cage plan against non-Muslims already in operation
Turkish cinema world backs reform drive
Turkey says Israeli planes allowed to overfly ‘on condition’
Balances change with constitutional reform package


The most read articles

Approval of Turkey-Armenia protocols given slim chance
Democratic initiative yields peaceful Nevruz this year
Chief of General Staff Gen. Başbuğ passes judgment: Gen. Berk is innocent
Long-awaited reform package to be unveiled today
Volcano erupts in Iceland, hundreds flee
US State Department official angers diaspora
Indictment: Cage plan against non-Muslims already in operation
Turkish cinema world backs reform drive
Turkey says Israeli planes allowed to overfly ‘on condition’
Balances change with constitutional reform package