EID: Declaration of a Bantustan in Palestine 14Oct11 October 13, 2011
by Haidar Eid - Aljazeera - 13 October 2011
The âinduced euphoriaâ that characterises discussions within the mainstream media around the upcoming declaration of an independent Palestinian state in September ignores the stark realities on the ground and the warnings of critical commentators. Depicting such a declaration as a âbreakthroughâ, and a âchallengeâ to the defunct âpeace processâ and the right-wing government of Israel, serves to obscure Israelâs continued denial of Palestinian rights while reinforcing the international communityâs implicit endorsement of an apartheid state in the Middle East.
The drive for recognition is led by Salam Fayyad, the appointed Prime Minister of the Ramallah-based Palestinian Authority (PA). It is based on the decision made during the 1970s by the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) to adopt the more flexible program of a âtwo-state solutionâ. This program maintains that the Palestinian question, the essence of the Arab-Israeli conflict, can be resolved with the establishment of an âindependent stateâ in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, with East Jerusalem as its capital. In this program Palestinian refugees would return to the state of âPalestineâ but not to their homes in Israel, which defines itself as âthe state of Jewsâ. Yet âindependenceâ does not deal with this issue, nor does it heed calls made by the 1.2 million Palestinian citizens of Israel to transform the struggle into an anti-apartheid movement, since they are treated as third-class citizens.
All this is supposed to be implemented after the withdrawal of Israeli forces from the West Bank and Gaza. Or will it merely be a redeployment of forces as witnessed during the Oslo period? Yet proponents of this strategy claim that independence guarantees that Israel will deal with the Palestinians of Gaza and the West Bank as one people, and that the Palestinian question can be resolved according to international law, thus satisfying the minimum political and national rights of the Palestinian people.
Forget about the fact that Israel has as many as 573 permanent barriers and checkpoints around the occupied West Bank, as well as an additional 69 “flying” checkpoints; and you might also want to ignore the fact that the existing âJewish-onlyâ colonies have annexed more than 54 per cent of the West Bank.
At the 1991 Madrid Conference, then Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamirâs “hawkish” government did not even accept the Palestinian “right” to administrative autonomy. However, with the coming of the “dovish” Meretz/Labor government, led by Yitzhak Rabin and Shimon Peres, the PLO leadership escaped into behind-curtains negotiations in Norway. By signing the Oslo Accords, Israel was released of the heavy burden of administering Gaza and the seven crowded cities of the West Bank. The first intifada was ended by an official – and secret – PLO decision without achieving its interim national goals, namely âfreedom and independenceâ, and without the consent of the people the organisation purported to represent.
This same idea of âindependenceâ was once rejected by the PLO, because it did not address the âminimum legitimate rightsâ of Palestinians and because it is the antithesis of the Palestinian struggle for liberation. What is proposed in place of these rights is a state in name only. In other words, the Palestinians must accept full autonomy on a fraction of their land, and never think of sovereignty or control of borders, water reserves, and most importantly, the return of the refugees. That was the Oslo agreement and it is also the intended âDeclaration of Independenceâ. No wonder, then, that Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu makes it clear that he âmight agree to a Palestinian state through negotiationsâ.
Nor does this declaration promise to be in accordance with the 1947 UN partition plan, which granted the Palestinians only 47 per cent of historic Palestine even though they comprised over two-thirds of the population. Once declared, the future âindependentâ Palestinian state will occupy less than 20 per cent of historic Palestine. By creating a Bantustan and calling it a âviable stateâ, Israel will get rid of the burden of 3.5 million Palestinians. The PA will rule over the maximum number of Palestinians on the minimum number of fragments of land – fragments that we can call âThe State of Palestineâ. This âstateâ will be recognised by tens of countries – South Africaâs infamous Bantustan tribal chiefs must be very envious!
One can only assume that the much talked-about and celebrated âindependenceâ will simply reinforce the same role that the PA played under Oslo. Namely providing policing and security measures designed to disarm the Palestinian resistance groups. These were the first demands made of the Palestinians at Oslo in 1993, Camp David in 2000, Annapolis in 2007 and Washington last year. Meanwhile, within this framework of negotiations and demands, no commitments or obligations are imposed on Israel.
Just as the Oslo Accords signified the end of popular non-violent resistance of the first intifada, this declaration of independence has a similar goal, namely ending the growing international support for the Palestinian cause since Israelâs 2008-2009 winter onslaught on Gaza and its attack on the Freedom Flotilla last May.Yet it falls short of providing Palestinians with the minimal protection and security from any future Israeli attacks and atrocities. The invasion and siege of Gaza was a product of Oslo. Before the Oslo Accords were signed Israel never used its full arsenal of F-16s, phosphorous bombs, and DIME weapons to attack refugee camps in the Gaza and the West Bank. Over 1,200 Palestinians were killed from 1987-1993 during the first intifada. Israel eclipsed that number during its three-week invasion in 2009; it managed to brutally kill more than 1,443 in Gaza alone. This does not include the victims of Israelâs siege in place since 2006, which has been marked by closures and repeated Israeli attacks before the invasion of Gaza and since.
Ultimately, what this intended âdeclaration of independenceâ offers the Palestinian people is a mirage, an âindependent homelandâ that is a Bantustan-in-disguise. Although it is recognised by so many friendly countries, it stops short of providing Palestinians freedom and liberation. Critical debate – as opposed to one that is biased and demagogic – requires scrutiny of the distortions of history through ideological misrepresentations. What needs to be addressed is an historical human vision of the Palestinian and Jewish questions, a vision that never denies the rights of a people, that guarantees complete equality, and abolishes apartheid – instead of recognising a new Bantustan 17 years after the fall of apartheid in South Africa.
Haidar Eid is an associate professor at Al-Aqsa University in Gaza.
Thank You.