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A New Palestinian Intifada?

Wendy Pearlman, Foreign Policy - Mahmoud Abbas captured the world’s attention with his controversial bid for U.N. recognition of Palestinian statehood. As the world awaits the outcome of that diplomatic contest, one of the key wild cards is the potential for mass nonviolent protest in the Palestinian territories. Some fear the failure of the bid will spark massive unrest and even the collapse of the Palestinian Authority. Others hope that Palestinians will rally en masse behind Abu Mazen’s strategy, using non-violent protest on the ground to supplement official Palestinian pressure on Israel at the United Nations. 

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Both will be disappointed. The thwarting of the U.N. bid is unlikely to be a sufficient spark for protest. Few Palestinians expect the diplomatic maneuver to lead to concrete changes, so they will not be galvanized by disappointment when it does not. Furthermore, the political, institutional, and territorial fragmentation in the Palestinian national movement today curtails its capacity to establish a single goal and strategy to guide popular resistance. As I explore in a new book on the Palestinian struggle, movements need national unity in order to muster the sweeping participation that fuels nonviolent protest, as well as the collective restraint to keep it from being provoked into violence. Political cohesion is critical for mobilization to be mass in scale and sustainable over time. That cohesion is currently lacking on the Palestinian scene, though one never knows when the tenacious vibrancy of Palestinian civil society might create it anew.

 

It may seem odd to argue that Palestinians are unlikely to engage in mass protest, given their deep history of popular mobilization and the many examples of creative grassroots activism on the ground today. These include West Bank villages’ ongoing protests against Israel’s separation wall, demonstrations against home demolitions in East Jerusalem, and the rallies last March demanding reconciliation between Fatah and Hamas, among numerous other undertakings that do and do not attract notice in the West.  But there are several reasons why such instances of localized or single-episode actions do not add up to national mobilization akin to the revolts seen elsewhere in the Arab world.

First, other uprisings in the region were propelled by the unleashing of frustrations that had been pent-up for decades. Palestinians, on the other hand, have had an uprising every generation. In this respect, the devastating toll of the second Intifada cannot be overstated. With more than 4,000 deaths and more than 5,000 prisoners in Israeli jails –apart from colossal economic losses, ravaging political and territorial fragmentation, and incalculable social suffering — Palestinians are wary of another uprising. Moreover, they are skeptical about its chances for success. A recent pollasked, “If a peaceful popular revolt like in Egypt or Tunisia were to erupt against the Israeli occupation in the West Bank, would it be capable of ending occupation?” Of Palestinian respondents, 64 percent said no, as did 72 percent of Israeli respondents. In contrast to other Arab publics, therefore, Palestinians are not alight with the thrill of reclaiming a long-suppressed voice. Rather, they are hoarse, and disillusioned, from shouting for so long.

Second, different dimensions of space carry different implications for tactics. In Egypt, Yemen, and Bahrain, pro-democracy movements occupied a central square. In Tunisia and Libya, protest began in the periphery of the country and gained power as it moved toward the capital. In Syria, the protest movement still seeks to do likewise. The political geography of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, however, is distinctive. If Palestinians have demonstrations in major towns in the West Bank of Gaza, Israelis will neither see nor care. Alternatively, Palestinians might have peaceful marches to Israeli checkpoints or settlements in the West Bank or toward Israel’s crossing-points into the Gaza Strip. These are militarized spaces, however, and Israel will treat them as breeches of sovereign borders. Even if approaching crowds of Palestinians are completely unarmed, Israel is likely to respond with force. And as cases from Palestinian history and across the world suggest, there is no surer way than repression to transform nonviolent protest into violent protest.

Third, a different relationship between society and leadership is at play. The Arab Spring has seen populations revolt against unelected and ineffective leaders. Palestinians are also very critical of the Fatah and Hamas-led governments in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, respectively. Unlike the hollow ruling parties in Tunisia and Egypt, however, Palestinian factions have deep roots in society. They also have their own long histories of leading grassroots resistance that they can summon when political imperatives require. Fatah and Hamas might welcome popular mobilization as pressure on Israel, but they will go to lengths to ensure that it neither slips from their control nor evolves into a challenge against them. In fact, they might seize upon popular protest as a resource to co-opt and use to further their own ambitions within Palestinian politics. In this sense, any major Palestinian mobilization is less likely to resemble the unity on display in Tahrir Square than the divisions that bogged down Lebanon’s 2005 Cedar Revolution. In the latter, calls for reform of the sectarian system were stymied when sectarian parties themselves corralled adherents back to the bunker of factional loyalties. They thereby blocked street protests from becoming a threat to the domestic political status quo.

To complicate matters further, the Palestinian Authority has a distinct interest in constraining popular resistance within the limits of its own political agenda. While it would like popular protests that increase its leverage in meaningful negotiations with Israel, it does not want any escalation that could jeopardize such negotiations. Even if the PA encourages demonstrations, it will try to prevent them from taking any form that might provoke Israel to respond with military force. It is not clear what a mass-scale renewal of Palestinian people’s power would look like if it becomes influenced, managed, or manipulated by the PA or any other of the parties competing for leadership of the Palestinian struggle. Certainly, it would be a different phenomenon than the grassroots resistance that unfolded elsewhere. Officially sanctioned rallies in Ramallah in support of the PA’s strategy might have the outward form of the Arab popular uprisings, but few will confuse them.

In sum, we ought not expect an eruption of the Arab spring in Palestine any time soon. More fundamentally, it would be unfair of us to do so. Many who support Palestinians’ U.N. bid do so in the hope of (re)internationalizing the conflict. Primarily, this means taking the conflict to the international realm, as opposed to that of U.S. hegemony and bilateral negotiations. Yet “internationalization” in this case should carry another meaning, as well — that of placing expectations with the world leaders, as opposed to the Palestinian grassroots.

Palestinian society has been engaging in various kinds of protest for nearly 100 years. It is rightfully exhausted. Over the course of the twentieth century, whenever the question of Palestine reached a point of stagnation, it was typically Palestinian civilian men, women, and children who shook things up by mobilizing the meager resources at their disposal. We should stop wondering if or when they will do so again. Rather, it is time for the international community to use the resources at its disposal to help bring about a just and lasting peace, once and for all. 

Wendy Pearlman is Assistant Professor of Political Science and the Crown Junior Chair in Middle East Studies at Northwestern University. Her second book on the Palestinian struggle, Violence, Nonviolence, and the Palestinian National Movement,” will be published by Cambridge University Press this month.

Photo: [gregg.carlstrom, Flickr]

Wadi Fukin, a Valley of Hope and Despair

Joshka Wessels - Fahmi Manasra walks to the spring he remembers from his childhood. He was a young boy when he moved from Dheisheh refugee camp to the paradise of Wadi Fukin some 30 years ago. At the time, he felt like he was in heaven.  He had wished to share this same feeling with his children but the spring is empty. Today, the spring and its reservoir are completely dried up. Nothing is left of the spring. Fahmi’s paradise is lost. The cause ? Construction of an expanding illegal Israeli settlement that is taking up land, drying up the springs and contaminating the soil.

[View:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vcvVmqHigeg&feature=player_embedded:200:0]

Continue reading “Wadi Fukin, a Valley of Hope and Despair” »

Despite thriving "tunnel economy", Gaza still a "prison"

The following is a Palestine Note exclusive story of one journalist’s descent into Gaza’s notorious smuggling tunnels.

Alexandra Robinson - “Complimentary tour of the Rafah tunnels.”  I received this offer a few weeks after arriving in Gaza.  In a conversation I was having with my colleague, Joe Catron, it came up that a friend of ours from Gaza City had given an open invitation for us to tour the tunnels.  For the purpose of this article we’ll refer to her as “X.”

After reading about much of the controversy of the tunnels and the political obstacles they have posed for Hamas since officially taking over the operations in 2007, I jumped at the proposition.

Actually managing to get into the tunnels was not such an easy task and ended up taking Joe and I two separate attempts.  Our first venture to Rafah was with X, who had initially invited us.  Our other colleague from the International Solidarity Movement (ISM) joined us and brought a friend of hers who was visiting Gaza from Egypt but was not officially affiliated with ISM.

Continue reading “Despite thriving "tunnel economy", Gaza still a "prison"” »

Is Hamas fighting over George Galloway’s $1 million?

 Neal Ungerleider - An interesting fight over money may be brewing in the Gaza Strip.

British politician George Galloway visited the statelet with
his Viva Palestina organization
 in
order to donate humanitarian aid to residents suffering under the Israeli
blockade. Now, several Palestinian websites are claiming that various Hamas factions are fighting over more than $1
million in cash that Galloway gave to the Islamist party
.



According to MEMRI, an Israeli-linked Middle
East press monitoring group:

The
Fatah website reports today, citing Hamas sources, on conflict between Ahmad
Al-Ja’bari, commander in Gaza of Hamas’ military wing, the ‘Izz Al-Din
Al-Qassem Brigades, and Hamas prime minister in Gaza Isma’il Haniya, over aid
funding transferred to Hamas by British MP George Galloway.

When
Al-Ja’bari demanded to know how the money had been distributed, Haniya replied
that he had $1 million in his possession and that the rest had been deposited
with the movement’s treasurer.

Al-Ja’bari
took $600,000 and said that Hamas’ military wing deserved more than its
political wing, and that the political wing had enough funds from what it
collected from the public.

Apart from MEMRI’s mention, this story does not appear to have hit
the Western media yet. Several Arabic-language websites affiliated with Fatah,
however, are running similar allegations.

Fatah-linked news site al-Ahd (The Covenant) has more details about
the claim that Jabari took $600,000 from Galloway (English translation here) for Hamas’ military wing.

Meanwhile, Fatah’s Voice of Palestine alleges that Galloway gave the money
to the Hamas government in Gaza
first and al-Jabari
then demanded the money from Hamas Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh
 (English translation here).

It’s important to note that Fatah, which controls the Palestinian
Authority in the West Bank, are Hamas’ hated
rivals. They have, of course, biases of their own regarding Hamas – which goes
double for MEMRI.

Nonetheless, if the story is true, it means that money donated by
a British politician ended up in the hands of Hamas’ al-Qassam Brigades - considered a terrorist organization
by both the United States
and the United Kingdom.

This piece was originally posted on True/Slant blog.

* Photo credit:  Image by gloucester2gaza via Flickr

 

 

Israeli army arrests non-violent resistance leader in Ni’ilin


Credit: Active Stills

Jonathan Pollak - At
around 3 AM on January 13, a military force of 15 armored jeeps and about a
hundred Israeli soldiers invaded the village of Ni’ilin and surrounded
the home of Ibrahim Amirah, the coordinator of Ni’lin’s Popular
Committee Against the Wall and Settlements. After forcefully entering
his home, soldiers extracted Amirah from his bed, searched the house
and arrested him.

Amirah
has previously been arrested twice under the same suspicion of
organizing demonstrations against the Wall in Ni’lin, but was never
charged. Protests have been held in the village since May 2008.

Additionally,
the Army raided the homes of Hassan Mousa and Zaidoun Srour. Hassan
Mousa, a high school teacher in the village and a member of the Popular
Committee, was released after being initially detained. Srour, a well
known activist in the village, was detained alongside Amirah. A
simultaneous raid was also carried in the village of Bil’in tonight,
where soldiers arrested 21 year old Yassin Yassin.

The
arrests today are an escalation of an ongoing and extensive Israeli
attempt to suppress the Palestinian popular resistance generally, and
repress its leadership particularly.

Yesterday, Israel staged a night raid into Area A, near the center of Ramallah, to arrest international solidarity activist Eva Nováková
for overstaying her visa. Such an incursion into Area A over an expired
visa is extremely unusual. A Czech national, Nováková served as the International Solidarity Movement‘s media coordinator
for the past three weeks. She was deported from the Ben Gurion airport at 6am this morning.

In
the past month, since 16 December, the army has staged eleven night
incursions into Ni’ilin. Since may 2008, when demonstrations began in
the village, 94 residents have been arrested in connection to the
protests. Similar raids have been conducted in the village of Bil’in -
where 34 residents have been arrested in the past six month and the
cities of Nablus, Ramallah and East Jerusalem.

Among
those arrested in the recent campaign are also five members of the
Bil’in Popular Committee, all suspected of incitement, and include
Adeeb Abu Rahmah – who has already been held in detention for almost
six months and Abdallah Abu Rahmah – the Bil’in Popular Committee
coordinator.

Prominent
Nablus grassroots activists, Wael al-Faqeeh, as well as Jamal Juma
(East Jerusalem) and Mohammed Othman (Jayyous) of the Stop the Wall
NGO, involved in anti-Wall and boycott, divestment and sanctions
campaigning have also been arrested recently. All three are currently
being held based on secret evidence and with no charges brought against
them.