A just peace or no peace
Ismail Haniyeh is the new Palestinian
prime minister and a Hamas leader
By Ismail Haniyeh
03/31/06 "The
Guardian" -- -- Do policymakers in Washington and
Europe ever feel ashamed of their scandalous double standards?
Before and since the Palestinian elections in January, they have
continually insisted that Hamas comply with certain demands.
They want us to recognise Israel, call off our resistance, and
commit ourselves to whatever deals Israel and the Palestinian
leadership reached in the past.
But we have not heard a single demand
of the Israeli parties that took part in this week's elections,
though some advocate the complete removal of the Palestinians
from their lands. Even Ehud Olmert's Kadima party, whose Likud
forebears frustrated every effort by the PLO to negotiate a
peace settlement, campaigned on a programme that defies UN
security council resolutions. His unilateralism is a violation
of international law. Nevertheless no one, not even the Quartet
- whose proposals for a settlement he continues to disregard, as
his predecessor Ariel Sharon did - has dared ask anything of
him.
Olmert's unilateralism is a recipe
for conflict. It is a plan to impose a permanent situation in
which the Palestinians end up with a homeland cut into pieces
made inaccessible because of massive Jewish settlements built in
contravention of international law on land seized illegally from
the Palestinians. No plan will ever work without a guarantee, in
exchange for an end to hostilities by both sides, of a total
Israeli withdrawal from all the land occupied in 1967, including
East Jerusalem; the release of all our prisoners; the removal of
all settlers from all settlements; and recognition of the right
of all refugees to return.
On this, all Palestinian factions and
people agree, including the PLO, whose revival is essential so
that it can resume its role in speaking for the Palestinians and
presenting their case to the world.
The problem is not with any
particular Palestinian group but with the denial of our basic
rights by Israel. We in Hamas are for peace and want to put an
end to bloodshed. We have been observing a unilateral truce for
more than a year without reciprocity from the Israeli side. The
message from Hamas and the Palestinian Authority to the world
powers is this: talk to us no more about recognising Israel's
"right to exist" or ending resistance until you obtain a
commitment from the Israelis to withdraw from our land and
recognise our rights.
Little will change for the
Palestinians under Olmert's plan. Our land will still be
occupied and our people enslaved and oppressed by the occupying
power. So we will remain committed to our struggle to get back
our lands and our freedom. Peaceful means will do if the world
is willing to engage in a constructive and fair process in which
we and the Israelis are treated as equals. We are sick and tired
of the west's racist approach to the conflict, in which the
Palestinians are regarded as inferior. Though we are the
victims, we offer our hands in peace, but only a peace that is
based on justice. However, if the Israelis continue to attack
and kill our people and destroy their homes, impose sanctions,
collectively punish us, and imprison men and women for
exercising the right to self-defence, we have every right to
respond with all available means.
Hamas has been freely elected. Our
people have given us their confidence and we pledge to defend
their rights and do our best to run their affairs through good
governance. If we are boycotted in spite of this democratic
choice - as we have been by the US and some of its allies - we
will persist, and our friends have pledged to fill the gap. We
have confidence in the peoples of the world, record numbers of
whom identify with our struggle. This is a good time for
peace-making - if the world wants peace.
Ismail Haniyeh is the new Palestinian
prime minister and a Hamas leader. Email:
ihaniyyeh@hotmail.com