|
Another
world is
necessary
By Serene Assir
03/02/08 "The
Electronic Intifada" -- - -Under siege since 9
June 2007, the Palestinian people of Gaza moved the world by
breaking out and materially reclaiming their stolen freedom of
movement, rights to travel to and from their country, and right
to resist the illegal status imposed on them through occupation
since 1967 and economic and near-total physical blockade since
the democratic election of Hamas in the legislative election of
January 2006.
The present siege, which began shortly after Hamas' takeover of
Gaza, led to a total collapse of the Gazan economy, as well as
an escalating humanitarian crisis affecting every aspect of life
for Palestinian residents of the world's most densely populated
area, including business, health care and sanitation, state of
mind, infrastructure and indeed survival itself. Israel's total
blockade that began one week before the popular disruption of
the siege led to total power blackouts, to the extent that the
UN agency for Palestinian refugees, UNRWA, whose role in
providing assistance to 1948 refugees living in Gaza is central
for the provision and distribution of goods including baby milk
and basic foodstuffs, was rendered almost incapable of
continuing its work. Where Gaza would have stood today without
the act of disruption that awed the world last week cannot be
gauged -- without pushing the limits of our imagination beyond
the parameters of the worst plausible.
Under the 25 November 2005 agreement reached by Israel, the
European Union and the Palestinian Authority (PA) -- then in
charge of the Gaza Strip -- and under the surveillance of the
United States, it was established that the PA would take over
from Israel to control entry into and exit from Gaza of persons
via the Rafah border terminal, with the EU deploying monitors at
the terminal. Owing to Israeli interventionism, such as that
exercised on and ever since 9 June 2007, the terminal was closed
more often than it was open, in contravention to the spirit of
the 2005 agreement. As of the election of Hamas in January 2006,
the terminal was closed 86 percent of the time, according to
information gathered by the UN Office for the Coordination of
Humanitarian Affairs.
Egypt was not a signatory to the agreement governing the Rafah
border terminal. Instead it was granted observer status, which
appeared to some high-ranking security officials bizarre enough
given that the agreement concerned an Egyptian border. According
to security sources, Egypt had expressed some interest in having
its status upgraded to that of signatory when the agreement was
renewed. This renewal was set to take place in 2006; however, it
never did, owing to Israeli postponement.
Thus the precise details of Egypt's role in maintaining the
blockade of Gaza have through much of the duration of the siege
remained murky. For the most comfortable of analyses, all that
was publicly known was that Israel instigated the closure of the
terminals leading in and out of the Gaza Strip, and that the
closure was supported by PA President Mahmoud Abbas (Abu Mazen),
who criminally enough believed that Hamas would lose popularity
to his advantage if the people of Gaza were progressively
starved. Meanwhile Egypt's grassroots, Cairo-based human rights
organizations remained conspicuously silent for months, for the
most part speaking out only when Israel's blockade of the Gaza
Strip became total, by which time fear of reprimand from the
notorious state security services was overwhelmed by the
absolute rejection of the continuous suffering of fellow Arabs
in Gaza. Only the Muslim Brotherhood-run Doctors' Syndicate
remained active throughout the seven months of illegal
collective punishment faced by the Palestinians of Gaza, and
even then on a principally humanitarian level. Only in the time
nearing the Palestinians' act of disruption last week did Cairo
see mass action, the most notable example of which was a protest
before the headquarters of the Arab League in the heart of the
Arab world's most populous capital, organized by the Muslim
Brotherhood and other opposition parties. Hundreds of people
were arrested during and prior to the protest.
On the state level, even though it had been Israel and the PA
which had created the humanitarian and political crisis in Gaza,
Egypt could conceivably have unilaterally ended it. Under
international law, given the illegality of the siege, Egypt had
an obligation to act, an obligation to which it failed to
fulfill. Under the Fourth Geneva Convention, to which Egypt is a
High Contracting Party, parties are obliged "to respect and
ensure respect" for all the provisions contained, including the
criminalization of collective punishment (Article 33). No doubt,
the besiegement of Gaza as a pressure mechanism to turn the
Palestinian civilian population against Hamas constitutes, at
the very least, collective punishment.
However, if there remained any shred of doubt that Egypt could
have done more to interrupt the siege, then recent days' events
have helped establish an even more glaring understanding of the
role of Cairo. "To Egypt the disruption of the siege came as a
surprise, and under growing pressure from the population and
particularly the Muslim Brotherhood, it was impossible for the
regime in Cairo to put an immediate end to the flow of
Palestinians to and from Gaza," said director of the Addameer
human rights group in Gaza Khalil Abu Shammala. Egyptian
President Hosni Mubarak "tried to capitalize on the events, by
issuing statements that would paint Egypt in a more humanitarian
light and thus to persuade opposition that the regime was doing
its part in support of the Palestinians of Gaza. It was foolish,
however, on the part of the regime to think that simply allowing
Palestinians exit into Egypt for a few days would rid Egypt of
its responsibility towards the Palestinians under the present
conditions. Much, much more needs to be done. Egypt has to
actively end its participation in the siege," Abu Shammala
added.
But within five days of the disruption of the siege of Gaza, the
deployment of Central Security Forces to north Sinai,
particularly from al-Arish to Rafah, had been massively
intensified. While initial attempts to close down the border
were thwarted following clashes with armed Hamas members, later
attempts were rendered impossible by the sheer fury of
Palestinian civilians, who threw stones in the spirit of
self-defense from renewed imprisonment by the simplest means at
their disposal. Meanwhile, it was reported less than a week on
from the popular outbreak that up to 3,000 Palestinians were
detained by the Egyptian authorities as the campaign to prohibit
the entry of Gazans without visas escalated. In addition, there
were daily reports of the authorities prohibiting the entry into
Sinai of Egyptian human rights and political campaigners from
across the political spectrum as they brought with them
medicines and supplies in demonstration of solidarity with the
people of Gaza.
At the time of writing, such had been the forcefulness of the
Egyptian regime's effort to expel the remaining Palestinians and
to prevent any new entry that very few managed to remain in
Sinai one week on from the initial outbreak. Barring
approximately 1,000 Palestinians who set up camp by the Security
Headquarters in al-Arish in an attempt to secure visas and thus
acquire legal means to remain in Egypt, or to travel to third
countries where they work or study, most Gaza residents had
returned home, ready to face a renewed closure up until the time
that new arrangements for the border are reached.
Perhaps a total defeat of the natural and legal act of struggle
against siege, poverty, occupation and death that the
Palestinians of Gaza demonstrated over the past week is
precisely what the Israelis and their allies in Washington and
peace partners in Cairo would desire most. However, gauging from
the mood in Gaza, that they would secure such a result in the
long run is unlikely. First off, according to Hamas spokesman
Fawzi Barhoum, "It would be absurd to suggest that Hamas would
open the border only to then close it again. The destruction of
the border is not intended solely to give Palestinians temporary
relief, but essentially to work towards negotiations for a
solution that would end the siege once and for all."
Meanwhile, on the streets the effects of the disruption of the
siege extend far beyond a mere re-injection of economic life
into Gaza, to the lifting of Palestinian confidence in struggle.
"What has been made clear by this single action is that no
matter how dark the abandonment by the entire world has been of
the Palestinian people, the people can still take the initiative
to secure their freedom," said Emad Abu Mohamed, one refugee
resident of Gaza City. "There can be no going back from here."
Insofar as the action raised the spirits of the people of Gaza,
it also re-directed the focus of a people who have seen fierce
factional rivalry and bloodshed to the occupation, which is the
origin of the problem, said Mohammed Dahman, a Gaza-based
journalist. "The whole of Gaza celebrated the outbreak in unity,
and in so doing proved that the rivalries are superficial,"
Dahman added.
The immensity of the overwhelmingly peaceful movement of
Palestinians in and out of north Sinai indicated that another
reality is possible and indeed necessary in the Arab world.
Occupation in Palestine cannot be successfully challenged if the
Arab world does not wake up to the fact that anything but more
actions of a similarly massive, popular nature are not
encouraged. Acceptance of a continued oppression of Arab popular
movements is tantamount to acceptance of Israel's siege of Gaza.
Under international law, nothing short of full Egyptian
cooperation at the state level with the people of Gaza will do.
And it was precisely this sort of cooperation that Hamas called
for, using last week's outbreak as a state-of-the-art pressure
card to ensure it, alongside the promise of greater economic
influence in the Gaza Strip. "We are looking to end Gaza's
economic ties to Israel, and for Egypt to step in to take over,"
Palestinian Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh said.
Now given that Cairo has already turned down Hamas overtures to
take control of the border, and that Hamas has rejected
proposals for an international presence at Rafah, and granted
that Cairo's relations with Washington have long been unequal to
the effect that it is safe to say that the present regime
survives because it is supported by the world's only superpower,
it remains to be seen just where the unfolding crisis will lead.
There is no doubt that the short-term economic advantage of
maintaining ties with Washington over developing a longer-term
strategy involving the Palestinian people, who are determined to
emerge victorious over occupation, appears more beneficial to
Cairo. However, what is clear is that, as is the case every
minute of every day within Egyptian jurisdiction ever since the
signing of the Camp David Peace Treaty in 1978, there is a
fundamental discord between what the vast majority of the people
of Egypt really want, and what power has imposed on them. Given
the reality of power distribution in the Arab world, it is not
yet the time to imagine that the crisis will lead to an
immediate settlement that will aptly meet the requirements of
the people of Gaza. But what the surprise disruption of the
siege, involving the instantaneous, physical realization of what
has been the dream of millions of human beings the world over
for hundreds of years -- namely the downfall of borders and the
victory of the people over brutality and oppression --
indicates, is that it is necessary to think beyond the limits of
the mundane. This was a lesson learned not only by the Gazans,
but also no doubt by hundreds of thousands of Arabs who watched
in awe at the spontaneous creativity of their brothers and
sisters, the Palestinians.
Serene Assir is a Beirut
and Cairo-based independent journalist and blogger.</>
Related Links
Click on "comments" below to read or post comments
Comment Guidelines
Be succinct, constructive and
relevant to the story.
We encourage engaging, diverse
and meaningful commentary. Do not include
personal information such as names, addresses,
phone numbers and emails. Comments falling
outside our guidelines – those including
personal attacks and profanity – are not
permitted.
See our complete
Comment Policy
and
use this link to notify us if you have concerns
about a comment.
We’ll promptly review and remove any
inappropriate postings.
Send Page To a Friend
In accordance
with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material
is distributed without profit to those who have
expressed a prior interest in receiving the
included information for research and educational
purposes. Information Clearing House has no
affiliation whatsoever with the originator of
this article nor is Information ClearingHouse
endorsed or sponsored by the originator.)
|