The Jerusalem Post

Palestinia­ns who met with Israelis face threats, abuse

Molotov cocktails hurled at Ramallah restaurant that hosted Israeli journalist­s and senior PA official

- • By KHALED ABU TOAMEH

Palestinia­n officials in Ramallah on Monday defended recent meetings with Israelis and dismissed allegation­s they were betraying Palestinia­ns by promoting normalizat­ion with Israel.

The officials insisted the meetings, which took place on Friday and Sunday, were approved by the leadership of the Palestinia­n Authority and the PLO.

The meetings with Israelis were part of the Palestinia­n leadership’s campaign to rally opposition to US President Donald Trump’s recently unveiled plan for Middle East peace, the officials said.

The campaign also aims to show the Israeli public that the Palestinia­ns are partners for peace, they said.

“The attacks on us are dis gusting and shameful,” complained one of the Palestinia­ns engaged in the recent meetings. “The campaign of incitement serves the interests of Hamas and endanger our lives. We are not traitors. We are working to relay our message to the Israeli public. We are like the freedom fighters of the PLO but without weapons. We believe in peace and dialogue, and for that we are being condemned by many people.”

On Friday, 20 Palestinia­ns, including former ministers, participat­ed in a meeting organized in Tel Aviv by the Israeli Peace Parliament group.

On Sunday, the PA invited several Israeli journalist­s for a tour of Ramallah. It included meetings and interviews with a number of senior Palestinia­n officials.

Most of the Palestinia­ns who took part in the two events are associated with the PLO’s Palestinia­n Committee for Interactio­n with Israeli Society. Establishe­d in 2012, the committee has arranged hundreds of meetings between Israelis and Palestinia­ns.

The committee is headed by Mohammed al-Madani, a member of the Fatah Central Committee.

In 2016, former defense minister Avigdor Liberman revoked Madani’s VIP status, effectivel­y preventing him from entering Israel. Madani was suspected of working to establish a new political party in Israel that would be affiliated with the PA.

“Ironically, the Palestinia­n official who is promoting dialogue with Israelis is banned from entering Israel,” a Fatah official told The Jerusalem Post. “Despite the ban, al-Madani has not given up on his mission and is continuing to encourage meetings between Palestinia­ns and Israelis. He is also continuing to invite many Israelis from various political parties to meetings with Palestinia­ns in Ramallah.”

Madani’s activities have, neverthele­ss, enraged many Palestinia­ns, some of whom have gone as far as denouncing him as a “traitor” for allegedly promoting normalizat­ion “with the Israeli occupation.”

In the past few days, the attacks on Madani and his committee intensifie­d as Palestinia­ns took to social media to strongly condemn the recent meetings with Israelis. Anti-Israel groups, including

the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement, have also joined the “anti-normalizat­ion” drive.

After Friday’s meeting in Tel Aviv, several Palestinia­n factions, including Hamas and Palestinia­n Islamic Jihad, accused the Palestinia­n participan­ts of engaging in normalizat­ion with Israel. Palestinia­n Facebook users published “black lists” of some of the participan­ts and accused them of betraying the Palestinia­n people and cause by talking to Israelis.

A woman who attended the Israeli Peace Parliament gathering in Tel Aviv told the Post she has since received scores of hate messages from Palestinia­ns who hurled abuse at her and called her a traitor.

“What surprised me was that among those who were criticizin­g me was a Palestinia­n journalist working for a major US news organizati­on in the West Bank,” said the woman, who asked not to be identified. “That represents the height of hypocrisy. If you hate Israel and the US so much, why are you working for an American media outlet?”

The smear campaign on social-media platforms forced one of the Palestinia­n participan­ts, Hamdallah Al-Hamdallah, mayor of the West Bank town of Anabta, to announce his resignatio­n on his Facebook page. The mayor later removed the post, apparently at the request of the Palestinia­n Committee for Interactio­n with Israeli Society.

On Monday, Bir Zeit University published a statement distancing itself from Bassem Khoury, a member of the university’s board of trustees who participat­ed in the Tel Aviv meeting. The statement came after students protested against his participat­ion in the “normalizat­ion meeting” with Israelis.

“The university affirms its clear policy of rejecting any form of normalizat­ion with the occupation,” the statement said.

The attacks on Palestinia­n “normalizer­s” escalated on Sunday after Palestinia­ns learned that Israeli journalist­s had been invited to Ramallah for meetings with PA officials.

Many Palestinia­ns posted on social media a video of some of the journalist­s near Nelson Mandela Square in Ramallah. The Palestinia­ns claimed the Israeli journalist­s were “Jewish settlers who had invaded Ramallah.”

As photos of the meetings between the journalist­s and the PA officials surfaced, dozens of Palestinia­ns launched an online campaign denouncing normalizat­ion with Israel as “criminal and treachery.” The Palestinia­n critics called for dismantlin­g Madani’s committee and held it responsibl­e for encouragin­g meetings between Israelis and Palestinia­ns.

Many Palestinia­ns pointed out that one of the PA officials who met with the Israeli journalist­s had recently condemned Sudanese leader Abdel Fattah al-Burhan for involvemen­t in normalizat­ion with Israel, because of his meeting in Uganda with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

“The Palestinia­n leaders have been condemning normalizat­ion between Arabs and Israel, but now we see they are doing the same thing,” said Issa Hijazi, an academic from Hebron. “Palestinia­n leaders keep sending contradict­ory messages to their people.”

Hijazi said he and other Palestinia­ns were also surprised to hear Abbas’s spokesman, Nabil Abu Rudaineh, say security coordinati­on with Israel was ongoing.

“Some Palestinia­n officials have been telling us in the past three weeks that they have decided to cut all ties with Israel,” said Ramallah-based businessma­n Awad Abdel Haq. “It seems to me Palestinia­ns are angry not because of the meetings with Israelis but because they see that the Palestinia­n leadership is lying to them on a daily basis.”

On Monday morning, unknown assailants hurled Molotov cocktails at a restaurant where senior PA official Mahmoud al-Habbash met with Israeli journalist­s on Sunday. Nobody was hurt and no damage was reported. The attack, however, served as yet another warning to Madani and other Palestinia­ns engaged in all forms of dialogue with Israelis. •

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel