New Era

Africa must demand accountabi­lity for Israel’s crimes

- Hanan Jarrar is Palestine’s non-resident ambassador to Malawi, Namibia and Lesotho, and ambassador of Palestine to South Africa with residency.

How many more need to be killed before the internatio­nal community acts to hold Israel accountabl­e for its continuing crimes against humanity?

The assassinat­ion of Palestinia­n journalist Shireen Abu Aqleh is a culminatio­n of Israel’s 74-year long inhumane occupation of Palestine, the Nakba (catastroph­e) of

1948, commemorat­ed annually on May 15 by Palestinia­ns.

Each year we mark Nakba as a reminder of the events leading up to the creation of Israel in 1948.

A catastroph­e which saw about 800 000 Palestinia­ns being massacred and expelled from their homeland. Hundreds of villages were destroyed and millions of our descendant­s now live scattered as refugees all over the globe, denied the right to return to their homeland.

Abu Aqleh’s killing is a bloody reminder of the deadly system Israel has locked Palestinia­ns in. Her death is the latest in a long line of journalist­s killed by the Israeli occupation forces, which have a long history of targeting reporters and other members of the media, suppressin­g press freedom.

Muffling the internatio­nal community, its silence perpetuate­s Israel’s criminalit­y.

Since 2000 Israeli occupation forces have killed at least 45 journalist­s who had a common voice of truth and carried out their responsibi­lities toward the public. All of them were deprived of their right to life for exposing Israel’s cruelty in the Occupied Palestinia­n Territory (OTP).

The occupation is characteri­sed by ongoing field executions against us in a systematic attempt to silence the voice of truth in Israel. To cover up their crimes and those of their settlers against our people, whose lives, land, and property are destroyed.

Nakba is a reminder of the colonial subjugatio­n we live under by Israeli means of brute military force, while the world watches. It is a reminder that our existence is resistance.

We are being ethnically cleansed. There are continuing patterns of unlawful killings, willful injury, settler expansion and arbitrary arrests, torture and other ill-treatment and collective punishment against Palestinia­ns, including women and children.

These crimes highlight the urgent need to end Israel’s apartheid policies and practices against our people that began 74 years ago and continues to this day.

In the early 1990s, the Palestinia­n leadership negotiated a solution where Palestinia­n aspiration­s for selfdeterm­ination were realised in an independen­t state with East Jerusalem as its capital on the land occupied in 1967.

By agreeing to this solution, our leadership made a historic compromise on over 88% of the land of historic Palestine.

Almost three decades after the agreement on the principles of this solution, Israel refuses to withdraw from the OTP. It further entrenches its presence by continuing to construct illegal settlement­s and related infrastruc­ture.

It persists undeterred in its policies aiming at Judaizing the holy city of Jerusalem by gradually erasing its multicultu­ral and diverse identity as a city for all faiths.

But even during the holy month of Ramadan, with impunity, Israeli police forces relentless­ly raided the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound in occupied East Jerusalem, attacking Muslim worshipper­s.

The military occupation imposed since 1967 over the remaining 22% of the area of historic Palestine provides Israel with the opportunit­y to grow its settlement­s while subjecting us to a brutal apartheid regime.

For far too long the internatio­nal community has looked away. Abu Aqleh’s death has drawn global eyes to us. Like all journalist­s before her, she died as she lived.

Showing the world the brutality of atrocities that Israel commits in its 74-year long inhumane occupation of Palestine, Nakba - the destructio­n of our society and homeland and the permanent displaceme­nt of a majority of the Palestinia­n Arabs.

We might be mourning, but we are proud to recognise Africa Month as a time of unity that brought the continent together against colonisati­on and oppression through the founding of the Organisati­on of African Unity in 1963, the precursor to the African Union.

While May is sorrowful for Palestine, we look to the struggles of the many African countries that have achieved independen­ce from their oppressors.

They have endured the horrors of colonialis­m and rejected Israel’s occupation of Palestine.

Wecallonth­emtobestan­dard-bearers in our struggle for self-determinat­ion and statehood and to lead internatio­nal efforts to end Israel’s colonial occupation and apartheid regime.

We demand accountabi­lity for Israel’s crimes.

Africa should not associate itself with this brutal colonial project continuing in the 21st century.

The internatio­nal community, nations, government­s, activists and internatio­nal media outlets that proactivel­y condemned Israel’s killing of Abu Aqleh, must equally condemn Israel’s apartheid policies and practices against our people.

Her killing is a reminder that Nakba continues to this day.

Condemning actions the internatio­nal community must act to hold Israel accountabl­e for its continuing crimes against humanity.

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