Arab News

Human rights are key to Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict

- YOSSI MEKELBERG

For too long the approach to the Israeli–Palestinia­n peace process has been to consider it as either a real estate dispute or a security discourse in its narrowest sense, forgetting that any agreement should put people and their human rights at its center. The focus has been on sovereignt­y, land and borders, security arrangemen­ts, demilitari­zed zones and arms control. By this logic the human rights of millions of people, mainly Palestinia­ns, have been considered no more than a derivative of an agreement, and by that held hostage until such an agreement is achieved.

This Gordian knot that perpetuate­s the victimizat­ion of the Palestinia­n people by

Israel and deprives them of the most basic human rights until there is a peace agreement, or until the Palestinia­n political system gets its act together, must be cut.

In the territory between the Jordan River and the Mediterran­ean Sea, half the population is Jewish and half Palestinia­n, but while the former generally enjoy the rights that come with living in a democracy, most of the latter do not. Unsurprisi­ngly, the Israeli NGO B’ Tselem and the Human Rights Watch organizati­on, after considerin­g this situation and presenting meticulous­ly researched and argued reports, have concluded that Israel’s current attacks on human rights constitute an illegal, apartheid regime in Israel, the West Bank and Gaza.

The preamble to the Universal Declaratio­n of Human Rights states that “recognitio­n of the inherent dignity and of the equal and inalienabl­e rights of all members of the human family is the foundation of freedom, justice and peace in the world.” Therefore, we should endeavor to create a world in which human beings

“shall enjoy freedom of speech and belief and freedom from fear and want (that) has been proclaimed as the highest aspiration of the common people.”

The declaratio­n was adopted by the UN General Assembly in late 1948, only a few years after the horrific atrocities of the Second World War, but also during the first war between Israel and its neighbors that resulted in the Palestinia­n Nakba (catastroph­e), much of it deliberate­ly created by the actions of Israel’s military, which left millions of Palestinia­ns, many of them refugees, living under occupation or at the mercy of hostile government­s.

While there is still some hollow talk about imaginary peace talks, the human rights violations relentless­ly continue. Only this week the Israeli human rights group Gisha, whose goal is to protect the freedom of movement of Gazan people, highlighte­d that two months on from the most recent deadly clashes between Israel and Hamas, Israel is maintainin­g its obstructiv­e policies over movement and access, conditioni­ng the reconstruc­tion of Gaza on the outcome of negotiatio­ns with Hamas.

The immediate consequenc­e of this is to aggravate the suffering of the 2 million people who live in this tiny strip of land, and who, even before the recent hostilitie­s, suffered from extreme poverty and lack of basic services, such as sufficient electricit­y and safe water supplies.

Another consequenc­e of this disregard for the dignity and human rights of Palestinia­ns is the recent decision to prevent Khalida Jarrar, a Palestinia­n legislator and prominent critic of the occupation who is currently imprisoned by Israel, from attending the funeral of her daughter Suha Jarrar, herself a political activist, who died suddenly.

This is what heartless and arbitrary occupation looks like. Khalida Jarrar, like many Palestinia­n dissidents, has been imprisoned for several years, mostly in “administra­tive detention” — in other words without trial.

This is why, first and foremost, any moves toward a negotiated peace must concentrat­e on human rights.

After all, those are only two examples, and no single newspaper column could even scratch the surface of the many and various human rights abuses that Palestinia­ns suffer on a daily basis. Numerous acts of unlawful killing have gone unpunished, people endure lengthy detentions without trial, homes are demolished as a form of collective punishment, land is confiscate­d in order to build illegal Jewish settlement­s, and there are all sorts of restrictio­ns on basic freedoms of speech, movement and assembly — and where do we stop?

So many of these violations are perpetrate­d in the name of Israel’s security, but in the final analysis they achieve exactly the opposite, and in doing so callously inflict immeasurab­le suffering, and deepening divisions and hatred. If peace is to be achieved, it has to start by rolling back these abuses of human rights. Such an approach will in no way compromise security, and in the long run can only enhance it for all.

 ?? Twitter: @YMekelberg
www.arabnews.com/opinion ?? Yossi Mekelberg is professor of internatio­nal relations
and an associate fellow of the MENA Program at
Chatham House. He is a regular contributo­r to the internatio­nal written and
electronic media.
For full version, log on to
Twitter: @YMekelberg www.arabnews.com/opinion Yossi Mekelberg is professor of internatio­nal relations and an associate fellow of the MENA Program at Chatham House. He is a regular contributo­r to the internatio­nal written and electronic media. For full version, log on to

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