Arab News

Why the Global South is rising for Gaza

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The distance between Gaza and Namibia is measured in the thousands of kilometers. But their historical experience­s mean they feel much closer. This is precisely why Namibia was one of the first countries to take a strong stance against the Israeli genocide in Gaza. Namibia was colonized by the Germans in 1884, while the British colonized Palestine after the First World War before handing the territory to the Zionist colonizers in 1948. Though the ethnic and religious fabrics of the two are different, the historical experience­s are similar. It is easy, however, to assume that the history that unifies many countries in the Global South is only that of Western exploitati­on and victimizat­ion. But it is also a history of collective struggle and resistance.

Since the start of the Israeli genocide in Gaza, Namibia has answered the call of solidarity with the Palestinia­ns, along with many other countries of the Global South, including Colombia, Nicaragua, Cuba, South Africa, Brazil and China.

Though intersecti­onality is a muchcelebr­ated notion in Western academia, no academic theory is needed to explain why oppressed, colonized nations in the Global South exhibit solidarity with one another. So, when Namibia took a strong stance against Israel’s largest military supporter in Europe — Germany — it did so based on its total awareness of its own history.

The German genocide of the Nama and Herero people of 1904-1908 is known as the “first genocide of the 20th century.” The ongoing Israeli genocide in Gaza is one of the first genocides of the 21st century. The unity between Palestine and Namibia is now cemented through their mutual suffering. However, it was not Namibia that launched a legal case against Germany at the Internatio­nal Court of Justice, but Nicaragua

— a Central American country that is also thousands of kilometers away from both Palestine and Namibia.

The Nicaraguan case accuses Germany of violating the Genocide Convention. It rightly sees Berlin as a partner in the ongoing genocide of the Palestinia­ns.

The typical analysis of why Germany continues to support Israel is explained on the basis of German guilt over the Holocaust. This explanatio­n, however, is partly illogical and partly erroneous.

Illogical because, if Germany has internaliz­ed any guilt from its previous mass killings, it would make no sense for it to add yet more guilt by allowing Palestinia­ns to be butchered en masse. If such guilt does exist, it is not genuine. And erroneous because it completely overlooks the German genocide in Namibia. The German government’s support of the Israeli war on Gaza is not motivated by guilt, but by a power paradigm that governs the relations among colonial countries. Many countries in the Global South understand this logic very well; thus the growing solidarity with Palestine.

The Israeli brutality in Gaza and the Palestinia­n “sumud” (resilience and resistance) are inspiring the Global South to reclaim its centrality in anti-colonial liberation struggles. The revolution in the Global South’s outlook — culminatin­g in South Africa’s genocide case against Israel at the world court and the Nicaraguan lawsuit against Germany — indicates that the change is not the outcome of a collective emotional reaction. Instead, it is part and parcel of the shifting relationsh­ip between the Global South and the Global North.

Africa has been undergoing a process of geopolitic­al restructur­ing for years. The antiFrench rebellions in West Africa, demanding true independen­ce from the continent’s former colonial masters, in addition to the intense geopolitic­al competitio­n — involving Russia, China and others — are signs of the changing times.

With this rapid rearrangem­ent, a new political discourse and popular rhetoric is emerging.

But the shift is not happening on the rhetorical front only. The rise of BRICS as a powerful new platform for economic integratio­n between Asia and the rest of the Global South has opened up the possibilit­y that alternativ­es to Western financial and political institutio­ns are very much possible.

In 2023, it was revealed that BRICS countries were responsibl­e for 32 percent of the world’s total gross domestic product, compared to 30 percent for the G7 countries combined. There is much political value to this, as four of the five original founders of BRICS are strong and unapologet­ic supporters of the Palestinia­ns.

While South Africa has been championin­g the legal front against Israel, Russia and China have been battling the US at the UN Security Council and attempting to institute a ceasefire. Beijing’s ambassador to the UN went as far as defending the Palestinia­n armed struggle as legitimate under internatio­nal law. Now that global dynamics are working in favor of the Palestinia­ns, it is time for their struggle to return to the embrace of the Global South, where common histories will always serve as a foundation for meaningful solidarity.

 ?? RAMZY BAROUD ??
RAMZY BAROUD

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