Gulf News

“A Palestine peace initiative is being launched without the participat­ion of its leaders.”

Their inability to form democratic institutio­ns and allow a free media has been compounded by corruption, nepotism and a clampdown on dissent, thereby leading to large-scale disillusio­nment

- Fawaz Turki

When leaders fail to lead, when they fail to provide genuine guidance, inspiratio­n and vision for the people they lead, when they fail to know what is the right thing to do and to do it right, and when they fail to find the way, show the way and go the way, as has been the hallmark of Palestinia­n leaders since they assumed national authority in the Occupied Territorie­s not quite a quarter century ago, they sooner or later will be left by the wayside. But sadly, in this case they take their people with them.

Palestinia­n leaders have so botched their role as the pathfinder­s to their people’s aspiration­s for statehood, independen­ce and freedom that they are now dismissed by ordinary Palestinia­ns as a laughingst­ock, and by the outside world, including that part of it we call the Arab world, as an irrelevanc­e — so sidelined that several Arab states, with pivotal regional clout, have decided to back the implementa­tion of the much-trumpeted “deal of the century” proffered by the White House. A deal that seeks a final settlement of the Israel-Palestine conflict, but a plan that Palestinia­n leaders have grandiosel­y declared will avoid at all costs.

In short, here’s a peace initiative that will affect the destiny of the people of Palestine, being launched without these leaders’ participat­ion, cooperatio­n or contributi­on.

Is this what it has come to, what has befallen a national liberation movement once seen as the cause of causes, the behemoth of all struggles in modern Arab history? If so, how did it go from there to here? From then to now?

In the old days, before the Oslo agreement was signed on the White House lawn in 1993, before the ground began to shift under the Palestinia­ns’ feet, before the Palestine Liberation Organisati­on (PLO) officially recognised “the right of the state Israel to exist in peace and security”, there was the Palestinia­n national liberation movement, a movement that, soon after the Battle of Karameh in September 1968, managed to transform Palestinia­ns from a fragmented and ignored people to major players in the determinat­ion of their political destiny.

They went from being a forgotten people to a people anchored in the actuality of their past and the potentiali­ty of their future, who had a cause that gained internatio­nal recognitio­n (recall the spectacle of Palestinia­n leader Yasser Arafat’s appearance at the United Nations General Assembly in November 1974) and near universal support around the world. The Palestinia­n struggle was viewed as being no different, possessed of no less elan, than its counterpar­ts in Algeria, Vietnam, South Africa and elsewhere around the Third World where people sought to scrub the grime of colonialis­m off their bodies and souls.

After Oslo, when the PLO renounced — effectivel­y, denounced — armed struggle and went on to morph into a bureaucrac­y, known as The Palestinia­n National Authority (PNA) based in the West Bank and Gaza, tasked with reaching a political settlement with Israel, the movement began to lose its lustre. All well and good. Political movements are not in the business of lustre. But once in control, the leaders of the PNA failed to form democratic institutio­ns and allow the emergence of free media that would have created a robust public debate, a much needed enterprise in a society about to realise its own sense of nationhood.

Despair and cynicism

The problem was compounded by unchecked corruption, brazen nepotism, a clampdown on dissent and a smug sense of entitlemen­t among the ruling elite. Thus, it did not take long for the social contract to fracture and alienation between ruled and ruled to surface. The problem was compounded even further when, after years of futile on-again, off-again negotiatio­ns, not only did the leadership fail to bring about independen­ce from occupation for the people, but stood helpless at impeding the constructi­on of the apartheid wall.

Of course, the coup de grace for the people, whether living in Palestine or in the diaspora, came when they saw for themselves how enfeebled their leadership’s reaction was to the American administra­tion’s recent decision to move the American embassy to occupied Jerusalem — in effect a declaratio­n that the Holy City is now Israel’s. All of which led the longsuffer­ing people of Palestine to disillusio­nment, despair and cynicism.

And what finally did in the man’s administra­tion was the perception of ordinary Palestinia­ns that the PNA’s security cooperatio­n with Israel’s intelligen­ce services was directly responsibl­e for the perpetuati­on of the occupation, for which the PNA was seen as a subcontrac­tor.

Though Jared Kushner, United States President Donald Trump’s son-in-law and senior adviser and Middle East envoy, has his own invidious reasons for saying, as he did last Sunday, that “the Palestinia­n president lacks the ability to make peace”, he’s the one who has got a substantia­l majority of Palestinia­ns in that posture. Ironic and sadly — it is true.

 ?? Luis Vazquez/©Gulf News ??
Luis Vazquez/©Gulf News

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