Vancouver Sun

Population swap proposal angers Arab minority

Israeli Arab citizens don’t want to be part of Palestine

- ARON HELLER

Israel’s powerful and outspoken foreign minister has enraged the country’s Arab minority by proposing that some of its towns and villages be handed over to a future Palestine in exchange for parts of the West Bank where Jewish settlers live.

The proposal, rejected by both Palestinia­ns and other Israeli leaders, nonetheles­s has deepened Arab fears that they are not welcome in the Jewish state and leaves them in the awkward position of insisting on staying Israeli. They say that their solidarity with their Palestinia­n brethren does not mean they are disloyal to their own country and should not be treated as second- class citizens.

“I didn’t come to Israel, Israel came to me ... They can’t take away my rights,” said Abdul Rahman Haj Yahiya, 79, an eighth- generation resident of Taybeh. “If Israelis can identify with Jews around the world, why can’t I identify with Arabs too?”

A town like Taybeh, home to some 40,000 people and only about a few kilometres away from the Palestinia­ncontrolle­d West Bank, likely would be a prime target under Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman’s plan. Lieberman, a leading voice in Israel’s so- called nationalis­t camp, has long been a skeptic of peace efforts with the Palestinia­ns and is a frequent critic of Israel’s Arab minority. His latest proposal appears to be aimed at complicati­ng U. S. Secretary of State John Kerry’s peace efforts as much as it is at unnerving Israeli Arabs.

Twenty per cent

Israel’s Arabs make up about 20 per cent of the country’s eight million citizens. They

descend from those who decided to stay in the country upon Israel’s establishm­ent in 1948, in contrast to hundreds of thousands of Palestinia­ns who fled or were driven away.

While they freely identify with their Palestinia­n counterpar­ts, there are also key difference­s. They have become fluent in Hebrew. Although they generally suffer from second- class status in Israel, they hold full citizenshi­p rights and enjoy a higher standard of living and more civil liberties than in other Arab countries — a reality they say they are loath to swap for life under Palestinia­n rule.

At the same time, Arabs do not serve in the military like Jewish citizens. With many siding openly with the Palestinia­ns — and a small number even charged with spying for Israel’s enemies — they have also drawn accusation­s of being a disloyal fifth column.

Lieberman’s hard- line nationalis­t party, Yisrael Beitenu, or “Israel is our Home,” has long called for aggressive action and pushed for legislatio­n that would have required a loyalty oath to Israel as a Jewish state and stripping citizenshi­p to those who refuse.

The Palestinia­ns seek a state in the West Bank, Gaza Strip and East Jerusalem, lands Israel captured in the 1967 Mideast war, but would accept minor land swaps to allow Israel to keep some Jewish settlement blocs. Lieberman unveiled his swap idea this week.

Special case

Lieberman said no one would be uprooted from their homes. Instead, the border would merely be adjusted to place Arab towns inside Palestinia­n territory. He also said he would not support any peace agreement brokered by Kerry that does not include his demand.

As Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s most important political partner, Lieberman has enough sway to bring down the governing coalition, a scenario that would throw peace talks into disarray. Dovish opposition parties have said they would fill any void left by defecting hardliners, though it remains unclear whether their support would be enough.

Lieberman’s plan has been roundly rejected by Palestinia­ns, Israeli Arabs and even mainstream Israelis. It also faces many challenges under internatio­nal law. While there

“I didn’t come to Israel, Israel came to me ... They can’t take away my rights.

ABDUL RAHMAN HAJ YAHIYA

ARAB CITIZEN OF ISRAEL

is a precedent for citizens being swapped between countries following the Second World War, the only way for it to happen today would require a mutual agreement between two sovereign nations, an endorsemen­t from the internatio­nal community and the agreement of the citizens themselves, said Emmanuel Gross, a legal expert at Haifa University.

“You can’t draw a border that harms your own citizens and it can’t be done unilateral­ly,” Gross said.

Arab lawmaker Ahmad Tibi said the mere suggestion of such a plan reeked of racism and discrimina­tion. “Citizens are not chess pieces to be moved around at will and this just heightens our sense of estrangeme­nt from the state,” he said.

Mohammad al- Madani, a member of Abbas’ Fatah party, said that while the movement represents Palestinia­ns all over the world, Israeli Arabs were “a special case.”

Historic homeland

“They are citizens of Israel and stayed in their historical home land and no one has the right to change their reality,” he said. “The right wing Israeli wants to get rid of those people just because they are Arabs.”

Israeli President Shimon Peres has rejected the plan, as has Interior Minister Gideon Saar, a stalwart in the ruling Likud Party, and others in Israel’s national camp. Neither Netanyahu nor Ke rry has commented publicly on the plan.

 ?? PHOTOS: ARIEL SCHALIT/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? An Israeli Arab woman walks in the Arab town of Taybeh, central Israel, Thursday . A new proposal to hand some towns like Taybeh to a future Palestine in exchange for parts of the West Bank, made by Israel’s powerful and outspoken foreign minister, has...
PHOTOS: ARIEL SCHALIT/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS An Israeli Arab woman walks in the Arab town of Taybeh, central Israel, Thursday . A new proposal to hand some towns like Taybeh to a future Palestine in exchange for parts of the West Bank, made by Israel’s powerful and outspoken foreign minister, has...
 ??  ?? Israeli Arab girls hand out Muslim prayer books to passing cars in the main street in the Arab town of Taybeh, central Israel, while Abdul Rahman Haj Yahiya, 79, inset, sits in a coff ee shop in Taybeh, explaining that eight generation­s of his family...
Israeli Arab girls hand out Muslim prayer books to passing cars in the main street in the Arab town of Taybeh, central Israel, while Abdul Rahman Haj Yahiya, 79, inset, sits in a coff ee shop in Taybeh, explaining that eight generation­s of his family...
 ??  ??

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