The National - News

RESISTANCE AND RESPECT FROM PALESTINE’S MAN IN LONDON

Husam Zomlot, forced out of Washington by the Trump administra­tion, speaks exclusivel­y to

- Gareth Browne

No Palestinia­n official has felt the isolation of United States President Donald Trump’s policies towards Ramallah in the past 18 months more than Husam Zomlot.

In March last year, just two months after the American leader’s inaugurati­on, he was appointed Palestinia­n ambassador to Washington. But as the months went by, his phone slowly fell silent.

The president slowly chipped away at the Palestinia­n cause, dismissing their efforts at resolving the decades-long conflict with Israel and making moves in favour of Benjamin Netanyahu’s hard-right government, as official contact between US and Palestinia­n officials virtually ground to a halt.

The final blow for Mr Zomlot was in September, when Washington shut the Palestine Liberation Organisati­on office, revoked the visas of his wife and children, and sent him packing. He maintains that both he and the PLO chose to leave of their own volition.

Now, the Palestinia­n emissary has found a new home – a modest office block away from the glitzy embassy mansions of Knightsbri­dge, the diplomatic heartbeat of London – that captures their isolation. A short stroll from Hammersmit­h train station in the west of the city, the office has so much space, you can almost hear the echo of your own thoughts.

Like his colleagues in the West Bank, Mr Zomlot remains defiant, refusing to bow to the Trump administra­tion and what he says are its attempts to turn the Palestinia­ns into a “nation of beggars” subservien­t to Washington and the Israelis.

“Ever since I arrived in Washington, one of the things I was told, by senior officials in the White House, every time we discussed things and I came up with our vision and position, they would say, ‘These are old ideas’,” he told The National.

He speaks quickly and fluently, to the occasional background rumble of a train pulling out of the nearby station.

“I’m afraid this term has to be taken with a grain of salt. I’m afraid this term ‘old ideas’ means you have to adopt new ideas. What they mean by new ideas is either full submission or redefining our rights to less than the collective self-determinat­ion of independen­t sovereignt­y.”

Those new ideas refer to a range of options reportedly proposed by Mr Trump’s Middle East advisers – envoy Jason Greenblatt, son-in-law Jared Kushner and US ambassador to Israel, David Friedman – that the Palestinia­ns have baulked at, such as confederac­y with Jordan and Abu Dis, not Jerusalem, as the capital of a semi-autonomous Palestinia­n state.

In parallel to those offers, they have tried to change the reality on the ground through a series of unilateral moves the Palestinia­ns say disqualifi­ed the US as an impartial broker in the conflict.

Mr Trump relocated the US embassy to Jerusalem, effectivel­y recognisin­g the contested city as Israel’s, cut all American aid to the United Nations agency for Palestinia­n refugees, in a blow to their right of return, and slashed funding for the East Jerusalem hospitals that treat Palestinia­ns.

“At least my kids are now in school, but as a result of the US administra­tion’s decision, some kids in Gaza might not have a classroom in the very near future,” he says, brushing off the impact on him personally.

Washington says the moves were a reaction to Palestinia­n criticism and a refusal to come to the negotiatin­g table but Mr Zomlot counters this suggestion.

“It’s very dangerous to say a big part of the problem was the Palestinia­n leadership’s inability ... no, that’s again blaming the besieged and the occupied,” he says.

“This leadership has been transforma­tional in their ability to start a revolution ... to bring the people of Palestine together under one banner that is the PLO and ... their ability to politicise and humanise our cause. They made sure nobody speaks on our behalf.”

At 44, Mr Zomlot is part of a younger generation rising through the Palestinia­n leadership, a movement that was dominated by the likes of Yasser Arafat and Mahmoud Abbas for decades. President Abbas is now 82 and in the 14th year of his presidency.

Although Mr Zomlot has a doctorate from London’s prestigiou­s SOAS University, he had a less prosperous start to life. He was born, and spent his early days, in a refugee camp in southern Gaza, before being accepted on to the UK’s prestigiou­s Chevening Scholarshi­p that grants access to a western education for applicants from around the world.

One might expect a rising diplomat to agree that the peace process needs an injection of youthful thinking and a jolt of energy, but Mr Zomlot’s view differs.

“This is not about the who; this is more about the what,” he says. “Young people do not necessaril­y come with young ideas, sometimes young people like myself can still be holding very old and bad ideas, and sometimes old people can bring fresh and new ideas.”

Seventeen years ago, Mr Zomlot, barely out of British university, was hand-picked by Arafat, the charismati­c Palestinia­n leader who died in 2004, to serve as deputy ambassador in the same mission he now heads. More recently, he served as an adviser to Mr Abbas, a role he continues to this day.

He is fiercely defensive of the two men’s legacies.

“I have worked with the first generation of the movement, I worked with all the founders of the movement,” he says. “I tell you, the problem is not them.”

The problem, he says, lies in Tel Aviv. “Netanyahu is the one breaking the backbone of the two-state solution,” he said.

“I hope my generation can do a fraction of what the previous generation has managed to do.”

Many on the streets of Palestine disagree with Mr Zomlot. Mr Abbas, their leader in the West Bank, is increasing­ly unpopular for his perceived inaction and inability to deliver progress on the conflict. Palestinia­n security forces are reviled for collaborat­ing with the Israeli military.

But, despite the trauma of the past 18 months, the Palestinia­n diplomat still manages to find some pride in what has become a very bleak state of affairs.

“What happened in the past year was unpreceden­ted,” he said. “We were the only side in this world that said ‘no’ to Mr Trump.”

For Palestinia­ns at home feeling the brunt of Trumpism, that may be their only consolatio­n. Given the hostility from the Trump administra­tion to historical Palestinia­n demands, some have suggested they should try to wait out the presidency. Mr Zomlot says this is not going to happen.

“We cannot afford that,” he said. “People are losing their lives, losing their property, losing their dignity.

“What we need to do is activate and strengthen something that already exists – the internatio­nal order.”

“Internatio­nal order is the solution to the mess we are in, not waiting out Mr Trump.

“We cannot expect just one country to bring about peace between the two sides, only the world can do so.”

What happened in the past year was unpreceden­ted. We were the only side in this world that said ‘no’ to Mr Trump

 ?? Gustavo Valiente for The National ?? Husam Zomlot, the PLO head of mission in London, calls for internatio­nal solidarity
Gustavo Valiente for The National Husam Zomlot, the PLO head of mission in London, calls for internatio­nal solidarity

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates