The National - News

A passionate voice fated to oversee the Palestinia­n malaise

- Khaled Yacoub Oweis and James Haines-Young

Saeb Erekat, the secretary general of the Palestine Liberation Organisati­on who died yesterday, burst on to the internatio­nal media scene three decades ago on prime-time American news.

At the height of the First Intifada in 1989, ABC Nightline ran a series of debates on the conflict.

Host Ted Koppel, a veteran journalist and son of German Jews who fled Adolf Hitler, gave the Palestinia­ns a significan­t part of the three-hour series to explain their point of view.

Erekat, who was then in his mid-30s, was the youngest member of a Palestinia­n panel that debated with Israeli figures at a packed Henry Crown Symphony Hall in Jerusalem.

He was also, by far, the least composed.

Next to him were Haidar Abdel Shafi, the late Palestinia­n statesman – a model of decorum and eloquence – and Hanan Ashrawi, a savvy television communicat­or and his colleague until the end of his life.

It was a historic opportunit­y to address the US public directly and capitalise on the non-violence that marked the first Palestinia­n Intifada.

Abdel Shafi and Ms Ashrawi scored points with the sceptical audience, only to be undermined by the outbursts from Erekat, who came from the outskirts of Jerusalem.

The nerves he clearly felt during the debates followed him into his political career, but his first impression­s did not prevent him from becoming a fixture of on-and-off peace negotiatio­ns with Israel.

Nor did they stop him becoming – to many around the world at least – the face of those Palestinia­n negotiatio­ns.

His lack of composure did not hinder his rise to the top of the PLO and did not stop him being a stalwart voice calling clearly for a two-state solution and a viable, independen­t Palestinia­n nation.

This year, Erekat summed up the convoluted and complex Palestinia­n struggle for freedom in stark and simple terms.

“It’s our inalienabl­e, sacred, long overdue and internatio­nally recognised right to be free,” he told The National as he laid out the Palestinia­n rejection of

US President Donald Trump’s peace plan.

“Our right to self-determinat­ion has been systematic­ally denied by Israel, now with the support of the US.

“It is not news for us that the efforts of the Trump team are not in the direction of an independen­t, sovereign and contiguous state of Palestine, but towards that of normalisat­ion of the Israeli colonial occupation over the land and people of Palestine.”

Erekat was at the heart of the framework of deals that started the Palestinia­n peace process, starting as deputy to Abdel Shafi in the talks that led Yitzhak Rabin, Yasser Arafat and Bill

Clinton to meet at the White House in 1994 to sign the first Oslo Accords.

Abdel Shafi cautioned that the deals paid only lip service to Palestinia­n rights while making the PLO and the Palestinia­n Authority dependent on co-operation with Israel, but Erekat pushed on and led the Palestinia­n delegation from 1996.

He worked for years to further the path of dialogue, even at times when it seemed remote.

In the Palestine Papers, leaked documents mainly from his own office that chronicled the workings of the negotiatio­ns with Israel from the late 1990s until 2010, he came across as an affable, self-deprecatin­g negotiator.

Despite criticism from Palestinia­n colleagues that he was weak, he appeared to have recognised the power of Israel without ever being intimidate­d by it.

But the early momentum Erekat helped to create in the 1990s faded and entrenched positions, including his own, became harder to break.

In Palestinia­n politics, his career charted the course of the

PLO from armed group to political party, but also its course from radical leftist struggle to its contempora­ry moribund, sickly state.

A close ally of Arafat, Erekat clashed with current Palestinia­n president, Mahmoud Abbas, when he yielded to pressure to appoint a prime minister with real powers in 2003.

He ultimately kept his place after Arafat died a year later, and remained central to Palestinia­n politics.

But that placed Erekat in a leadership that many Palestinia­ns blame for failures to protect their rights or achieve peace.

That leadership was also accused of being nepotistic, corrupt and ageing.

While he was a knowledgea­ble and passionate champion of the Palestinia­n cause, he ultimately became part of an elite presiding over the Palestinia­n malaise, and passed away without seeing the national rights he had given so much of his life trying to obtain.

It’s our long overdue and internatio­nally recognised right to be free

SAEB EREKAT

PLO secretary general

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates