The
Real Reasons behind the Palestinian Hunger
Strike
By Ramzy
Baroud
May 03,
2017 "Information
Clearing House"
-
Gaza is the
world’s largest open air prison.
The West Bank is a prison, too,
segmented into
various wards, known as areas A, B and C. In
fact, all Palestinians are subjected to varied
degrees of military restrictions. At some level,
they are all prisoners.
East Jerusalem is
cut off from the West Bank,
and those in the West Bank are separated from
one another.
Palestinians in Israel are treated slightly
better than their brethren in the Occupied
Territories, but subsist in degrading conditions
compared to the first-class status given to
Israeli Jews, as per the virtue of their
ethnicity alone.
Palestinians ‘lucky’ enough to escape the
handcuffs and shackles are still trapped in
different ways.
Palestinian refugees in Lebanon’s
Ein el-Hilweh,
like millions of Palestinian refugees in
‘shattat’ (Diaspora), are prisoners in refugee
camps, carrying precarious, meaningless
identification, cannot travel and are denied
access to work. They languish in refugee camps,
waiting for life to move forward, however
slightly – as their fathers and grandfathers
have done before them for nearly seventy years.
This is
why the issue of prisoners is a very sensitive
one for Palestinians. It is a real and
metaphorical representation of all that
Palestinians have in common.
The
protests igniting
across the Occupied Territories to support 1,500
hunger strikers are not merely an act of
‘solidarity’ with the incarcerated and abused
men and women who are demanding improvements to
their conditions.
Sadly,
prison is the most obvious fact of Palestinian
life; it is the status quo; the everyday
reality.
The
prisoners held captive in Israeli jails are a
depiction of the life of every Palestinian,
trapped behind walls, checkpoints, in refugee
camps, in Gaza, in cantons in the West Bank,
segregated Jerusalem, waiting to be let in,
waiting to be let out. Simply waiting.
There
are 6,500 prisoners in Israeli jails. This
number includes hundreds of children, women,
elected officials, journalists and
administrative detainees, who are held with no
charges, no due process. But these numbers
hardly convey the reality that has transpired
under Israeli occupation since 1967.
According to prisoners’ rights group,
‘Addameer’, more than 800,000 Palestinians have
been imprisoned under military rule since Israel
commenced its occupation of Palestinian
territories in June 1967.
That is
40 percent of the entire male population of the
Occupied Territories.
Israeli
jails are prisons within larger prisons. In
times of protests and upheaval, especially
during the uprisings of 1987-1993 and 2000-2005,
hundreds of thousands of Palestinians were
subjected to prolonged military curfews,
sometimes lasting weeks, even months.
Under
military curfews, people are not allowed to
leave their homes, with little or no breaks to
even purchase food.
Not a
single Palestinian who has lived (or is still
living) through such conditions is alien to the
experience of imprisonment.
But
some Palestinians in that large prison have been
granted VIP cards. They are deemed the ‘moderate
Palestinians’, thus granted special permits from
the Israeli military to leave the Palestinian
prison and return as they please.
While former Palestinian leaders Yasser Arafat
was
holed up in his
office in Ramallah for years, until his death in
November 2004, current Palestinian Authority
President Mahmoud Abbas is free to travel.
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While
Israel can, at times, be critical of Abbas, he
rarely deviates far from the acceptable limits
set by the Israeli government.
This is
why Abbas is free and Fatah leader, Marwan
Barghouti, (along with thousands of others) is
jailed.
The
current prisoners’ hunger strike began on April
17, in commemoration of ‘Prisoner Day’ in
Palestine.
On the eighth day of the strike, as the health
of Marwan Barghouti
deteriorated,
Abbas was in Kuwait meeting a group of
lavishly dressed Arab singers.
The
reports, published in ‘Safa News Agency’ and
elsewhere, generated much attention on social
media. The tragedy of the dual Palestinian
reality is an inescapable fact.
Barghouti is far more popular among supporters
of Fatah, one of the two largest Palestinian
political movements. In fact, he is the
most
popular leader
amongst Palestinians, regardless of their
ideological or political stances.
If the
PA truly cared about prisoners and the
well-being of Fatah’s most popular leader, Abbas
would have busied himself forging a strategy to
galvanize the energy of the hungry prisoners,
and millions of his people who rallied in their
support.
But
mass mobilization has always scared Abbas and
his Authority. It is too dangerous for him,
because popular action often challenges the
established status quo, and could hinder his
Israeli-sanctioned rule over occupied
Palestinians.
While
Palestinian media is ignoring the rift within
Fatah, Israeli media is exploiting it, placing
it within the larger political context.
Abbas
is scheduled to meet US President Donald Trump
on May 3.
He wants to leave a good impression on the
impulsive president, especially as Trump is
decreasing foreign aid worldwide, but
increasing US assistance to the PA.
That alone should be enough to understand the US
administration’s view of Abbas and its
appreciation of the role of his Authority in
ensuring Israel’s security and in preserving the
status quo.
But not
all Fatah supporters are happy with Abbas’
subservience. The youth of the Movement want to
reassert a strong Palestinian position through
mobilizing the people; Abbas wants to keep
things quiet.
Amos Harel argued in ‘Haaretz’
that the hunger strike, called for by Barghouti
himself, was the latter’s attempt at challenging
Abbas and “rain(ing) on Trump’s peace plan.”
However, Trump has no plan. He is giving Israeli
Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, carte
blanche to do as he pleases. His solution is:
one state, two states, whichever ‘both parties
like.’ But both sides are far from being equal
powers. Israel has nuclear capabilities and a
massive army, while Abbas needs permission to
leave the Occupied West Bank.
In this
unequal reality, only Israel decides the fate of
Palestinians.
On his
recent visit to the US, Netanyahu articulated
his future vision.
“Israel
must retain the overriding security control over
the entire area west of the Jordan River,” he
said.
Writing in the ‘Nation’, Professor
Rashid Khalidi
expounded the true meaning of Netanyahu’s
statement.
By
uttering these words, “Netanyahu proclaimed a
permanent regime of occupation and colonization,
ruling out a sovereign independent Palestinian
state, whatever fiction of ‘statehood’ or
‘autonomy’ are dreamed up to conceal this brutal
reality,” he wrote.
“Trump’s subsequent silence amounts to the
blessing of the US government for this grotesque
vision of enduring subjugation and dispossession
for the Palestinians.”
Why
then, should Palestinians be quiet?
Their
silence can only contribute to this gross
reality, the painful present circumstances,
where Palestinians are perpetually imprisoned
under an enduring Occupation, while their
‘leadership’ receives both a nod of approval
from Israel and accolades and more funds from
Washington.
It is
under this backdrop that the hunger strike
becomes far more urgent than the need to improve
the conditions of incarcerated Palestinians.
It is a
revolt within Fatah against their disengaged
leadership, and a frantic attempt by all
Palestinians to demonstrate their ability to
destabilize the Israeli-American-PA matrix of
control that has extended for many years.
“Rights are not bestowed by an oppressor,”
wrote Marwan Barghouti
from his jail on the first day of the hunger
strike.
In
truth, his message was directed at Abbas and his
cronies, as much as it was directed at Israel.
–
Dr. Ramzy Baroud has been writing about the
Middle East for over 20 years. He is an
internationally-syndicated columnist, a media
consultant, an author of several books and the
founder of PalestineChronicle.com. His books
include “Searching Jenin”, “The Second
Palestinian Intifada” and his latest “My Father
Was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza’s Untold Story”. His
website is
www.ramzybaroud.net.
The
views expressed in this article are solely those
of the author and do not necessarily reflect the
opinions of Information Clearing House.