Israel’s Unabashed Role in the Syrian Refugee
CrisisBy Ramzy Baroud
September 17, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" -
When Zionist Haganah militias carried out
Operation Yiftach on 19 May, 1948, the aim was to drive Palestinians
in the northern Safad District outside the border of Israel, which
had declared its independence a mere five days earlier. The ethnic
cleansing of Safad and its many villages was not unique to that
area. In fact, it was the modus operandi of Zionist militias
throughout Palestine. Soon after Israel’s independence, and the
conquering of historic Palestine, the militias were joined together
to form the “Israel Defence Forces”.
Not all villages, however, were completely
depopulated. Some residents in villages like Qaytiyya, near the
River Jordan, remained in their homes. Living between two
tributaries of the Jordan — the Hasbani and Dan rivers — the
villagers hoped that normality would return to tranquil Qaytiyya
once the war subsided.
Their fate, however, was worse than that of those
who were forced out, or who fled for fear of what terrors the future
might hold. Israeli forces returned nearly a year later, rounded the
remaining villagers into large trucks, tortured many and dumped them
somewhere south of Safad. Little is known about what happened, but
many of those who survived ended up in Yarmouk refugee camp in
Syria.
Yarmouk was not established until 1957, and even
then it was not an “official” refugee camp. Many of its inhabitants
were squatters in Sahl Al-Yarmouk and other areas, before they were
brought to Shaghour Al-Basatin, near Ghouta. The area was renamed
Yarmouk.
Many of Yarmouk’s refugees originate from northern
Palestine, the Safad District and
villages like Qaytiyya, Al-Ja’ouneh and Khisas. They subsisted
in that region for nearly 67 years. Unable to return to Palestine,
yet hoping to do so, they named the streets of their camp, its
neighbourhoods, even its bakeries, pharmacies and schools, after the
villages from which they had been driven.
When the Syrian uprising-turned-civil-war began in
March 2011, many advocated that Palestinians in Syria should be
spared the conflict. The scars and awful memories of other regional
conflicts — the Jordan civil war, the Lebanese civil war, the Iraq
invasion of Kuwait and the US invasion of Iraq, wherein hundreds and
thousands of Palestinian civilians paid a heavy price — remained in
the hearts and minds of many. Calls for “hiyad” – neutrality – were
not heeded by the war’s multiple parties, and the Palestinian
leadership, incompetent and clustered in Ramallah, failed to assess
the seriousness of the situation, or provide any guidance, either
moral or political.
The results were horrific. Over 3,000 Palestinians
were killed, tens of thousands of Palestinian refugees fled Syria,
thousands more became internally displaced and the hopeless journey
away from the homeland continued on its horrific course.
Yarmouk used to have over 200,000 inhabitants,
most of whom are registered with the UN Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA);
the population was reduced to less than 20,000. Much of the camp is
in total ruins. Most of its residents who have neither starved to
death nor been killed in the war have fled to other parts of Syria,
Lebanon, Jordan, Turkey and Europe.
The most natural order of things would have been
the return of the refugees to Safad and villages like Qaytiyya. Yet,
few made such calls, and those demands
raised by Palestinians officials were dismissed by Israel as
non-starters. In fact while
countries like Lebanon have accepted 1.72 million refugees (one
in every five people in Lebanon is a Syrian refugee), Turkey 1.93
million, Jordan 629,000, Iraq 249,000, and Egypt 132,000, Israel has
made no offer to accept a single refugee.
Indeed, Israel, whose economy is the strongest in
the region, has been the most tight-fisted in terms of offering
shelter to Syrian refugees. This is a double sin considering that
even Syria’s Palestinian refugees, who were expelled from their own
homes in Palestine, were also left homeless for the second time.
Not surprisingly, there was no international
outrage directed at financially able Israel for blatantly shutting
its door in the face of desperate refugees, while bankrupt Greece
was rightly chastised for not doing enough to host hundreds of
thousands of refugees.
According to UN statistics,
by the end of August of this year, nearly 239,000 refugees, mostly
Syrians, landed on Greek islands seeking passage to mainland Europe.
Greece is not alone. Between January and August this year 114,000
landed in Italy (coming mostly from Libya), seeking safety. Around
the same time last year, almost as many refugees were recorded
seeking access to Europe.
Europe is both morally and politically accountable
for hosting and caring for these refugees, considering its
culpability in past Middle East wars and ongoing conflicts. Some
governments are doing exactly that, including, for example, those in
Germany and Sweden, while others, like Britain, have been utterly
oblivious of and downright callous towards refugees. Even so,
thousands of ordinary European citizens, as would any human being
with an ounce of empathy, are volunteering to help refugees in both
Eastern and Western Europe.
The same cannot be said of Israel, which has alone
ignited most of the Middle East conflicts in recent decades.
Instead, the debate in Israel continues to centre on demographic
threats, with rhetoric loaded with racial connotations about the
need to preserve a so-called Jewish identity. Strangely, few in the
media have picked up on that or found such a position particularly
egregious at the time of an unprecedented humanitarian crisis.
In
recent comments, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
rejected calls to shelter Syrian refugees, once more unleashing the
demographic rationale, which sees any non-Jews in Israel, be they
Africans, Syrians, or even the country’s original Palestinian
inhabitants, as a “demographic threat”.
“Israel is a very small state,” said Netanyahu on
6 September. “It has no geographic depth or demographic depth.”
When Israel was established on the ruins of
destroyed Palestine, Palestinian Jews were a small minority. It took
multiple campaigns of ethnic cleaning, which created the Palestinian
refugee problem in the first place, to create a Jewish majority in
the newly-founded state. Now, Palestinian Arabs are only a fifth of
Israel’s 8.3 million population, and yet, for many in Israel,
even such small numbers are a cause for alarm.
While the refugees of Qaytiyya, who became
refugees time and again, are still denied their
internationally-enshrined right of return as per United Nations
Resolution 194 of December 1948, Israel is allowed special status.
It is neither rebuked nor forced to repatriate Palestinian refugees,
and is now exempt from playing even a minor role in alleviating the
deteriorating refugee crisis in the region.
Greece, Hungry, Serbia, Macedonia, Britain, Italy
and other European countries, along with rich Arab Gulf countries,
must be pressured relentlessly to help Syrian refugees until they
can return home safely. Why, then, should Israel be spared this
necessary course of action? It must, even more forcefully than the
others, perhaps, be pressured to play a part in relieving the
refugee crisis, starting with the refugees of Qaytiyya whom the
Israelis expelled 67 years ago, and who are reliving that fate
today.
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 latest book is My Father Was
a Freedom Fighter: Gaza’s Untold Story (Pluto Press, London). His
website is:
www.ramzybaroud.net.