What's New about the Israeli Position on the
Palestinian Refugee Question
Summary and Comments BADIL Resource Center
14 October 1999
For Immediate Release
Recent statements by Israeli government members,
debates in the Knesset, and press reports by Israeli journalists have shed some light on
what will be the official Israeli starting position in the upcoming final status
negotiations on the Palestinian refugee question. (For a good summary, see also Aluf Benn,
political analyst in Ha'aretz newspaper, 12 October 99).
1. The Issue of Israeli Responsibility for the
Massive Eviction of Palestinians in 1948:
The Israeli government, especially its Labor and
Meretz ministers and supportive liberal intellectual circles, have launched a first trial
balloon to prepare the Israeli public for the fact, that Israel will have to accept some
responsibility for the Palestinian refugee problem in the course of the final status
negotiations. Prime Minister Barak's reference, in his recent Knesset speech (Oct. 4-99),
to regret - but not accept guilt and moral responsibility - for the suffering caused to
the Palestinian people; Education Minister Yossi Sarid's initiatives at reforming the
Israeli history curriculum (commemoration of the massacre of Kufr Qassem; new history
school books that correctly reflect the military strength of the Zionist forces and the
Israeli army in the war of 1948); and, Knesset debates about the need to publicly denounce
the massacres of Kufr Qassem and Deir Yassin - all these are part of the new Israeli
experiment aimed at preparing the public for the new official line. This new official
Israeli line by no means implies that the government and its negotiators will accept
direct and moral responsibility for the creation of the Palestinian refugee issue. Israel
will, however, be ready to recognize "objective" and "symbolic"
responsibility in form of a non-committal general statement of regret as part of a final
status agreement.
2. The Issue of the Palestinian Refugees' Right
of Return
The Israeli starting position will be a total
rejection of any refugee return to Israel's sovereign territory. The Israeli government
insists that this is one of its red lines in the final status negotiations. Based on
recent indications given by the prime minister, Israel may, however, relinquish its old
demand to limit refugee return to Palestinian territory in the West Bank and Gaza Strip.
This is not much of a compromise, because the absorptive capacity of these areas is
extremely limited. Current economic growth in the West Bank and Gaza Strip is barely able
to sustain the existing population at present growth-rates. Prospects for increased access
to labor markets and movement of goods with the long-delayed "safe passage"
between the two areas are slim, while the construction of a new Erez (Gaza)-style
checkpoint between Bethlehem and Jerusalem will further obstruct movement between the
southern and northern West Bank and limit economic growth.
3. The Issue of Refugee Compensation and
Rehabilitation
The Israeli position holds that most of the
refugees should be rehabilitated where they now reside - in the PA areas, in Jordan, in
Syria and in Lebanon. Since Israel rejects direct and moral responsibility for the
creation of the refugee issue, it also rejects accountability for the future settlement.
Refugee rehabilitation and compensation should become the task of a new international
body, in which Israel will, due to financial constraints, be no more than a symbolic
member. The new international body will be responsible for raising up to US $670 billion
for refugee rehabilitation and compensation and implementation. While Israel is not
planning on sharing the costs of refugee rehabilitation and compensation, it will try - as
part of the final status agreement with the PLO - to impose major conditions on the
operation of the international mechanism:
a) No to personal compensation to original property
owners; compensation must be paid as blocks sums to states, currently refugee host states,
and the PA;
b) A compensation agreement must be final and
extinguish further claims;
c) Israel must be able to influence the mechanism
for the allocation of funds, as a lever for political and economic pressure; and,
d) UNRWA must be dismantled and replaced by the new
international body. (This is because UNRWA's mandate is based on UN Resolution 194,
providing for the refugees right of return, and because of the strong Palestinian
involvement and sense of ownership in this international agency.)
In addition to trying to define the terms of
refugee rehabilitation and compensation, Israel already announced that it will be ready to
share the profits deriving from this huge international venture: Israeli companies will
offer their services to future rehabilitation projects, particularly in the Palestinian
areas of the West Bank and Gaza Strip
4. The Issue of Jewish Compensation Claims
against Arab States:
Although many Israeli politicians and academics
continue to raise the issue of Jewish counter claims in public discussions about
Palestinian refugee compensation, it appears that the Israeli government and its
negotiators have dropped the idea of raising Jewish claims against Arab states in the
framework of the final status negotiations with the PLO. Israeli officials may be heeding
the advice of legal experts who have frequently warned that raising Jewish claims against
third parties in the official Israeli-Palestinian negotiations would open the pandora box
of Palestinian and Arab counter claims, and might not even be supported by the
organizations representing the claims of Iraqi and North African Jews themselves. We thus
witness a repetition of the experience of the 1978 Camp David Agreement, in which Israel
also abstained from presenting Jewish claims against Egypt for similar reasons.
In brief, Israel's starting position on the
Palestinian refugee question offers the following:
- a non-committal statement of regret;
- the international community is expected to
finance refugee rehabilitation and compensation;
- Israel will not share the costs, but some of the
profits deriving from the international effort.
The Israeli position completely neglects
international law and practice, including the principle of refugee choice, which have
become standard guidelines for tackling refugee problems world wide. It by-passes the body
of UN Resolutions passed in particular for the Palestinian case. The current Israeli stand
is thus very much in accordance with the informal understandings reached between Yossi
Beilin/Israel and Abu Mazen/PLO already in 1995. Although Palestinian officials, including
Abu Mazen himself, have since denied the existence of a secret agreement, Israel continues
to push for a solution of the refugee question along these lines. It is encouraged to do
so by foreign governments, the United States, Sweden, a.o., who continue to express their
support of the so-called Beilin-Abu Mazen agreement.
Of course the Israeli leadership is worried
about the fact that the PLO might not be willing to make these enormous concessions.
However, Israel argues, without these concessions a final status agreement with the
Palestinians will not be possible. PLO Chairman Arafat will be asked to deliver, and five
million refugees are to silently fall in line.
For more information contact: BADIL Resource
Center, PO Box 728, Bethlehem, Palestine; tel/fax, 274-7346 or 277-7086; email, info@badil.org. |