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Unified
Palestinian delegation to the 2007 World
Social Forum, Nairobi, Kenya
A broad and
unified delegation will present the agenda
of Palestinian civil society at the first
global World Social Forum to be held on the
African continent between 20 and 25 January
2007, namely, building the global Campaign
for Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS)
against Israel until it ends its
apartheid-like regime of discrimination,
occupation and colonization, and respects
the right of return of Palestinian refugees
and IDPs.
The some 30
members-strong delegation represents all
major Palestinian community and NGO networks
operating in the occupied Palestinian
territory, Israel and Lebanon. It
coordinates with other Arab NGO networks,
the International Coordinating Network on
Palestine (ICNP), and a variety of social
movements from all continents, in particular
those from South Africa, whose experience in
the struggle against Apartheid and ongoing
social injustice continues to provide
inspiration for the Palestinian people.
WSF organizers
in Nairobi, Kenya, expect some 100,000
delegates, mainly from the southern
hemisphere, who will come to tackle
strategies for confronting war, oppression
and exploitation by the wealthy "north" led
by the United States and Europe, which
continue to extract a heavy price from the
large majority of the world's countries and
people, including economic debt, political
dependency, de-development and lack of
social security, health and education.
The Palestinian
delegation will contribute to building the
global Israel Boycott, Divestment and
Sanctions Campaign through workshops,
seminars and exhibits and based on its joint
political statement and call to action to
the 2007 World Social Forum:
Political Statement and
Call to Action on Palestine
Forty years
after Israel's occupation of Gaza and the
West Bank, including east Jerusalem, and
almost 60 years after the Palestinian Nakba
(catastrophe) of 1948, the Palestinian
people is at a critical juncture. Global
solidarity and support will be decisive in
enabling the Palestinian people’s struggle
for freedom, justice and durable peace to
prevail.
To date,
official diplomacy has failed in enforcing
scores of UN resolutions and relevant
principles of international law aimed at
ending Israel's occupation, colonization,
displacement and dispossession of the
Palestinian people. US-led Middle East
diplomacy, favoring military intervention
and unilateralism over respect for
international law, is also directly
implicated in wars and occupation in Iraq
and Lebanon, complicit with Israel's
colonial regime in Palestine, and actively
encouraging division and civil war in the
region. Rather than being part of the
solution, the US and the entire
Quartet--including the EU--have become part
of the problem in the region.
After intense efforts,
transparent and democratic parliamentary
elections were held in the Occupied
Palestinian Territory (OPT) with the fervent
backing of the US and the EU, both of which
rejected the election results that brought
Hamas to “power,” an outcome that was not in
line with their plans for the region,
particularly their attempt to “convince” the
Palestinians to accept limited self-rule in
the OPT under the overall control of Israeli
military authorities. Subsequently, Israel,
the US and most European powers imposed a
severe, inhumane regime of sanctions against
Palestinians under occupation. In the
words of the UN Special Rapporteur, Prof.
John Dugard, sanctions were imposed on the
occupied rather than the occupier, the first
time an occupied people has been so treated.
Poverty, unemployment,
de-development, and destabilization of vital
institutions providing health care,
education and social services were among the
immediate results of this merciless
blockade. This, coupled with direct foreign
intervention, encouraged dispute in the
Palestinian political system, undermining
the ability for effective coping and
eventually triggering open conflict between
the two leading Palestinian political
parties.
In the meanwhile, Israel
has escalated with unprecedented impunity
its colonial siege of Palestinian
Bantustans; killing of Palestinian
civilians, at least a third of whom are
children; confiscation of Palestinian land
and water resources; construction of the
apartheid Wall, condemned as illegal by the
International Court of Justice in 2004; and
wanton destruction of Palestinian
agricultural lands, infrastructure and
entire civilian neighborhoods. Furthermore,
in 2006, the Israeli government
issued four times more tenders for housing
units--in colonies built on occupied
Palestinian land--than in 2005.
The recent massacre of
defenceless civilians in Beit Hanoun is only
the latest episode in this series of war
crimes committed by the Israeli occupation
force without accountability or censure from
the world. By preventing Archbishop Desmond
Tutu and the UN investigative commission
headed by him from entering the Gaza Strip,
Israel, with ample complicity from the West,
is repeating the cover-up it got away with
after its atrocities in the Jenin refugee
camp in 2002. This time, again, world
governments chose to turn their heads
elsewhere, giving Israel the green light to
continue with its criminal policies whose
main goal is to instigate a slow process of
ethnic cleansing of the OPT, which would
achieve its historic objective of having a
“land without a people.”
In parallel,
Israel’s recent, widely acknowledged defeat
in Lebanon has only pushed it further to the
right, to the extent that an openly
fascist party like Avigdor Lieberman’s is
now part of the government. Political
disenfranchisement of Palestinians inside
Israel has deepened, and racial
discrimination against them in all vital
domains--family reunification, education,
health, land ownership and job
opportunities--has increased. Home
demolitions, crop destruction and forced
displacement of entire communities, mainly
in the Naqab (Negev), have become the norm
in Israel’s treatment of its own Palestinian
citizens.
Since the signature of
the Oslo accords in 1993, many years of
“peace-making” that ignored the basic
requirements of justice have passed in vain,
only helping the occupying power to
literally cement its hold on the occupied
land. Still, Palestinian civil society has
not lost hope in achieving a just peace
based on international law and universal
human rights, most primary among them the
right to full equality of all humans
regardless of religion or ethnicity.
Currently, as in past decades, the most
fundamental impediments preventing such a
comprehensive and lasting peace from being
realized remain Israel’s continued
occupation and colonization of Arab lands;
its denial of Palestinian refugee rights;
its persistent expulsion policies; and its
system of racial discrimination against its
own indigenous Palestinian citizens.
Palestinian civil society representatives
strongly believe that, without applying
direct, effective and consistent pressure on
Israel to end its three-tiered oppression of
the Palestinian people, the international
community will not genuinely contribute to
ending this age-old conflict and to bringing
about a just and enduring peace to the
entire region.
CALL TO ACTION
Based on the above,
Palestinian civil society overwhelmingly
advocates Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions
(or BDS) against Israel, similar to the
international community’s measures against
apartheid South Africa in the past. Consumer
boycotts of Israeli products; boycott of
Israeli academic, athletic and cultural
events and institutions complicit in human
rights abuses; divestment from Israeli
companies, as well as international
corporations involved in perpetuating
injustice; and pressuring governments to
impose sanctions on Israel are all examples
of effective, morally sound, non-violent
measures that ought to be initiated and
maintained until Israel meets its obligation
to recognize the Palestinian people’s
inalienable right to self-determination and
fully complies with the precepts of
international law by:
1. Ending its occupation
and colonization of all Arab lands occupied
in 1967 and dismantling the Wall;
2. Ending its system of
racial discrimination and recognizing the
fundamental rights of the Arab-Palestinian
citizens of Israel, including their right to
full equality; and
3. Recognizing the right
of Palestinian refugees, including
Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs), to
return to their homes and properties, as
stipulated in UNGA resolution 194.
International civil
society, in close coordination with
Palestinian and Arab civil society, has a
critical role to play in bringing about
justice and peace to the Middle East. By
adopting diverse, sustainable, and
context-sensitive, yet consistent, forms of
BDS actions against Israel in various
fields, conscientious organizations and
individuals can shoulder their moral
responsibility to end the Israeli system of
colonialism and racial discrimination,
providing a genuine opportunity for
reconciliation and coexistence for everyone
in the region, based on equality and mutual
respect for international law and
fundamental human rights.
The Palestinian
Delegation to the WSF-2007, Nairobi:
- Palestinian NGO Network
(PNGO)
- Ittijah – Union of Arab
Community Based Organizations
- Palestinian NGO Forum,
Lebanon
- Acting Steering
Committee, Palestinian BDS Campaign
- OPGAI-Occupied
Palestine and Syrian Golan Heights Advocacy
Initiative
- The Grassroots
Palestinian Anti-Apartheid Wall Campaign
- APN-Arab Group
for the Protection of Nature
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For phone
numbers of the Palestinian delegation in
Nairobi, please contact:
info@badil.org,
media@badil.org,
or:
rania@pngo.net
For the 2005
Palestinian Civil Society BDS Call see:
www.bds-palestine.net |