Noot 25/Astrid Essed weer ten strijde tegen NOS Teletekst

[25]

NOS

LEEFGEBIED GAZANEN TOT EEN DERDE TERUGGEBRACHT

https://nos.nl/collectie/13959/artikel/2507785-leefgebied-gazanen-tot-een-derde-teruggebracht

VN-waarnemers zeggen dat het gebied waarvoor een Israëlisch evacuatiebevel geldt nu twee derde van de Gazastrook uitmaakt, ofwel 246 vierkante kilometer. De plaatsen waar de inwoners van Gaza naartoe kunnen vluchten beslaan daardoor nog maar een derde van hun leefgebied van voor de oorlog met Israël.

De meeste inwoners zijn nu samengedrongen in het zuidelijke deel van de Gazastrook. Meer dan de helft van de 2,3 miljoen Gazanen verblijft in de stad Rafah, aan de grens met Egypte, en het gebied eromheen.

Guido Versloot werkt voor het Rode Kruis in het zuiden van Gaza als fysiotherapeut in het European Gaza Hospital in Khan Younis. Woordvoerder Danielle Brouwer van de hulporganisatie sprak hem vorige week voor het laatst over de situatie.

“Hij vertelde dat er steeds meer zware regenval in Gaza is. Mensen wonen in tenten rondom het ziekenhuis, omdat het daar relatief veilig is. Maar die tenten lopen onder water, waardoor mensen in het ziekenhuis onderdak zoeken.”

Operaties zonder verdoving

Het vervoeren van hulpgoederen is een grote uitdaging. Volgens fysiotherapeut Versloot raakt de voorraad medicijnen en verdovingsmiddelen op. Hij vreest dat de hulpverleners binnenkort noodgedwongen operaties zonder verdoving moeten uitvoeren. “Er zijn veel meer hulpgoederen nodig in Gaza,” zegt Brouwer.

Een deel van een ander ziekenhuis in het zuiden van Gaza, het Al-Amal ziekenhuis, is gisteren geëvacueerd, vertelt ze. “Afgelopen weekend zijn daar drie medewerkers van de Rode Kruis om het leven gekomen.”

8000 mensen verlieten het ziekenhuis omdat het gebied onveilig was door bombardementen en beschietingen. Er wordt nog wel zorg verleend in het ziekenhuis, ouderen en zieke mensen kunnen er blijven.

Van 300 naar 1000 tenten

Het Rode Kruis bouwde tenten als tijdelijk onderdak voor mensen bij Khan Younis. Er staan er nu 300 tenten, dat worden er 1000. Momenteel is er ruimte voor 1500 mensen. De extra tenten zouden onderdak moeten bieden aan nog eens 6000 mensen.

Israël zegt dat het alleen doelen van Hamas aanvalt. Het stelt Hamas verantwoordelijk voor de burgerslachtoffers, omdat de organisatie vanuit bewoond gebied tegen Israël vecht.

Bij de oorlog in Gaza zijn volgens de Palestijnse autoriteiten meer dan 27.000 mensen omgekomen. De autoriteiten maken geen onderscheid tussen burgers en Hamasstrijders die tegen Israël vechten. Twee derde van de doden zouden vrouwen en kinderen zijn.

EINDE

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[26]

AL JAZEERA

ISRAEL’S WAR ON GAZA LIVE:

SNIPERS GUN DOWN CIVILIANS OUTSIDE HOSPITAL

9 FEBRUARY 2024

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/liveblog/2024/2/9/israels-war-on-gaza-live-fear-in-rafah-as-israel-prepares-ground-attack#:~:text=Gaza%20death%20toll%20rises%20to,67%2C459%20Palestinians%20have%20been%20wounded.
  • Israeli snipers in Khan Younis kill at least 21 people outside of Nasser Hospital with medical staff also being targeted. Some 107 Palestinians were killed and 142 injured in the past 24 hours.
  • US President Joe Biden calls Israel’s attack on Gaza “over the top” and says he continues to work “tirelessly” for an extended “pause in fighting”.
  • UN chief Antonio Guterres says half of Gaza’s 2.3 million population “is now crammed into Rafah with nowhere to go”, warning the displaced “have no homes” and “no hope”.
  • At least 27,947 people have been killed and 67,459 wounded in Israeli attacks on Gaza since October 7. The death toll in Israel from the October 7 Hamas attacks stands at 1,139.

[27]

Although Israel says it strives to avoid civilian casualties, including issuing evacuation orders, more than 11,500 under-18s have been killed according to Palestinian health officials”
BBCINJURED, HUNGRY AND ALONE-THE GAZANCHILDREN ORPHANED BY WAR31 JANUARY 2024

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-68141039

Born amid the horrors of the war in Gaza, the month-old baby girl lying in an incubator has never known a parent’s embrace.

She was delivered by Caesarean section after her mother, Hanna, was crushed in an Israeli air strike. Hanna did not live to name her daughter.

“We just call her the daughter of Hanna Abu Amsha,” says nurse Warda al-Awawda, who is caring for the tiny newborn at the al-Aqsa Hospital in Deir al-Balah in central Gaza.

Warning: This piece contains graphic descriptions which some may find upsetting.

In the chaos caused by the ongoing fighting and with entire families almost wiped out, medics and rescuers often struggle to find carers for bereaved children.

“We have lost contact with her family,” the nurse tells us. “None of her relatives have shown up and we don’t know what happened to her father.”

Children, who make up nearly half of Gaza’s population of 2.3 million, have had their lives shattered by the brutal war.

Although Israel says it strives to avoid civilian casualties, including issuing evacuation orders, more than 11,500 under-18s have been killed according to Palestinian health officials. Even more have injuries, many of them life-changing.

It is hard to get accurate figures but according to a recent report from Euro-Mediterranean Human Rights Monitor, a non-profit group, more than 24,000 children have also lost one or both parents.

Ibrahim Abu Mouss, just 10 years old, suffered severe leg and stomach injuries when a missile hit his home. But his tears are for his dead mum, grandfather and sister.

“They kept telling me they were being treated upstairs in the hospital,” says Ibrahim as his father clutches his hand.

“But I found out the truth when I saw photos on my dad’s phone. I cried so much that I hurt all over.”

The cousins of the Hussein family used to play together but now they sit solemnly by the sandy graves where some of their relatives are buried by a school-turned-shelter in central Gaza. Each has lost one or both parents.

“The missile fell on my mum’s lap and her body was torn into pieces. For days we were taking her body parts from the rubble of the house,” says Abed Hussein, who lived in al-Bureij refugee camp.

“When they said that my brother, my uncle and my whole family were killed I felt like my heart was bleeding with fire.”

With dark bags around his eyes, Abed stays awake at night frightened by the sounds of Israeli shelling and feeling alone.

“When my mum and dad were alive, I used to sleep but after they were killed, I can’t sleep any more. I used to sleep next to my dad,” he explains.

Abed and his two surviving siblings are being looked after by his grandmother but everyday life is very hard.

“There’s no food or water,” he says. “I have a stomach ache from drinking sea water.”

Kinza Hussein’s father was killed trying to fetch flour to make bread. She is haunted by the image of his corpse, brought home for burial after he was killed by a missile.

“He had no eyes, and his tongue was cut,” she remembers.

“All we want is for the war to be over,” she says. “Everything is sad.”

Nearly everyone in Gaza now relies on aid handouts for the basics of life. According to UN figures, some 1.7 million people have been displaced, with many forced to move repeatedly in search of safety.

But the UN’s children’s agency, Unicef, says its biggest concern is for an estimated 19,000 children who are orphaned or have ended up alone with no adult to look after them.

“Many of these children have been found under the rubble or have lost their parents in the bombing of their home,” Jonathan Crickx, chief of communications for Unicef Palestine, tells me from Rafah in southern Gaza. Others have been found at Israeli checkpoints, hospitals and on the streets.

“The youngest ones very often cannot say their name and even the older ones are usually in shock so it can be extremely difficult to identify them and potentially regroup them with their extended family.”

Even when relatives can be found, they are not always well placed to help care for bereaved children.

“Let’s keep in mind they are often also in a very dire situation,” Mr Crickx says.

“They may have their own children to take care of and it can be difficult, if not impossible, for them to take care of these unaccompanied and separated children.”

Since the war started, a non-profit organisation, SOS Children’s Villages, which works locally with Unicef, says it has been working to take in 55 such children, all aged under 10. It has employed additional specialist staff in Rafah to give psychological help.

A senior SOS staff member tells me about a four-year-old who had been left at a checkpoint. She was brought in with selective mutism, an anxiety disorder which left her unable to speak about what had happened to her and her family, but is now making progress after being welcomed with gifts and playing with other children she lives with.

Unicef believes that nearly all children in Gaza are now in need of mental health support.

With their lives shattered, even when there is a lasting ceasefire, many will be left with terrible losses that they will struggle to overcome.

END

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[28]

MAIL ASTRID ESSED AAN NOS TELETEKST/”UW BERICHTGEVING DD

15 JANUARI 2024/”SPELER ISRAEL OPGEPAKT IN TURKIJE”

[29]

NOS TELETEKST

NETANYAHU VERWERPT HAMAS VOORSTEL

https://teletekst-data.nos.nl/webplus?p=125

Zoals verwacht gaat Israel niet akkoord met het voorstel

van Hamas voor een staakt-het-vuren.

Premier Netanyahu zei dat op een persconferentie in

Jeruzalem.

Hamas had een staakt-het-vuren in drie fases voorgesteld waarbij

de gijzelaars vrij zouden komen net als Palestijnse gevangenen.

Ook zou Israel uit Gaza moeten vertrekken.

Netanyahu noemde de eisen van Hamas waanzinnig.

Volgens Netanyahu gaat de oorlog door tot Israel de totale

overwinning heeft behaald.

Hij herhaalde zijn doelen: het ontmantelen van Hamas en de

vrijlating van alle gijzelaars.

De overwinning ligt binnen handbereik, zei Netanyahu.

EINDE NOS TELETEKSTBERICHT

ORIGINEEL NOS TELETEKST BERICHT

NOS TELETEKST

NETANYAHU VERWERPT HAMAS VOORSTEL

https://teletekst-data.nos.nl/webplus?p=125
Netanyahu verwerpt Hamas-voorstel   Zoals verwacht gaat Israël niet akkoord met het voorstel van Hamas voor een staakt-het-vuren.Premier Netanyahu zei dat op een persconferentie in Jeruzalem. Hamas had een staakt-het-vuren in drie fases voorgesteld waarbij de gijzelaars vrij zouden komen net als Palestijnse gevangenen.Ook zou Israël uit Gaza moeten vertrekken.Netanyahu noemde de eisen van Hamas waanzinnig. Volgens Netanyahu gaat de oorlog door tot Israël de totale overwinning heeft behaald.Hij herhaalde zijn doelen:het ontmantelen van Hamas en de vrijlating van alle gijzelaars.De overwinning ligt binnen handbereik,zei Netanyahu.  nieuws buitenland binnenland sport

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[30]


NU.NL

NETANYAHU KONDIGT OP VALREEP MEEST RECHTSE

ISRAELISCHE REGERING OOIT AAN

22 DECEMBER 2022

https://www.nu.nl/buitenland/6243591/netanyahu-kondigt-op-valreep-meest-rechtse-israelische-regering-ooit-aan.html

De Israëlische oud-premier Benjamin Netanyahu heeft een nieuwe, ultrarechtse regering gevormd. Het wordt de meest rechtse regering in de geschiedenis van het land. Netanyahu’s conservatieve partij Likud gaat regeren met religieus-nationalistische partners.

De deadline verliep woensdagavond, maar vlak daarvoor stelde Netanyahu president Isaac Herzog ervan op de hoogte dat hij eruit was met zijn coalitiepartners.

Likud won de parlementsverkiezingen van 1 november. De partij sleepte 32 zetels binnen. Dat was het beste resultaat in de partijgeschiedenis, maar onvoldoende om zelfstandig te regeren. Als grootste partij kreeg Likud wel het mandaat om als eerste te proberen een regering te vormen.

Dat mandaat verliep eigenlijk begin december, maar Netanyahu kreeg van president Herzog tien dagen extra, tot 22 december middernacht.

Ultra-orthodoxe partijen zijn voor annexatie en tegen gelijke rechten

Met de steun van de ultra-orthodoxe partijen kan de nieuwe regering rekenen op 64 van de 120 zetels in het parlement. Wanneer de nieuwe regering wordt beëdigd en hoe de ministersposten zijn verdeeld is nog niet bekend. Naar verwachting zullen de leiders van de ultra-orthodoxe partijen een plek in het kabinet krijgen.

Zij hebben zich in het verleden uitgesproken voor onder meer annexatie van de door Israël bezette Westelijke Jordaanoever. Ook spraken ze zich uit voor ruimere bevoegdheden voor het leger om geweld te gebruiken en tegen gelijke rechten voor vrouwen en de lhbtiq+-gemeenschap.

Netanyahu (73) was van 1996 tot 1999 al premier van Israël en van 2009 tot 2021 opnieuw.

EINDE BERICHT

BBC

ISRAEL’S MOST RIGHT-WING GOVERNMENT AGREED UNDER 

BENJAMIN NETANYAHU

22 DECEMBER 2022

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-63942616

A new government seen as the most right-wing in Israel’s history has been agreed, sealing Benjamin Netanyahu’s return to power.

Mr Netanyahu, who won elections in November, is set to serve an historic sixth term as prime minster.

His coalition contains far-right parties, including one whose leader was once convicted of anti-Arab racism.

Palestinians fear the new government will also strengthen Israel’s hold on the occupied West Bank.

“I have managed [to form a government],” Mr Netanyahu tweeted, just minutes before a midnight local time (22:00 GMT) deadline set by the Israeli President, Isaac Herzog.

It will take over from the outgoing centre-left caretaker government when it is sworn in, which is expected to happen next week.

Mr Netanyahu’s coalition partners reject the idea of a two-state solution to the Israel-Palestinian conflict – the internationally backed formula for peace which envisages an independent Palestinian state in the West Bank alongside Israel, with Jerusalem as their shared capital.

The leader of the Religious Zionism party, which in alliance with two other far-right parties won the third largest number of seats in the knesset (parliament), wants to see Israel annex the West Bank and has been given wide powers over its activities there.

Israel occupied the West Bank, East Jerusalem and the Gaza Strip in the 1967 war. More than 600,000 Jewish settlers live in East Jerusalem and the West Bank. The settlements they live in are considered illegal under international law, though Israel disputes this. Israel pulled its settlers and troops out of the Gaza Strip in 2005.

Israeli opposition politicians, as well as its attorney general, have warned that reforms planned by the incoming government – including giving MPs the right to overrule Supreme Court decisions – threaten to undermine Israeli democracy.

Coalition partners have also proposed legal reforms which could end Mr Netanyahu’s ongoing trial on charges of bribery, fraud and breach of trust. Mr Netanyahu denies any wrongdoing.

Israeli opposition and civil rights groups have expressed particular alarm at the inclusion of the far-right in the new government.

Otzma Yehudit (Jewish Power) party leader Itamar Ben-Gvir is known for his anti-Arab comments and has called for the relaxation of rules on when security forces can open fire in the face of threats. Once convicted of incitement to racism and supporting a terror organisation, he is set to become national security minister with authority over the police in Israel and the West Bank.

The other far-right partner in government, Avi Maoz of the anti-LGBT Noam party, has called for Jerusalem’s Gay Pride event to be banned, disapproves of equal opportunities for women in the military, and wants to limit Jewish immigration to Israel to those defined as such according to Jewish religious law.

Mr Netanyahu has accused critics of fearmongering and has vowed to preserve the status quo.

“I’ll have two hands firmly on the steering wheel,” he told US broadcaster NPR last week. “I won’t let anybody do anything to LGBT or to deny our Arab citizens their rights or anything like that, it just won’t happen. And the test of time will prove that.”

END

AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL

ISRAEL’S APARTHEID AGAINST PALESTINIANS”A CRUEL 

SYSTEM OF DOMINATION AND A CRIME AGAINST HUMANITY

1 FEBRUARI 2022

Israeli authorities must be held accountable for committing the crime of apartheid against Palestinians, Amnesty International said today in a damning new report. The investigation details how Israel enforces a system of oppression and domination against the Palestinian people wherever it has control over their rights. This includes Palestinians living in Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territories (OPT), as well as displaced refugees in other countries.

The comprehensive reportIsrael’s Apartheid against Palestinians: Cruel System of Domination and Crime against Humanity, sets out how massive seizures of Palestinian land and property, unlawful killings, forcible transfer, drastic movement restrictions, and the denial of nationality and citizenship to Palestinians are all components of a system which amounts to apartheid under international law. This system is maintained by violations which Amnesty International found to constitute apartheid as a crime against humanity, as defined in the Rome Statute and Apartheid Convention.

Amnesty International is calling on the International Criminal Court (ICC) to consider the crime of apartheid in its current investigation in the OPT and calls on all states to exercise universal jurisdiction to bring perpetrators of apartheid crimes to justice.

“There is no possible justification for a system built around the institutionalized and prolonged racist oppression of millions of people. Apartheid has no place in our world, and states which choose to make allowances for Israel will find themselves on the wrong side of history. Governments who continue to supply Israel with arms and shield it from accountability at the UN are supporting a system of apartheid, undermining the international legal order, and exacerbating the suffering of the Palestinian people. The international community must face up to the reality of Israel’s apartheid, and pursue the many avenues to justice which remain shamefully unexplored.”

Amnesty International’s findings build on a growing body of work by Palestinian, Israeli and international NGOs, who have increasingly applied the apartheid framework to the situation in Israel and/or the OPT.

Identifying apartheid

A system of apartheid is an institutionalized regime of oppression and domination by one racial group over another. It is a serious human rights violation which is prohibited in public international law. Amnesty International’s extensive research and legal analysis, carried out in consultation with external experts, demonstrates that Israel enforces such a system against Palestinians through laws, policies and practices which ensure their prolonged and cruel discriminatory treatment.

In international criminal law, specific unlawful acts which are committed within a system of oppression and domination, with the intention of maintaining it, constitute the crime against humanity of apartheid. These acts are set out in the Apartheid Convention and the Rome Statute, and include unlawful killing, torture, forcible transfer, and the denial of basic rights and freedoms.

Amnesty International documented acts proscribed in the Apartheid Convention and Rome Statute in all the areas Israel controls, although they occur more frequently and violently in the OPT than in Israel. Israeli authorities enact multiple measures to deliberately deny Palestinians their basic rights and freedoms, including draconian movement restrictions in the OPT, chronic discriminatory underinvestment in Palestinian communities in Israel, and the denial of refugees’ right to return. The report also documents forcible transfer, administrative detention, torture, and unlawful killings, in both Israel and the OPT.

Amnesty International found that these acts form part of a systematic and widespread attack directed against the Palestinian population, and are committed with the intent to maintain the system of oppression and domination. They therefore constitute the crime against humanity of apartheid.

The unlawful killing of Palestinian protesters is perhaps the clearest illustration of how Israeli authorities use proscribed acts to maintain the status quo. In 2018, Palestinians in Gaza began to hold weekly protests along the border with Israel, calling for the right of return for refugees and an end to the blockade. Before protests even began, senior Israeli officials warned that Palestinians approaching the wall would be shot. By the end of 2019, Israeli forces had killed 214 civilians, including 46 children.

In light of the systematic unlawful killings of Palestinians documented in its report, Amnesty International is also calling for the UN Security Council to impose a comprehensive arms embargo on Israel. This should cover all weapons and munitions as well as law enforcement equipment, given the thousands of Palestinian civilians who have been unlawfully killed by Israeli forces. The Security Council should also impose targeted sanctions, such as asset freezes, against Israeli officials most implicated in the crime of apartheid.

Palestinians treated as a demographic threat

Since its establishment in 1948, Israel has pursued a policy of establishing and then maintaining a Jewish demographic majority, and maximizing control over land and resources to benefit Jewish Israelis. In 1967, Israel extended this policy to the West Bank and Gaza Strip. Today, all territories controlled by Israel continue to be administered with the purpose of benefiting Jewish Israelis to the detriment of Palestinians, while Palestinian refugees continue to be excluded.

Amnesty International recognizes that Jews, like Palestinians, claim a right to self-determination, and does not challenge Israel’s desire to be a home for Jews. Similarly, it does not consider that Israel labelling itself a “Jewish state” in itself indicates an intention to oppress and dominate.

However, Amnesty International’s report shows that successive Israeli governments have considered Palestinians a demographic threat, and imposed measures to control and decrease their presence and access to land in Israel and the OPT. These demographic aims are well illustrated by official plans to “Judaize” areas of Israel and the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, which continue to put thousands of Palestinians at risk of forcible transfer.

Oppression without borders

The 1947-49 and 1967 wars, Israel’s ongoing military rule of the OPT, and the creation of separate legal and administrative regimes within the territory, have separated Palestinian communities and segregated them from Jewish Israelis. Palestinians have been fragmented geographically and politically, and experience different levels of discrimination depending on their status and where they live.

Palestinian citizens in Israel currently enjoy greater rights and freedoms than their counterparts in the OPT, while the experience of Palestinians in Gaza is very different to that of those living in the West Bank. Nonetheless, Amnesty International’s research shows that all Palestinians are subject to the same overarching system. Israel’s treatment of Palestinians across all areas is pursuant to the same objective: to privilege Jewish Israelis in distribution of land and resources, and to minimize the Palestinian presence and access to land.

Amnesty International demonstrates that Israeli authorities treat Palestinians as an inferior racial group who are defined by their non-Jewish, Arab status. This racial discrimination is cemented in laws which affect Palestinians across Israel and the OPT.

For example, Palestinian citizens of Israel are denied a nationality, establishing a legal differentiation from Jewish Israelis. In the West Bank and Gaza, where Israel has controlled the population registry since 1967, Palestinians have no citizenship and most are considered stateless, requiring ID cards from the Israeli military to live and work in the territories.

Palestinian refugees and their descendants, who were displaced in the 1947-49 and 1967 conflicts, continue to be denied the right to return to their former places of residence. Israel’s exclusion of refugees is a flagrant violation of international law which has left millions in a perpetual limbo of forced displacement.

Palestinians in annexed East Jerusalem are granted permanent residence instead of citizenship – though this status is permanent in name only. Since 1967, more than 14,000 Palestinians have had their residency revoked at the discretion of the Ministry of the Interior, resulting in their forcible transfer outside the city.

Lesser citizens

Palestinian citizens of Israel, who comprise about 19% of the population, face many forms of institutionalized discrimination. In 2018, discrimination against Palestinians was crystallized in a constitutional law which, for the first time, enshrined Israel exclusively as the “nation state of the Jewish people”. The law also promotes the building of Jewish settlements and downgrades Arabic’s status as an official language.

The report documents how Palestinians are effectively blocked from leasing on 80% of Israel’s state land, as a result of racist land seizures and a web of discriminatory laws on land allocation, planning and zoning.

The situation in the Negev/Naqab region of southern Israel is a prime example of how Israel’s planning and building policies intentionally exclude Palestinians.  Since 1948 Israeli authorities have adopted various policies to “Judaize” the Negev/Naqab, including designating large areas as nature reserves or military firing zones, and setting targets for increasing the Jewish population. This has had devastating consequences for the tens of thousands of Palestinian Bedouins who live in the region.

Thirty-five Bedouin villages, home to about 68,000 people, are currently “unrecognized” by Israel, which means they are cut off from the national electricity and water supply and targeted for repeated demolitions. As the villages have no official status, their residents also face restrictions on political participation and are excluded from the healthcare and education systems. These conditions have coerced many into leaving their homes and villages, in what amounts to forcible transfer.

Decades of deliberately unequal treatment of Palestinian citizens of Israel have left them consistently economically disadvantaged in comparison to Jewish Israelis. This is exacerbated by blatantly discriminatory allocation of state resources: a recent example is the government’s Covid-19 recovery package, of which just 1.7% was given to Palestinian local authorities.

Dispossession

The dispossession and displacement of Palestinians from their homes is a crucial pillar of Israel’s apartheid system. Since its establishment the Israeli state has enforced massive and cruel land seizures against Palestinians, and continues to implement myriad laws and policies to force Palestinians into small enclaves. Since 1948, Israel has demolished hundreds of thousands of Palestinian homes and other properties across all areas under its jurisdiction and effective control.

As in the Negev/Naqab, Palestinians in East Jerusalem and Area C of the OPT live under full Israeli control. The authorities deny building permits to Palestinians in these areas, forcing them to build illegal structures which are demolished again and again.

In the OPT, the continued expansion of illegal Israeli settlements exacerbates the situation. The construction of these settlements in the OPT has been a government policy since 1967. Settlements today cover 10% of the land in the West Bank, and some 38% of Palestinian land in East Jerusalem was expropriated between 1967 and 2017.

Palestinian neighbourhoods in East Jerusalem are frequently targeted by settler organizations which, with the full backing of the Israeli government, work to displace Palestinian families and hand their homes to settlers. One such neighbourhood, Sheikh Jarrah, has been the site of frequent protests since May 2021 as families battle to keep their homes under the threat of a settler lawsuit.

Draconian movement restrictions

Since the mid-1990s Israeli authorities have imposed increasingly stringent movement restrictions on Palestinians in the OPT. A web of military checkpoints, roadblocks, fences and other structures controls the movement of Palestinians within the OPT, and restricts their travel into Israel or abroad.

A 700km fence, which Israel is still extending, has isolated Palestinian communities inside “military zones”, and they must obtain multiple special permits any time they enter or leave their homes. In Gaza, more than 2 million Palestinians live under an Israeli blockade which has created a humanitarian crisis. It is near-impossible for Gazans to travel abroad or into the rest of the OPT, and they are effectively segregated from the rest of the world.

“The permit system in the OPT is emblematic of Israel’s brazen discrimination against Palestinians. While Palestinians are locked in a blockade, stuck for hours at checkpoints, or waiting for yet another permit to come through, Israeli citizens and settlers can move around as they please.”

Amnesty International examined each of the security justifications which Israel cites as the basis for its treatment of Palestinians. The report shows that, while some of Israel’s policies may have been designed to fulfil legitimate security objectives, they have been implemented in a grossly disproportionate and discriminatory way which fails to comply with international law. Other policies have absolutely no reasonable basis in security, and are clearly shaped by the intent to oppress and dominate.

The way forward

Amnesty International provides numerous specific recommendations for how the Israeli authorities can dismantle the apartheid system and the discrimination, segregation and oppression which sustain it.

The organization is calling for an end to the brutal practice of home demolitions and forced evictions as a first step. Israel must grant equal rights to all Palestinians in Israel and the OPT, in line with principles of international human rights and humanitarian law. It must recognize the right of Palestinian refugees and their descendants to return to homes where they or their families once lived, and provide victims of human rights violations and crimes against humanity with full reparations.

The scale and seriousness of the violations documented in Amnesty International’s report call for a drastic change in the international community’s approach to the human rights crisis in Israel and the OPT.  

All states may exercise universal jurisdiction over persons reasonably suspected of committing the crime of apartheid under international law, and states that are party to the Apartheid Convention have an obligation to do so. 

“Israel must dismantle the apartheid system and start treating Palestinians as human beings with equal rights and dignity. Until it does, peace and security will remain a distant prospect for Israelis and Palestinians alike.”

RAPPORT AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL:

ISRAEL’S APARTHEID AGAINST PALESTINIANS”A CRUEL 

SYSTEM OF DOMINATION AND A CRIME AGAINST HUMANITY

HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH

ISRAELI APARTHEID: ”A THRESHOLD CROSSED”

https://www.hrw.org/news/2021/07/19/israeli-apartheid-threshold-crossed

In April, Human Rights Watch released a 213-page report, “A Threshold Crossed,” finding that Israeli authorities are committing the crimes against humanity of apartheid and persecution. We reached this determination based on our documentation of an overarching government policy to maintain the domination by Jewish Israelis over Palestinians coupled with grave abuses committed against Palestinians living in the occupied territory, including East Jerusalem

In the months since, a growing chorus of voices, from former Israeli ambassadors to South Africa and current Knesset members to the ex-UN Secretary General and the French foreign minister, have referenced apartheid in relation to Israel’s discriminatory treatment of Palestinians, in particular in the occupied territory. Yet many in Germany, including those critical of Israeli human rights abuses, remain hesitant to apply the label to Israeli conduct.

Given history, one can certainly understand Germany’s concern for the welfare of the Jewish people, but that should not carry over to an endorsement of abusive and discriminatory Israeli government conduct, especially in the occupied territory. As recognition grows that these crimes are being committed, the failure to recognize that reality requires burying your head deeper and deeper into the sand.

The problem begins with the Israeli government having exercised primary control for more than a half-century over the land between the Mediterranean Sea and Jordan River, encompassing Israel and the occupied territory, where two main groups of people of roughly equal size live. Throughout this area, Israeli authorities methodologically privilege one of the groups, Jewish Israelis, who are governed under the same body of laws with the same rights and privileges wherever they live. At the same time, authorities allocate different baskets of inferior rights to the other, Palestinians, systematically discriminating against them wherever they live and most severely in the occupied territory.

Our sense that our research was not capturing this underlying reality led us to write this report. Reporting on “separate, not equal” schools for Palestinians inside Israel, Palestinians being forced out of their homes in occupied East Jerusalem, the serious rights abuses stemming from the Israeli settlement enterprise in the West Bank, and the crushing closure of the Gaza Strip, we felt that our work captured important dynamics, including entrenched discrimination, in particular areas, but did not capture the full scope of Israel’s discriminatory rule over Palestinians.

We set out in the report to evaluate Israel’s treatment of Palestinians across Israel and the occupied territory. As we do in the nearly 100 countries across the world we work in, we began by documenting the facts—drawing on years of our own research, case studies that compared Palestinian areas with predominantly or exclusively Jewish ones, and a review of government planning documents, statements by officials, and a range of other materials.

Across Israel and the occupied territory, Human Rights Watch found that Israeli authorities have pursued an intent to privilege Jewish Israelis at the expense of Palestinians. They have done so by undertaking policies aimed at mitigating what they openly describe as the “demographic threat” Palestinians pose and maximizing the land available for Jewish communities, while concentrating most Palestinian in dense enclaves. The policy takes different forms and is pursued in a particularly severe form in the occupied territory. It includes efforts to, as leading Israelis officials have put it, “Judaize” the Negev and Galilee regions of Israel and to maintain “a solid Jewish majority,” as described in government planning documents, in the Jerusalem municipality, which includes the eastern part of Jerusalem, which Israel unilaterally annexed and occupies. It also encompasses efforts to “settle [Jews in] the land between the [Palestinian] minority population centers and their surroundings” in the West Bank, as set out in plans that have guided the government’s settlement, and to pursue “separation” between the West Bank and Gaza. The policy across the board serves the same fundamental goal: maximum land, minimum Palestinians. 

Furthermore, we found that Israeli authorities have carried out the grave abuses needed for the crimes of apartheid and persecution against Palestinians living in the occupied territory. It has done so through, among other policies, sweeping restrictions on movement in the form of the 14-year generalized closure of Gaza and the discriminatory permit system in the West Bank; the confiscation of more than a third of the land in the West Bank; and denial of residency rights to hundreds of thousands of Palestinians and their relatives. Israel has imposed draconian military rule over millions of Palestinians, suspending their basic civil rights, while Jewish Israelis living in the same territory are governed under the permissive Israeli civil law; and imposed harsh conditions in parts of the West Bank that led to forcing thousands of Palestinians out of their homes.

We then evaluated these facts against the relevant areas of international law—in this case, the established law on discrimination—which includes a universal prohibition against apartheid. While the term was coined in relation to specific practices in South Africa, international treaties define apartheid as a universal legal term referring to a particularly severe form of discriminatory oppression.

International criminal law, including the 1973 International Convention on the Suppression and Punishment of the Crime of Apartheid and the 1998 Rome Statute to the International Criminal Court, define apartheid as a crime against humanity consisting of three primary elements: (1) an intent by one racial group to dominate another; (2) systematic oppression by the dominant group over the marginalized group; and (3) particularly grave abuses known as inhumane acts.

Racial group is understood today also to encompass treatment on the basis of descent and national or ethnic origin. International criminal law also identifies a related crime against humanity of persecution. Under the Rome Statute and customary international law, persecution consists of severe deprivation of fundamental rights of a racial, ethnic, or other group with discriminatory intent.

The ratification by the State of Palestine of these two treaties in recent years has strengthened the legal application of these two crimes in its territory. A ruling by a chamber of the International Criminal Court (ICC) earlier this year confirmed that it has jurisdiction over war crimes and crimes against humanity – including apartheid and persecution – committed in the Occupied Palestinian Territory since 2014.

Applying the facts to the laws, Human Rights Watch concluded that Israeli authorities are committing the crimes against humanity of apartheid and persecution. We found that the elements of the crimes come together in the occupied territory as part of a single Israeli government policy. That policy is to maintain the domination by Jewish Israelis over Palestinians across Israel and the occupied territory. It is coupled in the occupied territory with systematic oppression and inhumane acts against Palestinians living there.

Sometimes the most important thing someone who cares deeply about you can do is to share hard truths and push you to confront them. The late Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and leaders of Israel’s closest ally, the US, including former President Jimmy Carter and former Secretary of State John Kerry, warned of the prospect of apartheid if things did not change.

Today, apartheid is not a hypothetical or future scenario. A 54-year-occupation is not temporary. The threshold has been crossed. Apartheid, and parallel persecution, is the reality for millions of Palestinians. Recognizing and correctly diagnosing a problem is the first step to solving it and ending apartheid is vital to the future of both Palestinians and Israelis and the cause of peace. It is by extension Germany’s special relationship with Israel and history that should prompt them to recognize the reality of apartheid and persecution and bring to bear the sorts of tools needed to end these crimes against humanity.

EINDE BERICHT HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH

RAPPORT HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH

A TRESHOLD CROSSED

27 APRIL 2021

https://www.hrw.org/report/2021/04/27/threshold-crossed/israeli-authorities-and-crimes-apartheid-and-persecution

ZIE OOK

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International Court of Justice/Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide in the Gaza Strip (South Africa v Israel)/26 january 2024

home

The International Court of Justice, which has its seat in The Hague,
is the principal judicial organ of the United Nations

INTERNATIONAL COURT OF JUSTICE

APPLICATION OF THE CONVENTION ON THE PREVENTION AND

PUNISHMENT OF THE CRIME OF GENOCIDE IN THE GAZA STRIP 

(SOUTH AFRICA V. ISRAEL)

https://www.icj-cij.org/sites/default/files/case-related/192/192-20240126-pre-01-00-en.pdf

INTERNATIONAL COURT OF JUSTICE  

Peace Palace, Carnegieplein 2, 2517 KJ The Hague, Netherlands  

  Tel.: +31 (0)70 302 2323 Fax: +31 (0)70 364 9928

Press Release 

Unofficial   

No. 2024/6 

26 January 2024 

Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime 

of Genocide in the Gaza Strip (South Africa v. Israel) 

The Court indicates provisional measures 

THE HAGUE, 26 January 2024. The International Court of Justice today delivered its Order  

  on the Request for the indication of provisional measures submitted by South Africa in the case

concerning Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of 

Genocide in the Gaza Strip (South Africa v. Israel)  

  It is recalled that, on 29 December 2023, South Africa filed an Application instituting proceedings against Israel concerning alleged violations by Israel of its obligations under the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (the “Genocide Convention”) in relation to Palestinians in the Gaza Strip.

 In its Application, South Africa also requested the Court to indicate provisional measures in order to “protect against further, severe and irreparable harm to the rights of the Palestinian people under the Genocide Convention” and “to ensure Israel’s compliance with its obligations under the Genocide Convention not to engage in genocide, and to prevent and to punish genocide” (see press release No. 2023/77).   

  Public hearings on South Africa’s request for provisional measures were held on Thursday 11 and Friday 12 January 2024.

In its Order, which has binding effect, the Court indicates the following provisional measures: 

“(1) By fifteen votes to two, 

The State of Israel shall, in accordance with its obligations under the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, in relation to Palestinians in Gaza, take all measures within its power to prevent the commission of all acts within the scope of Article II of this Convention, in particular: 

(a) killing members of the group; 

(b) causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group; 

(c) deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part; and 

PAGE 2

  – 2 – 

(d) imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group;  

IN FAVOUR: 

President Donoghue; Vice-President Gevorgian; Judges Tomka, Abraham, Bennouna, Yusuf, Xue, Bhandari, Robinson, Salam, Iwasawa, Nolte,

 Charlesworth, Brant; Judge ad hoc Moseneke;   

AGAINST: 

Judge Sebutinde; Judge ad hoc Barak;  

  (2) By fifteen votes to two,

The State of Israel shall ensure with immediate effect that its military does not commit any acts described in point 1 above; 

IN FAVOUR: 

President Donoghue; Vice-President Gevorgian; Judges Tomka, Abraham, Bennouna, Yusuf, Xue, Bhandari, Robinson, Salam, Iwasawa, Nolte, Charlesworth, Brant; Judge ad hoc Moseneke;    

  AGAINST: 

Judge Sebutinde; Judge ad hoc Barak;  

(3) By sixteen votes to one 

The State of Israel shall take all measures within its power to prevent and punish the direct and public incitement to commit genocide in relation to members of the Palestinian group in the Gaza Strip; 

 IN FAVOUR:

 President Donoghue; Vice-President Gevorgian; Judges Tomka, Abraham, Bennouna, Yusuf, Xue, Bhandari, Robinson, Salam, Iwasawa, Nolte, Charlesworth, Brant; Judges ad hoc Barak, Moseneke;

 AGAINST: 

Judge Sebutinde;  

  (4) By sixteen votes to one,

The State of Israel shall take immediate and effective measures to enable the provision of urgently needed basic services and humanitarian assistance to address the adverse conditions of life faced by Palestinians in the Gaza Strip; 

IN FAVOUR: 

President Donoghue; Vice-President Gevorgian; Judges Tomka, Abraham, Bennouna, Yusuf, Xue, Bhandari, Robinson, Salam, Iwasawa, Nolte, Charlesworth, Brant; Judges ad hoc Barak, Moseneke;    

 AGAINST: 

Judge Sebutinde;  

  (5) By fifteen votes to two,

The State of Israel shall take effective measures to prevent the destruction and ensure the preservation of evidence related to allegations of acts within the scope of Article II and Article III of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide against members of the Palestinian group in the Gaza Strip; 

IN FAVOUR: 

President Donoghue; Vice-President Gevorgian; Judges Tomka, Abraham, Bennouna, Yusuf, Xue, Bhandari, Robinson, Salam, Iwasawa, Nolte, Charlesworth, Brant; Judge ad hoc Moseneke;    

 AGAINST: 

Judge Sebutinde; Judge ad hoc Barak;  

PAGE 3

  3 

(6) By fifteen votes to two,  

  The State of Israel shall submit a report to the Court on all measures taken to give effect to this Order within one month as from the date of this Order.

IN FAVOUR: 

President Donoghue; Vice-President Gevorgian; Judges Tomka, Abraham, Bennouna, Yusuf, Xue, Bhandari, Robinson, Salam, Iwasawa, Nolte, Charlesworth, Brant; Judge ad hoc Moseneke;   

AGAINST: 

Judge Sebutinde; Judge ad hoc Barak.”  

  *  

Judge XUE appends a declaration to the Order of the Court; 

Judge SEBUTINDE appends a dissenting opinion to the Order of the Court; Judges BHANDARI and NOLTE append declarations to the Order of the Court; Judge ad hoc BARAK appends a separate opinion to the Order of the Court  

   ___________

 A summary of the Order appears in the document entitled “Summary 2024/1”, to which summaries of the declarations and opinions are annexed.  

 This summary and the full text of the Order are available on the case page on the Court’s website.  

  ___________

Earlier press releases relating to this case are available on the Court’s website. 

Note: The Court’s press releases are prepared by its Registry for information purposes only and do not constitute official documents.     

  ___________

The International Court of Justice (ICJ) is the principal judicial organ of the United Nations. 

It was established by the United Nations Charter in June 1945 and began its activities in April 1946 

The Court is composed of 15 judges elected for a nine-year term by the General Assembly and the Security Council of the United Nations. 

The seat of the Court is at the Peace Palace in The Hague (Netherlands). 

The Court has a twofold role: first, to settle, in accordance with international law, legal disputes submitted to it by States; 

and, second, to give advisory opinions on legal questions referred to it by duly authorized United Nations organs and agencies of the system 

___________          

PAGE 4

  4 

  Information Department:

Ms Monique Legerman, First Secretary of the Court, Head of Department: +31 (0)70 302 2336 

Ms Joanne Moore, Information Officer: +31 (0)70 302 2337 

Mr Avo Sevag Garabet, Associate Information Officer: +31 (0)70 302 2394 

Email: info@icj-cij.org

Reacties uitgeschakeld voor International Court of Justice/Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide in the Gaza Strip (South Africa v Israel)/26 january 2024

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Het Geheim van Succes

ocean waves under orange sky during sunset

HET GEHEIM VAN SUCCES

Dit Prachtige Gedicht wllde ik met jullie delen

ASTRID ESSED

GEDICHT:

Als je denkt: ”ik ben verslagen”

Is de nederlaag een feit

Als je denkt: ”k zal niet versagen”

win je op den duur de Strijd

Als je denkt: ”ik kan het niet halen”

is de tegenslag op til

Want het Overslaan der Schalen

hangt voornamelijk af van Wil

Moedelozen gaan ten onder’

door hun twijfel, door hun vrees

Vechters winnen door een Wonder’

telkens weer de zwaarste race

Denk: ”Ik KAN het en dan GAAT het

Iedereen vindt bij wilskracht baat

En in zaken wint de daad het

van het nutteloos gepraat

Als je jammert: ”ik ben zwakker

dan mijn grote concurrent

Blijf je levenslang de stakker

die je ongetwijfeld bent

Niet de Goliaths en de Rijken

tellen in de kamp voor zes

Maar de Fermen, die niet Wijken

Hebben vroeg of laat Succes

EINDE

Reacties uitgeschakeld voor Het Geheim van Succes

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REACTIE ASTRID ESSED OP QUORA/LAAT JE NIET BEDOTTEN/EEN FASCISTENKABINET IS EEN GEVAARLIJKE GRAP

Geert Wilders woensdagavond op de partijbijeenkomst van de PVV in Scheveningen.  Beeld  Daniel Rosenthal /de VolkskrantGeert Wilders woensdagavond op de partijbijeenkomst van de PVV in Scheveningen.

Beeld Daniel Rosenthal /de VolkskrantGeert Wilders stunned by his PVV's impressive victory in the 2023 General Election. 22 November 2023

Geert Wilders stunned by his PVV’s impressive victory in the 2023 General Election. 22 November 2023 – Credit: Geert Wilders/PVV / Twitter – License: All Rights Reserved

REACTIE ASTRID ESSED OP QUORA/LAAT JE NIET BEDOTTEN/EEM FASCISTENKABINET IS EEN GEVAARLIJKE GRAP

Dit naar aanleiding van een Quora Post van Fedor van Eldijk,

die zich afvroeg of een ”kabinet Wilders” niet een optie

zou zijn

Overigens WEL met ironie, want hij schrijft in zijn Eindzinnen

”Wie weet lost ie wel eindelijk de problemen in de zorg, op straat en in de huisvesting op – dan zijn we er echt wat mee opgeschoten, hoewel ik die kans erg klein acht. Veel waarschijnlijker is het dat ie er niks van bakt, allemaal minkukels in het kabinet zet en binnen een paar maanden met knallende ruzie de boel opblaast.

Dat zou ook mooi zijn, dan is het voor iedereen duidelijk dat dit ook niet werkt en dan zijn we eindelijk af van al die mafketels in de extreem rechtse hoek.”

Zie eerst Fedor van Eldijk

Daaronder mijn reactie

ASTRID ESSEDhttps://nl.quora.com/

https://nl.quora.com/Komt-er-een-kabinet-Wilders-1

I

FELDOR VAN ELDIJK:

Profielfoto voor Fedor van Eldijk

Fedor van Eldijk · 

Volgen

Woont in: Amsterdam (1996–heden)29 nov

Komt er een kabinet Wilders-1?

Ik denk dat dat goed zou zijn, ik vrees dat we daar even doorheen moeten met z’n allen. En ik denk eerlijk gezegd dat het alleen maar goed uit kan pakken voor Nederland.

We hoeven niet heel bang te zijn dat hij een Nexit voor elkaar krijgt, daarvoor is zowel parlementair als maatschappelijk onvoldoende draagvlak te vinden. Hij zal mogelijk de immigratie terugdringen, maar we zullen onze internationale verplichtingen als het gaat om het opvangen van asielzoekers moeten nakomen. En ook Europese arbeidsmigranten gaat ie niet tegenhouden, en dat is maar goed ook voor zijn aarbeien- en aspergeminnende aanhang.

Wie weet lost ie wel eindelijk de problemen in de zorg, op straat en in de huisvesting op – dan zijn we er echt wat mee opgeschoten, hoewel ik die kans erg klein acht. Veel waarschijnlijker is het dat ie er niks van bakt, allemaal minkukels in het kabinet zet en binnen een paar maanden met knallende ruzie de boel opblaast.

Dat zou ook mooi zijn, dan is het voor iedereen duidelijk dat dit ook niet werkt en dan zijn we eindelijk af van al die mafketels in de extreem rechtse hoek.

55,2K weergaven

142 upvotes weergeven

6 deelacties weergeven

Antwoord opgevraagd door 

Jasper De Jong en 

Gregory Manberg

II

ASTRID ESSED

Astrid Essed · Zojuist

LAAT JE NIET BEDOTTEN/EEM FASCISTENKABINET IS EEN GEVAARLIJKE GRAP

In tegenstelling tot de heer Fedor van Eldijk, denk ik, dat het NIET goed is,

als er een kabinet Wilders zou komen.

LET OP!

Vanaf de oprichting van de PVV [2006] heeft Wilders/PVV zich gespecialiseerd

in haatzaaien tegen niet-westerse allochtonen, de Islam, moslims,

Marokkanen, niet-witte mensen en vluchtelingen.

Natuurlijk, Rotte Appels zijn er overal, maar wat hij en zijn partij deden,

is genoemde groepen als COLLECTIEF te criminaliseren.

Dat heet: Racisme

http://hrlibrary.umn.edu/

instree/d1cerd.htm

Zie ook over Wilders

https://www.astridessed.nl/

2007a-tsunami-of-racismthe-

political-views-of-mr-wilders/

EN OVER HAATZAAIEN TEGEN VLUCHTELINGEN

https://www.astridessed.nl/

wilders-spreekt-over-

omvolking-vluchtelingen-als-

hyenas-en-achterlijke-

islamitische-zandbaklanden/

ANNE FRANK STICHTING/EXTREEM-RECHTS

Met zijn zondeboktheorieen en zijn Law en Order gedachtegoed

is Wilders als extreem-rechts te karakteriseren

Kijk maar, wat de Anne Frank Stichting daarover heeft gemeld

https://www.astridessed.nl/

anne-frank-stichting-wilders-

extreem-rechts-tekst-van-de-

gehele-rapportage/

Lees ook, wat de diverse bronnen [IK dus niet!] melden over

het fascistische karakter van de PVV

https://www.astridessed.nl/

het-fascistische-karakter-van-

de-pvv-bronnen-onderzoeken/

WILDERS’ DROOM VOOR WIT NEDERLAND

En dan zijn er mensen, die denken, dat Wilders wel goed zou

zijn voor de autochton, witte Nederlanders?

Vergeet het maar

Wie net aan de verkeerde kant zit [andere mening, ”asociaal”

en ga zo maar door], krijgt met Geert Wilders te maken en niet

op een leuke manier

Dan mag je zo wit zijn als sneeuw, dat zal je niet helpen

LEES MAAR, ik heb het eens uitgezocht

https://www.astridessed.nl/

wilders-heilstaat-voor-wit-

nederland-paradijs-op-aarde/

VERDEEL EN HEERS

Het naarste van dit Heerschap is misschien wel, dat hij groepen tegen

elkaar uitspeelt:

Autochtone Nederlanders tegen ”die anderen” [Nederlanders met een

”migratieachtergrond]

Vluchtelingen tegen mensen, die hier legaal verblijven

Want de woningnood is NIET de schuld van de vluchtelingen

Lang voordat de eerste vluchteling hier kwam, WAS er al woningnood,

daterend van na WO II

Lang voordat de eerste Marokkaan hier kwam, WAS er al criminaliteit

En ga zo maar door

TRAP ER NIET IN!

Wilders gaat de problemen NIET voor Nederland oplossen, maar mensen

verder bang maken voor een Tsunami aan vluchtelingen, die niet bestaat

LEES DIT, ALS JE MIJ NIET GELOOFT

https://www.rodekruis.nl/wat-

doen-wij/hulp-wereldwijd/

migratie/#:~:text=Volgens%

20cijfers%20van%20de%

20Verenigde,opgevangen%20(

bron%3A%20UNHCR).

https://www.unhcr.org/nl/wie-

we-zijn/cijfers/

JUIST:

De meeste vluchtelingen blijven in de regio en komen helemaal

niet naar Europa!

MILDERS?/VERGEET HET MAAR

Wilders claimt nu, premier voor alle Nederlanders te willen zijn

Meent hij niets van

Het is een truc, omdat hij [begrijpelijkerwijs na de monsterzege

van de PVV] graag wil regeren

Luister in dezen naar wat Frans Timmermans daarover heeft opgemerkt

Ik citeer:

”U doet mij echt denken aan, ik weet…ik zal een klassieker noemen

eh eh Nemo…[Wilders tussendoor ”ja”] in Nemo komt eh Bruce voor

en Bruce is een Grote Witte Haai, die eh heeft afgesproken met zichzelf,

ik ben nu vegetarier, ik eet geen vis meer.

Totdat hij bloed ruikt en dan wordt hij weer de Haai zoals hij altijd is geweest.”

https://www.astridessed.nl/de-

milde-wilders-timmermans-

confronteert-wilders-u-doet-

mij-denken-aan-de-haai-bruce-

uit-finding-nemo/

Ik zou lering trekken uit wat deze ervaren politicus zegt en je maar’

eens goed afvragen, of de oplossingen van Wilders werken.

Alle allochtonen eruit?

Kijk dan eens wat er met de Nederlandse economie gebeurt

om maar een voorbeeld te noemen

”Preventief fouilleren door het hele land”

Ik denk niet, dat je daar vriend van bent

Zie ook

https://www.uitpers.be/geert-

wilders-het-grote-gevaar/

En bedenk ook:

ALS WILDERS EENMAAL EEN KEER PREMIER GEWEEST IS,

IS HET EEN AFGLIJDENDE SCHAAL

Het Fascisme is dan in Nederland genormaliseerd

ASTRID ESSED

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Article by Ilan Pappe, published in Journal of Palestine Studies, 2006/The 1948 Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine

https://www.palestineremembered.com/Jaffa/Jaffa/Picture1253.html

https://www.palestineremembered.com/Jaffa/Jaffa/index.html
Palestinian women and children driven from their homes by Israeli forces, 1948.

PALESTIJNSE VLUCHTELINGEN, ETNISCH GEZUIVERD DOOR

ZIONISTISCHE TROEPEN [1948]

https://ciaotest.cc.columbia.edu/olj/jps/vol36-141/vol36-141_b.pdf
https://ifamericansknew.org/history/

WIKIPEDIA

ILAN PAPPE

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ilan_Papp%C3%A9

ARTICLE FROM ILAN PAPPE, PUBLISHED IN JOURNAL OF

PALESTINE STUDIES, 2006: THE 1948 ETHNIC CLEANSING OF PALESTINE

INSTITUTE FOR PALESTINE STUDIES/JOURNALS

THE1948  ETHNIC CLEANSING OF PALESTINE

BY ILAN PAPPE

PUBLISHED IN FALL 2006

https://ciaotest.cc.columbia.edu/olj/jps/vol36-141/vol36-141_b.pdf

  The 1948 Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine by Ilan Pappé This article, excerpted and adapted from the early chapters of a new book, emphasizes the systematic preparations that laid the ground for the expulsion of more than 750,000 Palestinians from what became Israel in 1948. 

While sketching the context and diplomatic and political developments of the period, the article highlights in particular a multi-year “Village Files” project (1940–47) involving the systematic compilation of maps and intelligence for each Arab village and the elaboration—under the direction of an inner “caucus” of fewer than a dozen men led by David Ben-Gurion—of a series of military plans culminating in Plan Dalet, according to which the 1948 war was fought. 

The article ends with a statement of one of the author’s underlying goals in writing the book: to make the case for a paradigm of ethnic cleansing to replace the paradigm of war as the basis for the scholarly research of, and the public debate about, 1948  

 ILAN PAPPÉ, an Israeli historian and professor of political science at Haifa University, is the author of a number of books, including The Making of the Arab-Israeli Conflict, 1947–1951 (I. B. Tauris, 1994) and A History of Modern Palestine: One Land, Two Peoples (Cambridge University Press, 2004). 

The current article is extracted from early chapters of his latest book, The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine (Oneworld Publications, Oxford, England, forthcoming in October 2006).  

THE 1948 ETHNIC CLEANSING OF PALESTINE ILAN PAPPÉ

  This article, excerpted and adapted from the early chapters of a new book, emphasizes the systematic preparations that laid the ground for the expulsion of more than 750,000 Palestinians from what became Israel in 1948.

While sketching the context and diplomatic and political developments of the period, the article highlights in particular a multi-year “Village Files” project (1940–47) involving the systematic compilation of maps and intelligence for each Arab village and the elaboration—under the direction of an inner “caucus” of fewer than a dozen men led by David Ben-Gurion—of a series of military plans culminating in Plan Dalet, according to which the 1948 war was fought. 

. The article ends with a statement of one of the author’s underlying goals in writing the book: to make the case for a paradigm of ethnic cleansing to replace the paradigm of war as the basis for the scholarly research of, and the public debate about, 1948. 

  ON A COLD WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, 10 March 1948, a group of eleven men, veteran Zionist leaders together with young military Jewish officers, put the final touches on a plan for the ethnic cleansing of Palestine1.

 That same evening, military orders were dispatched to 

http://www.palestine-studies.org/final/en/journals/printer.php?aid=7175 (1 of 17) [4/10/2007 3:52:56 PM]

PAGE 2

units on the ground to prepare for the systematic expulsion of Palestinians from vast areas of the country 2. 

The orders came with a detailed description of the methods to be used to forcibly evict the people: large-scale intimidation; laying siege to and bombarding villages and population centers; setting fire to homes, properties, and goods; expelling residents; demolishing homes; and, finally, planting mines in the rubble to prevent the expelled inhabitants from returning.  

Each unit was issued its own list of villages and neighborhoods to target in keeping with the master plan. 

Code-named Plan D (Dalet in Hebrew), this was the fourth and final version of vaguer plans outlining the fate that was in store for the native population of Palestine 3  

The previous three plans had articulated only obscurely how the Zionist leadership intended to deal with the presence of so many Palestinians on the land the Jewish national movement wanted for itself. 

This fourth and last blueprint spelled it out clearly and unambiguously: the Palestinians had to go  

  The plan, which covered both the rural and urban areas of Palestine, was the inevitable result both of Zionism’s ideological drive for an exclusively Jewish presence in Palestine and a response to developments on the ground following the British decision in February 1947 to end its Mandate over the country and turn the problem over to the United Nations

Clashes with local Palestinian militias, especially after the UN partition resolution of November 1947, provided the perfect context and pretext for implementing the ideological vision of an ethnically cleansed Palestine. 

Once the plan was finalized, it took six months to complete the mission. When it was over, more than half of Palestine’s native population, over 750,000 people, had been uprooted, 531 villages had been destroyed, and 11 urban neighborhoods had been emptied of their inhabitants. 

The plan decided upon on 10 March 1948, and above all its systematic implementation in the following months, was a clear case of what is now known as an ethnic cleansing operation.     

DEFINING ETHNIC CLEANSING  

  Ethnic cleansing today is designated by international law as a crime against humanity, and those who perpetrate it are subject to adjudication: a special international tribunal has been set up in The Hague to prosecute those accused of ethnic cleansing in the former Yugoslavia, and a similar court was established in Arusha, Tanzania, to deal with the Rwanda case.

The roots of ethnic cleansing are ancient, to be sure, and it has been practiced from biblical times to the modern age, including at the height of colonialism and in World War II by the Nazis and their allies 

. But it was especially the events in the former Yugoslavia that gave rise to efforts to define the concept and that continue to serve as the prototype of ethnic cleansing. For example, in its special report on ethnic cleansing in Kosovo, the U.S. State Department defines the term as “the systematic and forced removal of the members of an ethnic group from communities in order to change the ethnic composition of a given region.” 

The report goes on to document numerous cases, including the depopulation within twenty-four hours of the western Kosovar town of Pec in spring 1999, which could 

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only have been achieved through advanced planning followed by systematic execution.4

  Earlier, a congressional report prepared in August 1992 for the U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee had described the “process of population transfers aimed at removing the nonSerbian population from large areas of Bosnia-Hercegovina,” noting that the campaign had “substantially achieved its goals: an exclusively Serb-inhabited region . . . created by forcibly expelling the Muslim populations that had been the overwhelming majority.”

” According to this report, the two main elements of ethnic cleansing are, first, “the deliberate use of artillery and snipers against the civilian populations of the big cities,” and second, “the forced movement of civilian populations [entailing] the systematic destruction of homes, the looting of personal property, beatings, selective and random killings, and massacres.”5 

Similar descriptions are found in the UN Council for Human Rights (UNCHR) report of 1993, which was prepared in follow-up to a UN Security Council Resolution of April 1993 that reaffirmed “its condemnation of all violations of international humanitarian law, in particular the practice of ‘ethnic cleansing.’” 

Showing how a state’s desire to impose a single ethnic rule on a mixed area links up to acts of expulsion and violence, the report describes the unfolding ethnic cleansing process where men are separated from women and detained, where resistance leads to massacres, and where villages are blown up, with the remaining houses subsequently repopulated with another ethnic group.6     

  In addition to the United States and the UN, academics, too, have used the former Yugoslavia as the starting point for their studies of the phenomenon.

Drazen Petrovic has published one of the most comprehensive studies of ethnic cleansing, which he describes as “a well-defined policy of a particular group of persons to systematically eliminate another group from a given territory on the basis of religious, ethnic or national origin. 

Such a policy involves violence and is very often connected with military operations.”7 Petrovic associates ethnic cleansing with nationalism, the creation of new nation-states, and national struggle, noting the close connection between politicians and the army in the perpetration of the crime: the political leadership delegates the implementation of the ethnic cleansing to the military level, and although it does not furnish systematic plans or provide explicit instructions, there is no doubt as to the overall objective    

  These descriptions almost exactly mirror what happened in Palestine in 1948: Plan D constitutes a veritable repertoire of the cleansing methods described in the various reports on Yugoslavia, setting the background for the massacres that accompanied the expulsions.

 Indeed, it seems to me that had we never heard about the events in the former Yugoslavia of the 1990s and were aware only of the Palestine case, we would be forgiven for thinking that the Nakba had been the inspiration for the descriptions and definitions above, almost to the last detail.   

  Yet when it comes to the dispossession by Israel of the Palestinians in 1948, there is a deep chasm between the reality and the representation.

This is most bewildering, and it is difficult to understand how events perpetrated in modern times and witnessed by foreign reporters and UN observers could be systematically denied, not even recognized as historical fact, let 

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alone acknowledged as a crime that needs to be confronted, politically as well as morally. 

Nonetheless, there is no doubt that the ethnic cleansing of 1948, the most formative event in the modern history of the land of Palestine, has been almost entirely eradicated from the collective global memory and erased from the world’s conscience.     

SETTING THE STAGE

  When even a measure of Israeli responsibility for the disappearance of half the Arab population of Palestine is acknowledged (the official government version continues to reject any responsibility whatsoever, insisting that the local population left “voluntarily”), the standard explanation is that their flight was an unfortunate but unavoidable by-product of war.

But what happened in Palestine was by no means an unintended consequence, a fortuitous occurrence, or even a “miracle,” as Israel’s first president Chaim Weitzmann later proclaimed 

Rather, it was the result of long and meticulous planning.     

The potential for a future Jewish takeover of the country and the expulsion of the indigenous Palestinian people had been present in the writings of the founding fathers of Zionism, as scholars later discovered

  . But it was not until the late 1930s, two decades after Britain’s 1917 promise to turn Palestine into a national home for the Jews (a pledge that became enshrined in Britain’s Mandate over Palestine in 1923), that Zionist leaders began to translate their abstract vision of Jewish exclusivity into more concrete plans

New vistas were opened in 1937 when the British Royal Peel Commission8 recommended partitioning Palestine into two states. 

Though the territory earmarked for the Jewish state fell far short of Zionist ambitions, the leadership responded favorably, aware of the signal importance of official recognition of the principle of Jewish statehood on even part of Palestine. 

Several years later, in 1942, a more maximalist strategy was adopted when the Zionist leader David Ben-Gurion, in a meeting at the Biltmore Hotel in New York, put demands on the table for a Jewish commonwealth over the whole of Mandatory Palestine.9 

Thus, the geographical space coveted by the movement changed according to circumstances and opportunities, but the principal objective remained the same: the creation in Palestine of a purely Jewish state, both as a safe haven for Jews and as the cradle of a new Jewish nationalism 

And this state had to be exclusively Jewish not only in its sociopolitical structure but also in its ethnic composition. 

That the top leaders were well aware of the implications of this exclusivity was clear in their internal debates, diaries, and private correspondence. Ben-Gurion, for example, wrote in a letter to his son in 1937, “The Arabs will have to go, but one needs an opportune moment for making it happen, such as a war.”10 

Unlike most of his colleagues in the Zionist leadership, who still hoped that by purchasing a piece of land here and a few houses there they would be able to realize their objective on the ground, Ben-Gurion had long understood that this would never be enough. 

He recognized early on that the Jewish state could be won only by force but that it was necessary to bide one’s time until the opportune moment arrived for dealing militarily with the demographic reality on the ground: the          

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presence of a non-Jewish native majority. 

The Zionist movement, led by Ben-Gurion, wasted no time in preparing for the eventuality of taking the land by force if it were not granted through diplomacy. 

These preparations included the building of an efficient military organization and the search for more ample financial resources (for which they tapped into the Jewish Diaspora). 

In many ways, the creation of an embryonic diplomatic corps was also an integral part of the same general preparations aimed at creating by force a state in Palestine. 

The principal paramilitary organization of the Jewish community in Palestine had been established in 1920 primarily to defend the Jewish colonies being implanted among Palestinian villages. 

Sympathetic British officers, however, helped transform it into the military force that eventually was able to implement plans for the Zionist military takeover of Palestine and the ethnic cleansing of its native population.       

 One officer in particular, Orde Wingate, was responsible for this transformation.

  It was he who made the Zionist leaders realize more fully that the idea of Jewish statehood had to be closely associated with militarism and an army, not only to protect the growing number of Jewish colonies inside Palestine but also—more crucially—because acts of armed aggression were an effective deterrent against possible resistance by local Palestinians.

Assigned to Palestine in 1936, Wingate also succeeded in attaching Haganah troops to the British forces during the Arab Revolt (1936–39), enabling the Jews to practice the attack tactics he had taught them in rural areas and to learn even more effectively what a “punitive mission” to an Arab village ought to entail. 

The Haganah also gained valuable military experience in World War II, when quite a few of its members volunteered for the British war effort. 

Others who remained behind in Palestine, meanwhile, continued to monitor and infiltrate the 1,200 or so Palestinian villages that had dotted the countryside for hundreds of years.     

THE VILLAGE FILES

  Attacking Arab villages and carrying out punitive raids gave Zionists experience, but it was not enough; systematic planning was called for. In 1940, a young bespectacled Hebrew University historian named Ben-Zion Luria, then employed by the educational department of the Jewish Agency, the Zionist governing body in Palestine, made an important suggestion.

He pointed out how useful it would be to have a detailed registry of all Arab villages and proposed that the Jewish National Fund (JNF) conduct such an inventory. 

“This would greatly help the redemption of the land,” he wrote to the JNF.11 

He could not have chosen a better address: the way his initiative involved the JNF in the prospective ethnic cleansing was to generate added impetus and zeal to the expulsion plans that followed. 

Founded in 1901 at the fifth Zionist Congress, the JNF was the Zionists’ principal tool for the colonization of Palestine. 

. This was the agency the Zionist movement used to buy Palestinian land on which it then settled Jewish immigrants and that spearheaded the Zionization of Palestine throughout the Mandatory years. 

From the outset, it was designed to become the 

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“custodian” on behalf of the Jewish people of the land acquired by the Zionists in Palestine. The JNF maintained this role after Israel’s creation, with other missions being added to this primordial task over time.12 

Despite the JNF’s best efforts, its success in land acquisition fell far short of its goals. Available financial resources were limited, Palestinian resistance was fierce, and British policies had become restrictive. 

. The result was that by the end of the Mandate in 1948 the Zionist movement had been able to purchase no more than 5.8 percent of the land in Palestine.13 

This is why Yossef Weitz, the head of the JNF settlement department and the quintessential Zionist colonialist, waxed lyrical when he heard about Luria’s village files, immediately suggesting that they be turned into a “national project.”14              

 All involved became fervent supporters of the idea.

Yitzhak Ben-Zvi, a historian and prominent member of the Zionist leadership (later to become Israel’s second president), wrote to Moshe Shertock (Sharett), the head of the political department of the Jewish Agency (and later Israel’s prime minister), that apart from topographically recording the layout of the villages, the project should also include exposing the “Hebraic origins” of each village. 

Furthermore, it was important for the Haganah to know which of the villages were relatively new, as some of them had been built “only” during the Egyptian occupation of Palestine in the 1830s.15  

But the main endeavor was mapping the villages, and to that end a Hebrew University topographer working in the Mandatory government’s cartography department was recruited to the enterprise.

He suggested preparing focal aerial maps and proudly showed Ben-Gurion two such maps for the villages of Sindyana and Sabarin. (These maps, now in the Israeli State Archives, are all that remains of these villages after 1948.)

The best professional photographers in the country were also invited to join the initiative. 

Yitzhak Shefer, from Tel Aviv, and Margot Sadeh, the wife of Yitzhak Sadeh, the chief of the Palmah (the commando units of the Haganah), were recruited as well.

The film laboratory operated in Margot’s house with an irrigation company serving as a front: the lab had to be hidden from the British authorities who could have regarded it as an illegal intelligence effort directed against them. 

Though the British were aware of the project, they never succeeded in locating the secret hideout.

In 1947, this whole cartographic department was moved to the Haganah headquarters in Tel Aviv.16   

The end result of the combined topographic and Orientalist efforts was a large body of detailed files gradually built up for each of Palestine’s villages.  

By the late 1940s, the “archive” was almost complete.  

  Precise details were recorded about the topographic location of each village, its access roads, quality of land, water springs, main sources of income, its sociopolitical composition, religious affiliations, names of its mukhtars, its relationship with other villages, the age of individual men (16–50), and much more

An important category was an index of “hostility” (toward the Zionist project, that is) as determined by the level of the village’s participation in the 1936–39 Arab Revolt. The 

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material included lists of everyone involved in the revolt and the families of those who had lost someone in the fight against the British. Particular attention was given to people alleged to have killed Jews.  

That this was no mere academic exercise in geography was immediately obvious to the regular members of the Haganah who were entrusted with collecting the data on “reconnaissance” missions into the villages. 

One of those who joined a data collection operation in 1940 was Moshe Pasternak, who recalled many years later: 

We had to study the basic structure of the Arab village.  

This means the structure and how best to attack it.  

 In the military schools, I had been taught how to attack a modern European city, not a primitive village in the Near East.  

We could not compare it [an Arab village] to a Polish, or an Austrian one. 

The Arab village, unlike the European ones, was built topographically on hills. 

That meant we had to find out how best to approach the village from above or enter it from below. 

We had to train our “Arabists” [the Orientalists who operated a network of collaborators] how best to work with informants.17 

Indeed, the difficulties of “working with informants” and creating a collaborationist system with the “primitive” people “who like to drink coffee and eat rice with their hands” were noted in many of the village files. 

Nonetheless, by 1943, Pasternak remembered, there was a growing sense that finally a proper network of informants was in place. 

That same year, the village files were rearranged to become even more systematic. 

This was mainly the work of one man, Ezra Danin,18 who was to play a leading role in the ethnic cleansing of Palestine. 

In many ways, it was the recruitment of Ezra Danin, who had been taken out of his successful citrus grove business for the purpose, that injected the intelligence work and the organization of the village files with a new level of efficiency 

Files in the post-1943 era included for each village detailed descriptions of the husbandry, cultivation, the number of trees in plantations, the quality of each fruit grove (even of individual trees!), the average land holding per family, the number of cars, the names of shop owners, members of workshops, and the names of the artisans and their skills.19

Later, meticulous details were added about each clan and its political affiliation, the social stratification between notables and common peasants, and the names of the civil servants in the Mandatory government. 

The antlike labor of the data collection created its own momentum, and around 1945 additional details began to appear such as descriptions of village mosques, the names of their imams (together with such characterizations as “he is an ordinary man”), and even precise accounts of the interiors of the homes of dignitaries. 

Not surprisingly, as the end of the Mandate approached, the information became more explicitly military orientated: the number of guards in each village (most had none) and the quantity and quality of arms at the villagers’ disposal (generally antiquated or even nonexistent).20     

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Danin recruited a German Jew named Yaacov Shimoni, later to become one of Israel’s leading Orientalists, and put him in charge of “special projects” in the villages, in particular supervising the work of the informants.21  

  (One of these informants, nicknamed the “treasurer” (ha-gizbar) by Danin and Shimoni, proved a fountain of information for the data collectors and supervised the collaborators’ network on their behalf until 1945, when he was exposed and killed by Palestinian militants.22)

Other colleagues working with Danin and Shimoni were Yehoshua Palmon and Tuvia Lishanski, who also took an active part in preparing for the ethnic cleansing of Palestine. 

Lishanski had already been busy in the 1940s orchestrating campaigns to forcibly evict tenants living on lands purchased by the JNF from present or absentee landlords. 

Not far from the village of Furiedis and the “veteran” Jewish settlement, Zikhron Yaacov, where today a road connects the coastal highway with Marj Ibn Amr (Emeq Izrael) through Wadi Milk, lies a youth village called Shefeya. 

It was here that in 1944 special units employed by the village files project received their training, and it was from here that they went out on their reconnaissance missions. 

Shefeya looked very much like a spy village in the cold war: Jews walking around speaking Arabic and trying to emulate what they believed were the customs and behavior of rural Palestinians.23 

3 Many years later, in 2002, one of the first recruits to this special training base recalled his first reconnaissance mission to the nearby village of Umm al-Zaynat in 1944.        

The aim had been to survey the village and bring back details of where the mukhtar lived, where the mosque was located, where the rich villagers lived, who had been active in the 1936–39 revolt, and so on.

  These were not dangerous missions, as the infiltrators knew they could exploit the traditional Arab hospitality code and were even guests at the home of the mukhtar himself.

As they failed to collect in one day all the data they were seeking, they asked to be invited back. 

For their second visit they had been instructed to make sure to get a good idea of the fertility of the land, whose quality seemed to have highly impressed them: in 1948, Umm al-Zaynat was destroyed and all its inhabitants expelled without any provocation on their part whatsoever.24 

The final update of the village files took place in 1947. It focused on creating lists of “wanted” persons in each village. 

In 1948, Jewish troops used these lists for the search-andarrest operations they carried out as soon as they had occupied a village.      

  That is, the men in the village would be lined up and those whose names appeared on the lists would be identified, often by the same person who had informed on them in the first place, but now wearing a cloth sack over his head with two holes cut out for his eyes so as not to be recognized.

The men who were picked out were often shot on the spot. 

Among the criteria for inclusion in these lists, besides having participated in actions against the British and the Zionists, were involvement in the Palestinian national movement (which could apply to entire villages) and having close ties to the leader of the movement, the Mufti Haj Amin alHusayni, or being affiliated with his political party.25    

  Given the Mufti’s dominance of Palestinian politics since the establishment of the Mandate in 1923, and the prominent positions held by members of his party in the Arab Higher Committee that became the embryo government of the Palestinians, this offense too was very common. Other reasons

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for being included in the list were such allegations as “known to have traveled to Lebanon” or “arrested by the British authorities for being a member of a national committee in the village.”26   

   An examination of the 1947 files shows that villages with about 1,500 inhabitants usually had 20–30 such suspects (for instance, around the southern Carmel mountains, south of Haifa, Umm al-Zaynat had 30 such suspects and the nearby village of Damun had 25).27

Yigael Yadin recalled that it was this minute and detailed knowledge of each and every Palestinian village that enabled the Zionist military command in November 1947 to conclude with confidence “that the Palestine Arabs had nobody to organize them properly.” 

The only serious problem was the British: “If not for the British, we could have quelled the Arab riot [the opposition to the UN Partition Resolution in 1947] in one month.”28 

GEARING UP FOR WAR 

As World War II drew to a close, the Zionist movement had obtained a much clearer general sense of how best to go about getting its state off the ground. 

By that time, it was clear that the Palestinians did not constitute a real obstacle to Zionist plans. True, they still formed the overwhelming majority in the land, and as such they were a demographic problem, but they were no longer feared as a military threat 

A crucial factor was that the British had already completely destroyed the Palestinian leadership and defense capabilities in 1939 when they suppressed the 1936–39 Arab Revolt, allowing the Zionist leadership ample time to set out their next moves. 

The Zionist leadership was also aware of the hesitant position that the Arab states as a whole were taking on the Palestine question. 

Thus, once the danger of Nazi invasion into Palestine had been removed, the Zionist leaders were keenly aware that the sole obstacle that stood in the way of their seizing the country was the British presence.          

As long as Britain had been holding the fort against Nazi Germany, it was impossible, of course, to pressure them.  

But with the end of the war, and especially with the postwar Labor government looking for a democratic solution in Palestine (which would have spelled doom for the Zionist project given the 75-percent Arab majority), it was clear that Britain had to go.

Some 100,000 British troops remained in Palestine after the war and, in a country with a population under two million, this definitely served as a deterrent, even after Britain cut back its forces somewhat following the Jewish terrorist attack on it headquarters in the King David Hotel.  

 It was these considerations that prompted Ben-Gurion to conclude that it was better to settle for less than the 100 percent demanded under the 1942 Biltmore program and that a slightly smaller state would be enough to allow the Zionist movement to fulfill its dreams and ambitions.29  

This was the issue that was debated by the movement in the final days of August 1946, when Ben-Gurion assembled the leadership of the Zionist movement at the Royal Monsue hotel in Paris.  

  Holding back the more extremist members, Ben-Gurion told the gathering that 80 to 90 percent of Mandatory Palestine was plenty for creating a viable state, provided

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 they were able to ensure Jewish predominance. “We will demand a large chunk of Palestine” he told those present.  

 A few months later the Jewish Agency translated Ben-Gurion’s “large chunk of Palestine” into a map which it distributed to the parties relevant to deciding the future of Palestine.  

  Interestingly, the Jewish Agency map, which was larger than the map proposed by the UN in November 1947, turned out to be, almost to the last dot, the map that emerged from the fighting in 1948–49: pre-1967 Israel, that is, Palestine without the West Bank and the Gaza Strip.30

The major topic on the Zionist agenda in 1946, the struggle against the British, resolved itself with Britain’s decision in February 1947 to quit Palestine and to transfer the Palestine question to the UN.   

In fact, the British had little choice: after the Holocaust they would never be able to deal with the looming Jewish rebellion as they had with the Arab one in the 1930s. 

Moreover, as the Labor party had made up its mind to leave India, Palestine lost much of its attraction. 

Fuel shortages during a particularly cold winter in 1947 drove the message home to London that the empire was soon to be a second-rate power, its global influence dwarfed by the two new superpowers (the United States and the Soviet Union) and its postwar economy crippled. 

Rather than hold onto remote places such as Palestine, the Labor party saw as its priority the building of a welfare state at home. In the end, Britain pulled out in a hurry, and with no regrets.31  

By the end of 1946, even before Britain’s decision, Ben-Gurion had already realized that the British were on their way out and, with his aides, began working on a general strategy that could be implemented against the Palestinian population the moment the British were gone.  

  This strategy became Plan C, or Gimel in Hebrew. Plan C was a revised version of two earlier plans.

Plan A was also named the “Elimelech Plan,” after Elimelech Avnir, the Haganah commander in Tel Aviv who in 1937, at Ben-Gurion’s request, had set out possible guidelines for the takeover of Palestine in the event of a British withdrawal. 

Plan B had been devised in 1946. 

Shortly thereafter, the two plans were fused to form Plan C.  

Like Plans A and B, Plan C aimed to prepare the Jewish community’s military forces for the offensive campaigns they would be waging against rural and urban Palestine after the departure of the British.   

  The purpose of such actions would be to “deter” the Palestinian population from attacking Jewish settlements and to retaliate for assaults on Jewish houses, roads, and traffic.

Plan C spelled out clearly what punitive actions of this kind would entail:   

Striking at the political leadership. 

Striking at inciters and their financial supporters. 

Striking at Arabs who acted against Jews. 

Striking at senior Arab officers and officials [in the Mandatory system]. 

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Hitting Palestinian transportation.

Damaging the sources of livelihood and vital economic targets (water wells, mills, etc.).  

Attacking villages, neighborhoods, likely to assist in future attacks. 

Attacking clubs, coffee houses, meeting places, etc. 

Plan C added that the data necessary for the successful performance of these actions could be found in the village files: lists of leaders, activists, “potential human targets,” the precise layout of villages, and so on.32 

The plan lacked operational specifics, however, and within a few months, a new plan was drawn up, Plan D (Dalet). 

This was the plan that sealed the fate of the Palestinians within the territory the Zionist leaders had set their eyes on for their future Jewish State. 

Unlike Plan C, it contained direct references both to the geographical parameters of the future Jewish state (the 78 percent provided for in the 1946 Jewish Agency map) and to the fate of the one million Palestinians living within that space: 

These operations can be carried out in the following manner: either by destroying villages (by setting fire to them, by blowing them up, and by planting mines in their rubble), and especially those population centers that are difficult to control permanently; or by mounting combing and control operations according to the following guidelines: encirclement of the villages, conducting a search inside them. In case of resistance, the armed forces must be wiped out and the population expelled outside the borders of the state.33  

No village within the planned area of operations was exempted from these orders, either because of its location or because it was expected to put up some resistance. 

This was the master plan for the expulsion of all the villages in rural Palestine 

Similar instructions were given, in much the same wording, for actions directed at Palestine’s urban centers. 

The orders coming through to the units in the field were more specific.  

The country was divided into zones according to the number of brigades, whereby the four original brigades of the Haganah were turned into twelve so as to facilitate implementing the plan  

Each brigade commander received a list of the villages or neighborhoods in his zone that had to be occupied, destroyed, and their inhabitants expelled, with exact dates 

Some commanders were overly zealous in executing their orders, adding other locations as the momentum of their operation carried them forward. 

Some of the orders, on the other hand, proved too ambitious and could not be implemented within the expected timetable. 

This meant that several villages on the coast that had been scheduled to be occupied in May were destroyed only in July. 

And the villages in the Wadi Ara area—a valley connecting the coast near Hadera with Marj Ibn Amr (Emeq Izrael) and Afula (today’s Route 65)—somehow 

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succeeded in surviving all the Jewish attacks until the end of the war. But they were the exception. 

For the most part, the destruction of the villages and urban neighborhoods, and the removal of their inhabitants, took place as planned. 

And by the time the direct order had been issued in March, thirty villages were already obliterated. 

A few days after Plan D was typed out, it was distributed among the commanders of the dozen brigades that now comprised the Haganah. 

With the list each commander received came a detailed description of the villages in his field of operation and their imminent fate— occupation, destruction, and expulsion. 

The Israeli documents released from the IDF archives in the late 1990s show clearly that, contrary to claims made by historians such as Benny Morris, Plan Dalet was handed down to the brigade commanders not as vague guidelines, but as clear-cut operative orders for action.34 

Unlike the general draft that was sent to the political leaders, the instructions and lists of villages received by the military commanders did not place any restrictions on how the action of destruction or expulsion was to be carried out. 

There were no provisions as to how villages could avoid their fate, for example through unconditional surrender, as promised in the general document.  

  There was another difference between the draft handed to the politicians and the one given to the military commanders: the official draft stated that the plan would not be activated until after the Mandate ended, whereas the officers on the ground were ordered to start executing it within a few days of its adoption.  

This dichotomy is typical of the relationship that exists in Israel between the army and politicians until today —the army quite often misinforms the politicians of their real intentions, as Moshe Dayan did in 1956, Ariel Sharon did in 1982, and Shaul Mofaz did in 2000.   

What the political version of Plan Dalet and the military directives had in common was the overall purpose of the scheme. In other words, even before the direct orders had reached the field, troops already knew exactly what was expected of them. 

The venerable and courageous Israeli fighter for civil rights, Shulamit Aloni, who was an officer at the time, recalls how special political officers would come down and actively incite the troops by demonizing the Palestinians and invoking the Holocaust as the point of reference for the operation ahead, often planned for the day after the indoctrination had taken place.35  

THE PARADIGM OF ETHNIC CLEANSING   

In my forthcoming book, I want to explore the mechanism of the ethnic cleansing of 1948 as well as the cognitive system that has allowed the world to forget and the perpetrators to deny the crime committed by the Zionist movement against the Palestinian people.   

In other words, I want to make the case for a paradigm of ethnic cleansing to replace the paradigm of war as the basis for the scholarly research of, and the public debate about, 1948.  

I have no doubt that the absence so far of the paradigm of ethnic cleansing is one reason why the denial of the catastrophe has gone on for so long. It is not that the Zionist  

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movement, in creating its nation-state, waged a war that “tragically but inevitably” led to the expulsion of “parts of the indigenous population.”   

  Rather, it is the other way round: the objective was the ethnic cleansing of the country the movement coveted for its new state, and the war was the consequence, the means to carry it out.

On 15 May 1948, the day after the official end of the Mandate and the day the State of Israel was proclaimed, the neighboring Arab states sent a small army—small in comparison to their overall military capability—to try to stop the ethnic cleansing operations that had already been in full swing for over a month. 

The war with the regular Arab armies did nothing to prevent the ongoing ethnic cleansing, which continued to its successful completion in the autumn of 1948.    

To many, the idea of adopting the paradigm of ethnic cleansing as the a priori basis for the narrative of 1948 may appear no more than an indictment.  

 And in many ways, it is indeed my own J’Accuse against the politicians who devised the ethnic cleansing and the generals who carried it out.   

These men are not obscure. 

They are the heroes of the Jewish war of independence, and their names will be quite familiar to most readers. 

The list begins with the indisputable leader of the Zionist movement, David Ben-Gurion, in whose private home all the chapters in the ethnic cleansing scheme were discussed and finalized. 

He was aided by a small group of people I refer to as the “Consultancy,” an ad-hoc cabal assembled solely for the purpose of planning the dispossession of the Palestinians.36 

 In one of the rare documents that records the meeting of this body, it is referred to as the Consultant Committee—Haveadah Hamyeazet; in another document the eleven names of the committee appear.37 

 Though these names were all erased by the censor, it has been possible to reconstruct them.  

This caucus prepared the plans for the ethnic cleansing and supervised its execution until the job of uprooting half of Palestine’s native population had been completed.  

  It included first and foremost the top-ranking officers of the future state’s army, such as the legendary Yigael Yadin and Moshe Dayan.

They were joined by figures little known outside Israel but well grounded in the local ethos, such as Yigal Alon and Yitzhak Sadeh, followed by regional commanders, such as Moshe Kalman, who cleansed the Safad area, and Moshe Carmel, who uprooted most of the Galilee. 

Yitzhak Rabin operated both in al-Lyyd and Ramleh, as well as in the Greater Jerusalem area. Shimon Avidan cleansed the south; many years later Rehavam Ze’evi, who fought with him, said admiringly that he “cleansed his front from tens of villages and towns.”38 

Also on the southern front was Yitzhak Pundak, who told Ha’Aretz in 2004, “There were two hundred villages [in the front] and they are gone. We had to destroy them, otherwise we would have had Arabs here [namely in the southern part of Palestine] as we have in Galilee. We would have had another million Palestinians.”39 

  These military men commingled with what nowadays we would call the “Orientalists”: experts on the Arab world at large, and the Palestinians in particular, either because they themselves came from Arab lands or because they were scholars in the field of Middle Eastern studies.

Some of these were intelligence officers on the ground during this crucial period. 

Far from being mere collectors of data on the “enemy,” intelligence officers not only 

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played a major role in preparing for the cleansing, but some also personally took part in some of the worst atrocities that accompanied the systematic dispossession of the Palestinians.  

  It was they who were given the final authority to decide which villages would be ground to dust and which villagers would be executed.40

In the memories of Palestinian survivors, they were the ones who, after a village or neighborhood had been occupied, decided the fate of its peasants or town dwellers, which could mean imprisonment or freedom or spell the difference between life and death. 

Their operations in 1948 were supervised by Issar Harel, who later became the first head of Mossad and the Shin Bet, Israel’s secret services. 

I mention their names, but my purpose in doing so is not that I want to see them posthumously brought to trial. 

Rather, my aim here and in my book is to humanize the victimizers as well as the victims: 

: I want to prevent the crimes Israel committed from being attributed to such elusive factors as “the circumstances,” “the army,” or, as Benny Morris has it, “la guerre comme la guerre,” and similar vague references that let sovereign states off the hook and give individuals a clear conscience. 

I accuse, but I am also part of the society that stands condemned. 

 I feel both responsible for, and part of, the story.   

But like others in my own society, I am also convinced that a painful journey into the past is the only way forward if we want to create a better future for us all, Palestinians and Israelis alike. 

NOTES 

1. The composition of the group that met is the product of a mosaic reconstruction of several documents, as will be demonstrated in my book, The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine (Oxford: Oneworld Publications, 2006). 

The document summarizing the meeting is found in the Israel Defense Force Archives [IDFA], GHQ/Operations branch, 10 March 1948, File no. 922/75/595, and in the Haganah Archives [HA], File no. 73/94. 

The description of the meeting is repeated by Israel Galili in the Mapai center meeting, 4 April 1948, found in the HA, File no. 80/50/18. Chapter 4 of my book also documents the messages that went out on 10 March as well as the eleven meetings prior to finalizing of the plan, of which full minutes were recorded only for the January meeting. 

2. The historian Meir Pail claims, in From Haganah to the IDF [in Hebrew] (Tel Aviv: Zemora Bitan Modan, n.d.), p. 307, that the orders were sent a week later 

For the dispatch of the orders, see also Gershon Rivlin and Elhanan Oren, The War of Independence: Ben-Gurion’s Diary, vol. 1 (Tel Aviv: Ministry of Defense, 1982), p. 147. 

The orders dispatched to the Haganah brigades to move to State D—Mazav Dalet—and from the brigades to the battalions can be found in HA, File no. 73/94, 16 April 1948. 

3. On Plan Dalet, which was approved in its broad lines several weeks before that meeting, see Uri Ben-Eliezer, The Emergence of Israeli Militarism, 1936–1956 (Tel Aviv: Dvir, 1995), p. 253: “Plan Dalet aimed at cleansing of villages, expulsion of Arabs from mixed towns.” 

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4. State Department Special Report, “Erasing History: Ethnic Cleansing in Kosovo,” 10 May 1999.

5. “The Ethnic Cleansing of Bosnia-Hercegovina: A Staff Report to the Committee on Foreign Relations,” U.S. Senate, August 1992, S.PRT. 102–103. 

6. United Nations, “Report Following Security Council Resolution 819,” 16 April 1993 

7. Drazen Petrovic, “Ethnic Cleansing: An Attempt at Methodology,” European Journal of International Law 5, no. 3 (1994), pp. 342–60. 

8. On Peel, see Charles D. Smith, Palestine and the Arab-Israeli Conflict (Boston and New York: Beford/St. Martin’s Press, 2004), pp. 135–37 

9. Smith, Palestine, pp. 167–68        

10. Ben-Gurion Archives [BGA], Ben-Gurion Diary, 12 July 1937  

  11. “The Inelegance Service and the Village Files, 1940–1948” (prepared by Shimri Salomon), Bulletin of the Haganah Archives, issues 9–10 (2005).

12. For a critical survey of the JNF, see Uri Davis, Apartheid Israel: Possibilities for the Struggle Within (London: Zed Books, 2004). 

13. Shabtai Teveth, Ben-Gurion and the Palestinian Arabs: From Peace to War (New York: Oxford University Press, 1985). 

14. Teveth, Ben-Gurion. 

15. HA, File no. 66.8 

16. Testimony of Yoeli Optikman, HA, Village Files, File 24/9, 16 January 2003.     

  17. HA, File no. 1/080/451, 1 December 1939

18. HA, File no. 194/7, pp. 1–3, given on 19 December 2002. 

19. John Bierman and Colin Smith, Fire in the Night: Wingate of Burma, Ethiopia, and Zion (New York: Random House, 1999). 

20. HA, Files no. S25/4131, no. 105/224, and no. 105/227, and many others in this series, each dealing with a different village. 

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  21. Hillel Cohen, The Shadow Army: Palestinian Collaborators in the Service of Zionism [in Hebrew] (Jerusalem: Hozata Ivrit, 2004).

22. Interview with Palti Sela, HA, File no. 205.9, 10 January 1988. 

23. Interview, HA, File no. 194.7, pp. 1–3, 19 December 2002 

24. HA, Village Files, File no. 105/255 files from January 1947 

25. IDFA, File no. 114/49/5943, orders from 13 April 1948. 

26. IDFA, File no. 105.178. 

27. HA, Village Files, File no. 105/255, from January 1947. 

28. Quoted in Harry Sacher, Israel: The Establishment of a State (London: Wiedenfels and Nicloson, 1952), p. 217. 

29. On British policy, see Ilan Pappé, Britain and the Arab-Israeli Conflict, 1948–1951 (London: St. Antony’s/Macmillan Press, 1984) 

30. Moshe Sluzki interview with Moshe Sneh in Gershon Rivlin, ed., Olive Leaves and Sword: Documents and Studies of the Haganah [in Hebrew] (Tel Aviv: IDF Publications, 1990), pp. 9– 40 

31. See Pappé, Britain.              

  32. Yehuda Sluzki, The Haganah Book, vol. 3, part 3 [in Hebrew] (Tel Aviv: IDF Publications, 1964), p. 1942.

33. The English translation is in Walid Khalidi, “Plan Dalet: Master Plan for the Conquest of Palestine,” Journal of Palestine Studies 38, no. 1 (Autumn 1988), pp. 4–20. 

34. See discussion of State D (Mazav Dalet)—that is, the transition from Plan D to its actual implementation—in chapter 5 of Pappé, Ethnic Cleansing. 

35. The plan distributed to the soldiers and the first direct commands are in IDFA, File no. 1950/2315 File 47, 11 May 1948. 

36. The most important meetings are described in chapter 3 of Pappé, Ethnic Cleansing 

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  37. “From Ben-Gurion to Galili and the Members of the Committee,” BGA, Correspondence Section, 1.01.1948–07.01.48, documents 79–81. The document also provides a list of forty Palestinians leaders that are target for assassination by the Haganah forces.

38. Yedi’ot Aharonot, 2 February 1992. 

39. Ha’Aretz, 21 May 2004. 

40. For details, see Pappé, Ethnic Cleansing. The authority to destroy can be found in the orders sent on 10 March to the troops and specific orders authorizing executions are in IDFA, File no. 5943/49 doc. 114, 13 April 1948. 

Source : Institute for Palestine Studies URL : http://www.palestine-studies.org/en/journals/abstract.php? id=7175

END 

Reacties uitgeschakeld voor Article by Ilan Pappe, published in Journal of Palestine Studies, 2006/The 1948 Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine

Opgeslagen onder Divers

[Artikel Peter Storm]/Torpederen, dat komende fascistenkabinet!

ASTRID ESSED OVER ONDERSTAAND ARTIKEL:

”GOED EN STRIJDBAAR ARTIKEL”

TORPEDEREN, DAT KOMENDE FASCISTENKABINET!

WEBSITE PETER STORM

Geplaatst op 27 januari 2024 door egel

zaterdag 27 januari 2024

Geschreven voor Konfrontatie, en daar ook al verschenen, waarvoor weer dank. Ga er trouwens eens kijken, op Konfrontatie dus, staat beslist aardig spul op.

Meer dan twee maanden geleden veroverde Wilders met zijn PVV via verkiezingen een dominante positie in de parlementaire politiek. De PVV kreeg de grootste fractie in de Tweede Kamer, en al snel kwam er een formatie op gang van een fascistenkabinet. BBB en NSC schoven aan, VVD ook. Onder leiding van Plasterk (PvdA, ook dat nog) kwamen er gesprekken. Wilders deed zich hierbij voor als welwillend en inschikkelijk. De coalitiepartners gingen mee in die voze pretentie.

De gesprekken bleken te gaan over de vraag of de Grondwet en de rechtstaat intact zouden blijven. Alleen al het feit dat er over zoiets onderhandeld zou moeten worden, is al hoogst verontrustend. Nee, als anarchist heb ik met geen enkele staat iets, en met de wettelijke grondslag van zo’n staat al evenmin. Maar het is duidelijk dat het in de formatiegesprekken niet om het repressieve en autoritaire karakter van rechtsstaat en grondwet gaat, maar juist om enkele waardevolle beginselen die er binnen als rechtmatig zijn erkend (maar daarmee allerminst gegarandeerd…).

Het gaat dan boven alles om gelijkwaardigheid van mensen. En de erkenning of ontkenning daarvan is wezenlijk, ook voor mensen die de instituties en het wettelijk kader waarbinnen die erkenning plaatsvindt, op zichzelf niet als legitiem erkennen. Ik hoef de rechtsstaat en de grondwet niet. Maar ik verdedig de erin verankerde grondrechten wel met hand en tand. Dat die grondrechten nu gewoon discussiepunt zijn in formatiebesprekingen, duidt aan uit welke fascistische, de gelijkwaardigheid ontkennende hoek de wind in politiek Den Haag waait.

Er is weinig reden om over dit alles al te verbaasd te zijn. De PVV won haar grote aanhang immers op basis van precies de ontkenning van gelijke rechten. Pogingen om dat te ontkennen of relativeren, stranden op keiharde feiten. PVV-stemmers noemden in onderzoek naar kiezersmotivatie heel duidelijk migratie op nummer een. Dat is anders dan het praatje over de rechtmatig ontevreden kiezers die dus maar PVV kozen, doet geloven.

‘Een stem op radicaal-rechts, was ook wel de redenering, zou immers vaak een schreeuw om zijn bij het oplossen van problemen als bestaanszekerheid en woningnood.’ Dat is dus gecheckt. ‘Wat blijkt: het argument bestaanszekerheid is zo goed als afwezig als argument om op de PVV te stemmen. Ook de woningmarkt wordt nauwelijks genoemd, en dan uitsluitend gekoppeld aan migratie’. Dit blijkt uit het Nationaal Kiezersonderzoek, waar de Volkskrant op 21 december 2023 aandacht aan besteedde en waar ik hier uit citeer.(1)

Afkeer van migranten trok mensen naar de PVV. Die mensen zagen in een stem voor Wilders een mogelijkheid om hun racisme van een enorme megafoon te voorzien. Woningnood is geen reden om PVV te stemmen, hooguit een handvat om de racistische haat van een smoes te voorzien. Ginnoy Mooy formuleert het scherp in de kop van een prachtig artikel: ‘Eigen volk eerst, dat is wat ze willen’.(3) Inderdaad. Geen illusies, geen verhulling van het racistische karakter van de Wilders-support-base!

Dat sommige van die mensen gefrustreerd zijn over woningtekort en magere inkomens, zal waar zijn. Niet die frustratie op zich dreef ze echter naar Wilders. De behoefte om hun frustratie af te reageren om migranten, vluchtelingen, niet-witte mensen, dat dreef ze naar Wilders. Wie bijvoorbeeld echt wat aan het echte probleem wil doen dat dat woningnood of wooncrisis heet, heeft opties. De Bond Precaire Woonvormen kan dan je plek zijn.(2) Die heeft al in acht steden plaatselijke groepen en spreekuren. Nee, daar kun je niet op stemmen, maar die plegen dan ook geen verkiezingsbedrog. Die gaan samen met je aan de slag waar mogelijk, als je dat wilt.

Racisme verklaart dus de grote PVV-overwinning, er is geen goede reden om dat te ontkennen, te verhullen of te bagatelliseren. En precies dit racisme dreigt dus regeringsbeleid te worden. Niet dat eerdere kabinetten vrij van racisme waren trouwens! Maar met Wilders in een hoofdrol en de machtspositie die de PVV in een nieuw kabinet te krijgen, is er wel sprake van een levensgevaarlijke sprong. Een kabinet-Wilders is niet zomaar een rechts kabinet met de helaas veel te gangbare bureaucratische uitsluiting van en repressie tegen vluchtelingen als vaste prik in een omhulsel van gelijke rechten die met voeten getreden worden, maar niet al te openlijk. Een kabinet-Wilders wordt een kabinet van ongelijke rechten, een openlijk autoritair kabinet, een extreem nationalistisch kabinet, een fascistenkabinet.

Daarmee is Nederland weliswaar nog niet meteen een regelrechte dictatuur: een fascistische staat is nog iets meer dan een regering met fascisten er in. Maar een gevaarlijke stap die kant op is het wel. Wilders in de regering kan her en der fascisten benoemd krijgen op posten in bestuur, rechtspleging en politie. Bo Salomons laat in serieuze en stevig onderbouwde artikelen zien hoe bros , breekbaar en kwetsbaar voor autoritaire manipulatie het (staats)recht en het overheidsbestel is, hoe relatief makkelijk dat in openlijk autoritaire richting kan worden omgevormd, en hoe snel dat eventueel kan gaan.(4)

De retoriek van het kabinet zal intussen straatfascisten aanmoedigen, zoals de PVV-verkiezingszege dat ook al deed. Die praten en gedragen zich al extra arrogant en agressief, alsof hun grote dag gekomen is, en in zekere zin is dat ook zo. Het wordt tijd om ervoor te zorgen dat hun dag kort duurt. Het is tijd om ervoor te zorgen dat deze stap richting een fascistisch Nederland niet kan worden gezet, en dus dat dit Wilders-kabinet er niet komt.

Hoe gaan we dat doen? Een beroep op politici redt ons niet: een deel schuift al keurig aan bij Wilders en Plasterk. Een ander deel gaat keurig construtief oppositievoeren, oftewel collaboreren-op-afstand. Ons verschuilen achter rechtsstaat en Grondwet biedt weinig bescherming: lees Bo Salomons! Niemand gaat ons van deze rechtse machtsreep redden als we het zelf niet doen. Wij allemaal, ongeacht afkomst, gender en seksuele voorkeur, religieuze achtergrond en huidskleur. Wij allemaal samen.

Hoe? Kijk naar Duitsland, waar grote demonstraties tegen de fascistische AfD plaatsvonden. Goede voorbeelden, al dienen we de grote problemen binnen die protestbeweging daarbij onder ogen te zien.(5) Kijk ook naar Oostenrijk, waar vrijdag 26 januari 2024,zo’n 80.000 mensen in de hoofdstad Wenen tegen extreem-rechts protesteerden.(6) Waarom gaan we in Nederland niet in grote aantallen de straat op tegen de dreiging van een fascistenregering? Wie neemt het voortouw, wie neemt initiatief?

Nee, ik geloof niet dat zulke demonstraties de aanhang van de PVV op andere gedachten gaan brengen. Haters gonna hate, we moeten de invloed ervan zien te breken, maar het tot fatsoenlijker inzichten doen komen van fascisten is niet wat ik met straatprotesten beoog. Ik geloof ook niet dat PVV, NSC en/of BBB bij het zien van verontwaardigde menigten gaan denken : ‘O, we doen iets onfatsoenlijks!’ Ze weten wat ze doen, en ze doen het gewoon, als ze er mee weg komen.

Maar ik hoop wel dat, als deze partijen zien met hoeveel we zijn en hoe boos we aan het worden zijn, ze een beetje bang beginnen te worden. Bang voor hun politieke machtspositie als ze de antifascistische woede trotseren. Bang dat de orde die ze samen met openlijke fascisten zouden willen besturen, van onderop uitgedaagd en bedreigd wordt, precies ook omdat ze met fascisten willen gaan besturen. Bang voor ons allemaal samen. Zodat ze beginnen te zien dat ze er niet mee wegkomen.

Door ze zo bang te maken dat ze beginnen te snappen dat een kabinet-Wilders een hele slechte career-move is, geven we dit slag politici een motief om toch maar niet met die formatie door te gaan. Komt zo’n kabinet er toch, dan zijn we in ieder geval goed begonnen met het op de been brengen van tegenkrachten die we dan – juist ook dan – hard nodig hebben. Nou, gaan we aan de slag of niet?

Noten:

(1) Margriet Oostveen, ‘Nieuw onderzoek toont aan: flitswinst PVV kwam voort uit eigen-volk-eerst-gevoel’, Volkskrant, 21 december 2023, https://www.volkskrant.nl/binnenland/nieuw-onderzoek-toont-aan-flitswinst-pvv-kwam-voort-uit-eigen-volk-eerst-gevoel~bb864eee/

(2) De Bond Precaire Woonvormen is te vinden via https://bondprecairewoonvormen.nl/

(3) Ginny Mooy, “Eigen volk eerst, dat is wat ze willen’, 30 december 2024, https://www.ginnymooy.com/2023/12/30/eigen-volk-eerst-dat-is-wat-ze-willen/

(4) Bo Salomons, ‘Wordt de PVV echt zo erg? Nee, het wordt erger!’, Doorbraak, 29 november 2023, https://www.doorbraak.eu/wordt-de-pvv-echt-zo-erg-nee-het-wordt-erger/ Lees trouwens vooral ook andere artikelen van Bo Salomons, op Doorbraak staan er al een heleboel.

(5) Meer hierover: Peter Storm, ‘Antifascistisch protest Duitsland: bemoedigend maar niet probleemloos’, op: Egel, 21 januari 2024, https://peterstormt.nl/2024/01/21/antifascistisch-protest-duitsland-bemoedigend-maar-niet-probleemloos/

(6) Kate Connoly, ‘Thousands across Austria take part in protests against far right’, The Guardian, 26 januari 2024, https://www.theguardian.com/world/2024/jan/26/thousands-across-austria-to-take-part-in-protests-against-far-right

Peter Storm

Reacties uitgeschakeld voor [Artikel Peter Storm]/Torpederen, dat komende fascistenkabinet!

Opgeslagen onder Divers

[Artikel Peter Storm]/Antifascistisch protest Duitsland: bemoedigend maar niet probleemloos

ANTIFASCISTISCH PROTEST DUITSLAND: BEMOEDIGEND MAAR NIET

PROBLEEMLOOS

WEBSITE PETER STORM

Geplaatst op 21 januari 2024 door egel

zondag 21 januari 2024

Een golf van antifascistische demonstraties spoelt door Duitsland. Een ware massabeweging tegen de AfD, de fascistische partij die de afgelopen jaren gevaarlijk groot en sterk is geworden. Het is goed nieuws! Het verdient aandacht, en dat het goede voorbeeld dat er in steekt, maar gevolgd mag worden in Nederland. De aandacht kan echter beter niet vrij zijn van kritische observaties, want probleemloos is deze protestgolf niet. Maar eerst: die protestgolf zelf.

1 Wat?

Wanneer het precies begon? In ieder geval maakte Nu.nl op 14 januari 2024 melding van protest die zondag in twee steden: ‘Duizenden mensen in Berlijn en Potsdam hebben zondag geprotesteerd tegen extreemrechts’.(1) De NOS noemde naast die twee steden ook Kiel als stad waar zo’n demonstratie plaatsvond. Dat niet alleen: de dag ervoor wewas het al raak. ‘Gisteren waren er ook demonstraties in Duisburg en Hamburg’.(2) Op 16 januari meldt de Guardian dat de betogingen dan al vier dagen bezig zijn. ‘Protesten hebben plaatsgevonden in Leipzig, Essen en Berlijn’.(3)

Dan wordt het vrijdag in Hamburg, met volgens Nu.nl ‘zeker 50.000 mensen’ aan het demonstreren.(4) Het kunnen er ook veel meer geweest zijn, en het is ver boven verwachting van organisatoren, die zelf van 80.000 deelnemers spreken. Zo groot was de demonstratie dat de zaak werd afgebroken: ‘Hulpdiensten zouden mensen die flauwvielen niet meer hebben kunnen bereiken.(5)

Zaterdag, 20 januari was het de beurt aan een hele reeks steden. De NOS noemt Frankfurt en Hannover en spreekt van ‘in totaal meer dan 300.000 mensen’ die aan het demonstreren waren ‘tegen extreemrechts en de rechts-radicale partij Alternative für Deutschland’, die fascistische AfD dus.(6) Al Jazeera noemt Frankfurt met 35.000 demonstranten, Hannover met ‘een dergelijk aantal’, en Dortmund met 30.000 actievoerders. ‘Protesten werden ook gehouden in steden waaronder Braunschweig, Erfurt, Kassel en veel kleinere plaatsen.’(7)

Aardig is een stukje berichtgeving ui het niet als radicaal antifascistisch vbeikend staande beieren. Daar ging het ook goed los.Een demonstratie in Neurenberg bijvoorbeeld, met 15.000 deelnemers. Duizend demonstranten in Ansbach, een paar duizend in Bamberg, 4000 in Erlangen. Mooi waren de “Omas gegen Rechts’ (oma’s tegen rechts), die in Würzburg de straat op gingen met (volgens politiecijfers) 3000 mensen.(8) Dat pluk ik uit een artiikel van een regionale omroep dat ik min of meert toevallig tegenkwam. Alle kans dat er uit andere deelstaten soortgelijke taferelen te melden zijn.

Deutsche Welle vertelt nog dat onder meer in Kalrsruhe en Wuppertal werd gedemonstreerd. Wat aantallen per stad: ‘12.000 in Kassel, 7000 elk in Dortmund en Wuppertal, 20.000 in Karlsruhe, minstens 10.000 in Neurenberg, ongeveer 16.000 en Halle/Saale, 5000 in Koblenz en meerdere duizenden in Erfurt’. Het betreffende artitel spreekt van in totaal ruimschoots 200.000 protesterende mensen. (9) Vandaag, zondag 21 januari, was München aan de beurt, en hoe! Ook hier is de demonstratie stilgelegd wegens overweldigende opkomst. ‘Volgens de politie waren er zo’n 90.000 mensen op de been, de organisator houdt het op 250.000 mensen.’ (10) Een kwart miljoen!

2 Waarom?

Waar komt dit zo opeens vandaan, deze aanstekelijke en zeer welkome uitbraak van antifascistisch straatprotest? De aanleiding is het bekend worden van een geheime bijeenkomst in november 2023 waar AfD-figuren, fascisten van andere achtergronden waaronder uit Oostenrijk een woordvoerder van de Identitairen, en zelf enkele mensen van de christendemocratische CDU, praatten over het uitzetten van immigranten uit Duitsland. Over het deporteren van mensen dus. Over een stukje etnische zuivering. Ze bespraken soort van een plan in die richting.

Correktiv, een soort onderzoeksjournalistiek project, deed er verslag van, en het nieuws sloeg nogal in. Dat de AfJ extreem-rechts en anti-immigranten was, wisten veel mensen al. Hoe ver die partij daarin ging, en in wat voor gezelschap AfD-kopstukken verkeerden, werd met het bekend worden van deze enge samenkomst extra duidelijk. De Duitse publicatie van het Correktiv-verslag dateert van 10 januari 2024.(11) Kort erna, 13 en 14 januari, kwamen de protesten op gang, zoals we hierboven zagen.

Natuurlijk speelt er meer. Later dit jaar zijn er verkiezingen in drie deelstaten, en het kan zomaar zijn dat de AfD langs die weg een boel extra invloed en macht vergaart. Ook in Duitsland werkt de fascistentruc: bestaande onvrede bespelen en aanjagen, en stelselmatig naar migranten, vluchtelingen wijzen als ‘probleem, terwijl links en ‘woke’ neergezet wordt wegkijkers en vijand van alles wat veilig en vaderlandslievend is. Economische misère en ene dure oorlog in Oekraïne worden aangegrepen door deze fascisten. Maar dat werkt alleen maar zo sterk omdat een serieus links-en-van-onderop verhaal over deze kwesties zo immens weinig invloed en uitstraling heeft is zodat de onvrede makkelijk van een rechts verhaal en fascistische stootrichting wordt voorzien.

Er is al met al sprake van een serieus fascistisch gevaar in Duitsland, en de onthullingen van Correctiv over de AfD en de genoemde deportatie-bespreking waar AfD-ers aan deelnamen, was kennelijk een druppel waar de emmer vol antifascistische bezorgdheid door overliep. Van bezorgdheid naar wijdverbreid straatprotest: het is een stap die de affgelopen weken in Dyuitsland op grote schaal is gezet. Het is een grote stap vooruit, een stap die we in Nederland na de grote PVV-overwinning maar niet weten door te zetten, ook niet na veelbelovende beginnetjes in de eerste twee weken na verkiezingsdag. Hopelijk moedigen de protesten in Duitsland mensen in Nederland weer een beetje aan. De nadering van ween Wilders-regering passief en moppertwitterend blijven afwachten is een recept voor een ramp.

3 (Nog?) wel beperkt, (nog?) wel nalatig

Bij alle vreugde die we – terecht! – aan de antifascistische demonstraties in Duitsland weten te ontlenen, horen enkele kritische kanttekeningen echter niet te ontbreken. Allereerst: de demonstraties zijn dus zeer wijdverbreid en opvallend groot ook. Dat is een kracht: om het fascisme te stuiten hebben we inderdaad menigten nodig, niet slechts handjesvol. Maar de breedte van het protest omvat tegelijk een zwakte: de invloed die de politieke mainstream er in en ermee tot uiting brengt. Bondskanselier Scholz deed in Potsdam op 14 januari mee aan een demonstratie! Hij prees de demonstranten ook, en wees op het gevaar van de ‘etno-nationalistische ideologie van van de Nationaal-Socialisten’, waarmee hij het deportatieplan en de AfD dus in verband bracht.(12) Dat verband is er natuurlijk ook. En Scholz was niet het enige politieke en bestuurlijke kopstuk dat lof had voor de demonstraties en de AfD de wacht aanzegde. ‘CDU-leider Friedrich Merz noemde de landelijke protesten bemoedigend”, lees ik op de NOS in een bericht van gisteren. ‘ “De zwijgende meerderheid verheft haar stem en laat zien dat zij in een land wil leven dat kosmopolitisch en vrij is”, zei hij vanochtend tegen DPA’.(13)

Zoveel lof uit deze hoek verdient argwaan. Het verband dat Scholz aanduiddee – tussen de AfD-politiek en datgene waar de nazi’s destijds voor stonden – is er natuurlijk. Maar Scholz en zijn collega’s zijn niet bepaald geloofwaardig als antifascist, ook niet als ze iets zeggen dat op zichzelf klopt. Het zijn immers politici uit een bestel dat zelf niet te beroerd is om op racistische sentimenten in te spelen. Het betreft kopstukken van een staat die zij aan zij met andere Europese staten een menselijke opvang van vluchtelingen steeds verder frustreert, daartoe grensbewakingsinstantie Frontex overeind houdt, zonder blikken of blozen mensen in de Middellandse Zee laat verzuipen en akkoorden met autocraten sluit om vluchtelingen uit Europa weg te houden.

Het zijn ook kopstukken van een politiek bestel die opkomst van het fascisme ervaart als dreiging ervaren voor hun machtspositie. Het antifascistisch protest geeft ze de kans om zich progressiever en humaner voor te doen dan ze zijn. Zulk protest biedt ze een welkom tegenwicht tegen hun extreem-rechtse concurrenten. Maar het zou funest zijn als de demonstranten zich zouden beperken tot wat de gevestigde politici verwelkomen. Een serieuze antifascistische strijd betekent: opkomen voor vluchtelingen, voor verblijfsrecht voor iedereen, voor vrijheid van migratie. Alleen zo snijden we de weg naar verdeel-en-heers, dat fasco-trucje, effectief af. Waar antifascisten zich matigen uit angst om die aardige meneer Scholz niet weg te jagen, ondermijnen ze de noodzakelijke inhoudelijke scherpte die de antifascistische strijd nodig heeft.

Vroeg of laat zullen we meer nodig hebben dan keurige protesten. De AfD is met alleen d keurige demonstraties niet terug te slaan. Ze zal, waar ze samenkomt en congresseert, stevig gedwarsboomd dienen te worden. Gaan al die politici die nu de antifascisten prijzen, dan ook meehelpen? Of stuurt burgemeester Schubert van Potsdam, die nota bene ‘had opgeroepen tot die demonstratie’ – die van vorige week zondag aldaar(14) – in zo’n geval toch de oproerpolitie op antifascisten af? Ik zou als antifascist zeer serieus rekening houden met dat laatste. In laatste instantie verdedigen bestuurders een orde waarmee effectieve antifascistische strijd vroeg of laatst openlijk mee botst. Die noodzakelijke confrontatie kunnen we maar beter on der ogen zien, niet ontwijken.

En er is nog iets. De AfD laat zich in met openlijke deportatiepolitiek, in nazi-stijl. Mensen van die partij gaan daarover in gesprek met mede-fascisten, alsof zoiets serieus aanvaardbaar regeringsbeleid kan zijn. Dat antifascisten daartegen protesteren, in grote aantallen en met grote felheid, is goed en mooi en nodig. Maar intussen worden er daadwerkelijk deportaties … niet besproken, maar uitgevoerd, met actieve Duitse regeringssteun. Die deportaties, die omvangrijke etnische zuiveringen, vinden plaats in Gaza, met Palestijnen als doelwit, het Israëlische leger als dader, en onverkorte support van bondskanselier Scholz en zijn regering.

Het AfD-gepraat over etnische zuivering aanvallen en een daadwerkelijke, met Duitse regeringssteun plaatsvindende etnische zuivering onbesproken laten, is meer dan een beetje nalatig. Te meer daar de Duitse staat en regering mensen die zich wel actief tegen de genocide uitspreken, zo ongeveer als criminelen bejegent en een vrijwel absolute loyaliteit aan Israël eist. Tegen racisme protesteren en tegelijk een racistische apartheidsstaat de hand boven het hoofd houden kan gewoon niet goed gaan als je een serieuze en geloofwaardige antifascistische beweging op gang wilt krijgen.

Ter afsluiting. Ja, ik ben blij met de anti-AfD-protesten in Duitsland. We kunnen daar een voorbeeld aan nemen. Tegelijk: waar zien we in dat protest de solidariteit met de door etnische zuivering en genocidaal racisme bedreigde Palestijnse bevolking? Een genocidaal doorgevoerde etnische zuivering door een Israëlische staat die met grote steun vanuit de Joods-Israëlische bevolking steeds openlijker in fascistische stijl opereert en kan rekenen op onverholen officiële Duitse steun door dik en dun?

Noten:

(1) ‘Duizenden mensen bij demonstraties tegen extreemrechts in Duitsland’, Nu.nl, 14 januari 2024, https://www.nu.nl/buitenland/6297804/duizenden-mensen-bij-demonstraties-tegen-extreemrechts-in-duitsland.html

(2) ‘Duizenden mensen bij anti-extreemrechtse demonstraties in Duitsland’, NOS, 14 januari 2024, https://nos.nl/artikel/2504924-duizenden-mensen-bij-anti-extreemrechtse-demonstraties-in-duitsland

(3) Kate Connoly & Ashifa Kassam,’Germans take to the streets adter AfD meeting on mass deportation plan’, The Guardian, 16 januari 2024, https://www.theguardian.com/world/2024/jan/16/germans-take-to-streets-to-oppose-far-right-afds-mass-deportation-plan

(4) ‘Groot protest in Hamburg tegen extreem-rechts en racisme’, Nu.nl, 19 januari 2024, https://www.nu.nl/buitenland/6298457/groot-protest-in-hamburg-tegen-extreemrechts-en-racisme.html

(5) ‘Tienduizenden bij demonstratie tegen AfD in Hamburg, roep om partijverbod’, NOS, 19 januari 2024, https://nos.nl/artikel/2505522-tienduizenden-bij-demonstratie-tegen-afd-in-hamburg-roep-om-partijverbod

(6) ‘Opnieuw demonstraties tegen AfD, ruim 300.000 mensen op de been’, NOS, 20 januari 2024, https://nos.nl/artikel/2505619-opnieuw-demonstraties-tegen-afd-ruim-300-000-mensen-op-de-been

(7) ‘Tens of thousands protest in germany against the far right’, Al jazeera, 20 januari 2024, https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2024/1/20/tens-of-thousands-protest-in-germany-against-far-right-party

(8) ‘Rund 300000 Menschen demonstrierten Bubndesweit gegen Rechts’, BR24, 20 januari 2024, https://www.br.de/nachrichten/meldung/rund-300000-menschen-demonstrieren-bundesweit-gegen-rechts,300628d96

(9) ‘Germany: Marches against the far right draw over 200000’, Deutsche Welle, 20 januari 2024, https://www.dw.com/en/germany-marches-against-the-far-right-draw-over-200000/a-68043524

(10) ‘Weer demonstratie tegen AfD afgebroken, nu in Munchen’, NOS, 21 januari 2024, https://nos.nl/artikel/2505711-weer-demonstratie-tegen-afd-afgebroken-vanwege-drukte-nu-in-munchen

(11) Marcus Bensmann, Justus von Daniels, Anette Dowideit, Jean Peters, Gabriela Keller, ‘Geheimplan gegen Deutschand’, Correctiv, 10 januari 2024, https://correctiv.org/aktuelles/neue-rechte/2024/01/10/geheimplan-remigration-vertreibung-afd-rechtsextreme-november-treffen/ , Engelstalige versie, zelfde auteurs, ‘Secret Plan against Germany’, Correctiv,15 januari 2024, https://correctiv.org/en/top-stories/2024/01/15/secret-plan-against-germany/

Zie ook: Philip Oltermann en Kate Connoly, ‘ “Everyone, together, aga8inst fascism”: protests sweep germany after expose of AfD party’s deportation “masterplan”’, https://www.theguardian.com/world/2024/jan/21/germany-afd-party-deportation-masterplan-protests

Hat tip trouwens voor @GrauweGrutjes. Een thread van deze twitteraar wees al op dat Correctiv-rapport voor ik het elders was tegengekomen, en besprak de inhoud. Hier: https://twitter.com/GrauweGrutjes/status/1748741305943892222

(12) ‘Germany: Scholz welcomes protests against far right’, Deutsche Welle, 19 januari 2024, https://www.dw.com/en/germany-scholz-welcomes-protests-against-far-right/a-68038065

(13) ‘Opnieuw demonstraties tegen AfD, ruim 300.000 mensen op de been’, NOS, 20 januari 2024, https://nos.nl/artikel/2505619-opnieuw-demonstraties-tegen-afd-ruim-300-000-mensen-op-de-been

(14) ‘Duizenden mensen bij anti-extreemrechtse demonstraties in Duitsland’, NOS, 14 januari 2024, https://nos.nl/artikel/2504924-duizenden-mensen-bij-anti-extreemrechtse-demonstraties-in-duitsland

Peter Storm

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