In this update by Susan Koppelman: her article, an Al=haq joint open letter, and “Middle East Talks in Annapolis: Photo-Op or Talk-Fest,” by Phyllis Bennis Annapolis, the Road Map, Peace and Justice, by Susan Koppelman The upcoming Annapolis Conference has had a definite presence here in the West Bank and in East Jerusalem since it was first announced. Namely, in terms of increased Israeli military presence and increased Fatah police presence. We have felt this presence with an increase in Israeli checkpoints, an exponential increase in wait at these checkpoints and an increase in military incursions in Palestinian villages; and with the establishment of Palestinian or Fatah checkpoints (mostly notably around Nablus) and Palestinian or Fatah search missions. The increase in Israeli military and the increase in Fatah police, along with Fatah’s training and new weaponry, have all been funded by the U.S. government in conjunction with the conference. The conference in Annapolis is part of a push by U.S. President Bush and Israeli President Olmert to reach a ‘final solution’ to the conflict before Bush leaves office. According to the Road Map, the Palestinian Authority, or the Fatah party is to crack down on military resistance to the 40year Israeli military occupation of the West Bank and Gaza being levied from the West Bank; Gaza is being left completely out of the picture now that Hamas has assumed control there. Israel promises to dismantle some settlements and freeze the construction of new settlements if the Palestinians are able to squash military resistance to the occupation. Shortly after the Annapolis Conference was announced and U.S. trained Fatah police took to the streets, they arrested a reporter from Ma’an News Agency for covering a Hamas rally. Some Palestinians have vague remnants of hope that the Annapolis Conference may be a first step towards the end of the 40-year Occupation of the West Bank and Gaza and the restoration of civil rights and freedom— God-willing. However, most Palestinians are rightfully pessimistic that negotiations based upon the Road Map have any prospect of leading to justice. Many have cited the lack of a strong legal framework as a leading cause for concern. (See in attached word file, following my report, “Joint Letter to Negotiating Parties by Palestinian Civil Society Organisations” and “Middle East Talks in Annapolis: Photo-Op or Talk-Fest” by Phyllis Bennis with bullet points on Borders, Settlements, Refugees, and Jerusalem.) There are many additional blind spots on the Road Map in addition to its lack of legal framework for ending the military occupation of the West Bank and Gaza. I will raise three of these here, to give you an understanding of the severity of the injustices that will not be corrected by using this plan. 1) The Road Map does not propose a plan for joint management of the region’s shared water resources. More than 200,000 Palestinians on the West Bank are not connected to a water network and forced to rely on tankered water at a cost of 4-5x as much. In disadvantaged communities like Yatta Village near Hebron, some families spend a third of their income on water. The Jordan River and the Mountain Aquifer are the best sources of water in the region. Despite the fact that the West Bank is contiguous to 70 km of the Jordan River and is sitting on 85% of the Mountain Aquifer, Palestinians are completely denied the right to access the Jordan River and profoundly limited in what they are allowed to develop of the Mountain Aquifer. 2) The Road Map does not call for a dismantling of the Apartheid Road Infrastructure. There are roads on the West Bank, many of which date back to the British Mandate, that Palestinians are newly forbidden from using by Israel. These roads divide Palestinian villages, disrupt long established Palestinian travel routes, and isolate Palestinian villages behind Israeli-manned checkpoints, while linking the illegal Israeli settlements to 1967 Israel. I have documented one such Apartheid Road, Road 443 (in the attached slideshow). This is the road I use to travel from Tel Aviv to Ramallah, as it saves me nearly an hour in travel time. I have plans for linking these photos to an Israeli Roadmap. For now, as you watch the slideshow, notice that Modi’in, the large Israeli city on the right with skyscrapers, is a settlement built to obscure the Green Line; in fact a large portion of Modi’in is on the Palestinian side of the Green Line. Modi’in Illit off to the left is the Israeli settlement that has been stealing land from Bil’lin, a Palestinian village that is the site of weekly protests. The Israeli High Court recently ruled in favor of Bil’lin’s claims to the land stolen by the Wall, stating that the route of the Wall did not have normal settlement growth in mind (but rather was chosen to steal land from Bil’lin). Notice that the checkpoint is more than 7 km inside the Palestinian side of the Green Line / 1967 Armistice line. Notice the bus stops linking the Israeli settlements to the State of Israel; notice the road is in the West Bank but traffic is reported in Hebrew on Israeli radio. However, most importantly, NOTICE THE ROADBLOCKS PREVENTING ACCESS TO PALESTINIAN VILLAGES BORDERING THE ROAD. Notice the number of villages affected. With the exception of a tunnel (possibly two?) many Palestinians are literally trapped, and others are forced to go many kilometers out of their way thru dehumanizing checkpoints to visit their neighbors. 3) The Road Map does not call for dismantling all of the settlements built against international law since 1967. Instead Israel is only discussing the possibility of dismantling settlements built after 2001. In 1993 Rabin and Arafat negotiated the Oslo Accords, which called for a halt to new settlement construction. In fact, in the period following Oslo before the Second Intifada or uprising of Palestinians, settlement construction doubled. Frankly, Israel is not very credible on the issue of freezing settlement construction. What should Palestinians think now of Israel’s desire for peace when Israel is not even offering to dismantle all settlements built in direct violation of their last signed agreement? Expectations low for Annapolis: http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/FFB414DC-268B-4AA581CE-6564C4EF0CF2.htm AL-HAQ JOINT OPEN LETTER FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE REF.: 29.2007E 26 November 2007 A Foundation not an Afterthought: Upholding International Law at Annapolis Joint Letter to Negotiating Parties by Palestinian Civil Society Organisations* As Palestinian human rights and civil society organisations, we the undersigned, are deeply concerned by the lack of a clearly articulated legal framework for the upcoming diplomatic negotiations between Israel and the Palestinian National Authority (PNA) to be held at Annapolis on 27 November. While the process of negotiation is inherently political, the legitimate demands of the Palestinian people to dignity, territorial sovereignty and self-determination as enshrined in binding international law may not be made the subjects of negotiation. Following 40 years of occupation of the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, and the Gaza Strip, and numerous rounds of failed diplomatic initiatives, international law must at last be understood to be the essential over-arching framework for negotiations. International law not only provides a means of dispassionately assessing Israel’s existing policies and practices in the Occupied Palestinian Territory (OPT), but also limits the discretion of the negotiating parties, and their sponsors, in deciding certain fundamental issues. Under the terms of Article 4 of the Fourth Geneva Convention Relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War of 1949 (the Fourth Geneva Convention), the Palestinian civilian population of the OPT are “protected persons.” By virtue of this status, they are entitled to certain protections that may not be undermined or disregarded in political agreements. This is clearly set forth in Article 47 of the Fourth Geneva Convention, which establishes: Protected persons who are in occupied territory shall not be deprived, in any case or in any manner whatsoever, of the benefits of the present Convention by any change introduced, as the result of the occupation of a territory, into the institutions or government of the said territory, nor by any agreement concluded between the authorities of the occupied territories and the Occupying Power, nor by any annexation by the latter of the whole or part of the occupied territory. This provision seeks to address the obvious imbalance of power between the occupied and the occupier in any negotiation process. It recognises that an Occupying Power can, by virtue of its occupation, seek to legally validate through “negotiation” the unilateral imposition of facts on the ground that violate international humanitarian law and harm the civilian population. As noted by the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) in its authoritative commentary to the Fourth Geneva Convention, there is in the case of occupation, “a particularly great danger of the Occupying Power forcing the Power whose territory is occupied to conclude agreements prejudicial to protected persons.” This danger is clearly present in the context of the current negotiations, and is most obvious in relation to Israel’s settlement policy. Throughout the 40 years of the occupation, Israel has used its effective control over the OPT to implant some 149 settlements, currently home to over 470,000 settlers, which control over 40% of the West Bank, including essential agricultural and water resources. The current planned route of the Wall will incorporate some 69 settlements, home to 83% of the settler population, on 12.8% of the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, that will remain on the western side of the Wall. Under Article 49(6) of the Fourth Geneva Convention, an Occupying Power is prohibited from transferring parts of its civilian population into occupied territory. Israeli settlements in the OPT are in flagrant violation of this prohibition. Further, the construction and expansion of settlements, and their associated infrastructure, requires the extensive appropriation and destruction of property, and severe movement restrictions which are further violations of international humanitarian law and human rights law. In March 2006 Israel's Prime Minister Ehud Olmert stated his intention to make the Wall the new border of the State of Israel, incorporating settlements in the OPT and annexing Palestinian land. To accept Israel’s retention of the settlement blocs as part of a negotiated solution clearly deprives the Palestinian civilian population of the benefits of the Fourth Geneva Convention, as it would validate Israel’s violations thereof. As such any agreement recognising the settlements is in flagrant violation of Article 47. In the event that negotiations were to lead to recognition of Israeli settlements in the OPT as part of the State of Israel, this would amount to the endorsement of the acquisition of territory by force. The illegality of the acquisition of territory by force is a norm accepted and recognised by the international community as a peremptory norm of international law -- a norm from which no derogation is permitted. The right of all peoples to self-determination is also considered a peremptory norm of international law. The retention of settlements and their associated infrastructure by Israel would not only amount to the illegal annexation of territory, but would also fragment the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, into isolated geographical units. This would severely undermine the meaningful exercise by the Palestinian people of their inalienable right to self-determination by limiting the possibility of a contiguous territory and the ability to freely dispose of natural resources, both of which are required for the meaningful exercise of this right. Under Article 53 of the Vienna Convention on the Laws of Treaties, “a treaty is void if, at the time of its conclusion, it conflicts with a peremptory norm of general international law.” This therefore casts severe doubt on whether a negotiated solution that accepts Israel’s retention of settlements and de facto annexation of territory would be valid under international law. Other State parties accessory to the negotiations are also obliged to duly consider their international law obligations in relation to these negotiations. Under common Article 1 of the Geneva Conventions, the High Contracting Parties “undertake to respect and to ensure respect for the present Convention in all circumstances.” As specified by both the ICRC and the International Court of Justice (ICJ), this provision entails an obligation on all State parties, whether or not they are a party to the specific conflict, to take all possible steps to ensure that the provisions of the Convention are respected. In respect of the current negotiations, it is important to note that the ICJ, in its Advisory Opinion on the Wall, found all States to be under “an obligation, while respecting the United Nations Charter and international law, to ensure compliance by Israel with international humanitarian law as embodied in [the Fourth Geneva] convention.” Similarly, and as also noted by the ICJ, under customary international law all States have the duty not to recognise or to assist in the creation or maintenance of illegal situations. Such illegal situations would clearly include the acquisition of territory by force, the denial of the right to selfdetermination and the construction of settlements in occupied territory. To date, all diplomatic initiatives have ignored international law as the essential foundation of any solution to Israel’s occupation of the OPT, thereby allowing for the proliferation of violations. To cite but a few examples, in spite of former negotiations, Palestinians saw, inter alia, the imposition of draconian movement restrictions and unrestrained settlement construction and expansion, during the Oslo Process. Similarly, since the “Road Map” was initiated in 2002, Palestinians have seen the further entrenchment and expansion of settlements and the unilateral creation of a de facto border between Israel and the would-be Palestinian state through the building of the Wall. Most recently, on 19 September 2007, Israel declared the Gaza Strip an “enemy entity,” and began the imposition of further sanctions on the already beleaguered Palestinian civilian population therein. Having no basis in international law, the designation of the Gaza Strip as an “enemy entity” represents a clear effort by the Israel, the Occupying Power, to negate its responsibility for the welfare of the civilian population of the Gaza Strip under the terms of Fourth Geneva Convention. The sanctions, which further exacerbate an already dire humanitarian situation, further amount to unlawful reprisals and the collective punishment of the civilian population of the Gaza Strip. In this context, we urge the parties to approach the upcoming negotiations with a renewed sense of purpose, giving due recognition of the international legal obligations incumbent upon them, including UN Security Council and General Assembly resolutions addressing Palestinian refugees. The task which they face is a heavy one, as any final agreement must reflect a commitment to the principles of international law, justice in addressing wrongful acts, and respect for human rights. The fundamental rights of the Palestinian people are matters of binding international law, not political bargaining chips. Their implementation must not be left to Israel’s beneficence, but rather established as the foundation of any just and durable solution to the conflict. Al-Haq Al-Dameer Association for Human Rights in Gaza Addameer Prisoner’s Support and Human Rights Association Al Mezan Center for Human Rights Defence for Children International – Palestine Section Jerusalem Legal Aid and Human Rights Center Palestinian Center for Human Rights Palestinian Counselling Center Palestinian NGO Network (PNGO) Ramallah Center for Human Rights Studies Women’s Studies Center *The letter was sent on 26 November 2007 to key negotiating parties including the President of the PNA, the Israeli Prime Minister and Foreign Minister, and EU and UN Officials. Middle East Talks in Annapolis: By Phyllis Bennis Institute for Policy Studies Photo-Op or Talk-Fest 15 November 2007 ** There is one thing certain about the international (or regional or bilateral) Middle East peace conference (or meeting or get-together) called by Condoleezza Rice (or George Bush or Elliott Abrams) for November (or maybe December): it's going to be held in Annapolis, Maryland (probably). ** Rice's sudden renewal of interest in and commitment to a new Middle East "peace process" has two main goals: buying support from Arab regimes for Washington's war in Iraq and escalating threats against Iran, and providing a photo-op to restore Rice's tarnished legacy. **The agenda for the talks has not yet been finalized, but it will not include the goal of reversing Israeli occupation and dispossession and ending Israel's discriminatory apartheid policies. **Because of U.S.-Israeli control of the agenda, "success" in Annapolis will depend on whether the Palestinian leadership can be coerced to sign on to a U.S.-Israeli text that many Palestinians will view as further abandonment of Palestinian national goals, and many in international civil society will see as violations of international law and human rights. There are serious questions whether the meeting as currently envisioned will be convened at all because of Palestinian refusal to accept U.S.-backed Israeli preconditions. **With the U.S.-Israeli-led international boycott remaining intact, the conference is unlikely to lead to any even shortterm improvement in the humanitarian crisis exploding across Gaza. There is serious doubt about even the official viability of the conference. Ten days from the anticipated opening, invitations have not been issued (because Arab governments and even the Palestinian leadership have not so far agreed to U.S.-Israeli terms), an agenda has not been announced, and no preliminary statement of goals and/or principles has been agreed to. Palestinian officials have so far - at least publicly - rejected at least some of Israel's preconditions. Besides her urgent need to update her legacy (which is currently that of the person who stood before the world at the United Nations and announced "we don't want a ceasefire yet" as Israeli jets bombarded Lebanon in summer 2006), Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice urgently needs to win flagging Arab government support for the Bush administration's failing war and occupation in Iraq and its escalating mobilization against Iran. While most Arab governments remain quite happy to join the U.S. crusade, their people do not share support for the occupation of Iraq or for the anti-Iranian fervor now ascendant in Washington. As a result, the unpopular and often unstable Arab regimes (absolute monarchies, family dynasties and military regimes masquerading as democracies) must provide some kind of concession for the Arab rulers to pacify their restive populations. The latest version is to offer a highprofile (however low the results) diplomatic show aimed at allowing Arab governments to announce that the U.S. is now helping to give the Palestinians a state. As the New York Times described it, "now the United States is mired in Iraq and looking for a way to build good will among Arab allies." The Bush administration apparently anticipated that Arab governments, at the highest levels, would welcome invitations to Annapolis. But so far, even Jordan and Egypt, the two Arab governments with full diplomatic relations with Israel, have hesitated, and Saudi Arabia has remained unconvinced. Even if the Arab governments agree to participate, they may send lowto mid-level officials, without the political clout - and photo-op value - of kings and prime ministers. The stated U.S. goal for the Annapolis meeting is to realize a two-state solution. But in fact, if the conference takes place at all, the result will be to continue the approach of the long-moribund 2003 "Roadmap to Peace." It will, at most, provide a high-visibility launch of a new edition of the same Israeli-Palestinian "peace process" that has failed so many times before: a process based on acceptance of Israeli dominance over Palestinian lives and territory. Its real goal will be to create something that the U.S. can anoint as an "independent Palestinian state," while leaving largely unchallenged Israeli strategic, military, and economic domination over the entire area of Israel-Palestine. The meeting's agenda will not be based on what international law, as well as Palestinian and global public opinion, requires for a just, lasting and comprehensive settlement of the conflict:an end to Israeli occupation and settlement projects, realization of the Palestinians' rights of selfdetermination and return, and an end to Israeli discrimination and apartheid policies. If the U.S.-Israeli goals for Annapolis are realized, they would probably lead to the following "two-state solution" results: Borders A Palestinian "state" would be announced on a series of noncontiguous truncated Bantustan-like cantons comprising something less than 50% of the West Bank plus Gaza. Israel might, with great fanfare, charitably "adjust" very slightly the current route of the Apartheid Wall to seize slightly less land than the current route (which Israeli Foreign Minister Tsipi Livni earlier announced would be the basis for any border). All of the West Bank's major water aquifers will remain on the Israeli side of the Wall. Settlements All the major West Bank settlement blocs would remain intact on the Israeli side of the Wall, leaving between 180,000 and 200,000 of the current 250,000 West Bank settlers in place. With great fanfare most of the 105 small symbolic "outpost" settlements constructed since 2001, which together house only about 2000 settlers, will be dismantled. The entire Jordan Valley would remain in Israeli hands. In exchange, Palestinians would be offered a "land swap" which would almost certainly involve a significantly smaller amount of land, of far less arability and viability. Refugees The Palestinian right of return, codified not only in general international law but specifically in UN resolution 194 (1949), has already been officially rejected by Israel but also by the United States, in the Bush-Sharon letter exchange of April 2004. Israel's Annapolis agenda plans to reassert that rejection through a demand that the Palestinians accept language recognizing the "Jewish character" of Israel, or accepting the definition of Israel as "the state of the Jewish people" as opposed to a state of its own citizens. So far Palestinian officials have indicated they will not accept that language, which Israeli Prime Minister Olmert says is a precondition to any negotiations. The rejection of the right of return will be further entrenched by an Israeli "offer" to Palestinian refugees of the privilege of "returning" to the erstwhile new "Palestinian state," rather than the right to return to their actual home territory inside what is now Israel. Jerusalem International law (UN Security Council resolution 181, which divided Palestine into what was supposed to become a Jewish and an Arab state) calls for Jerusalem to belong to neither state, but rather to be a "separate body" under international jurisdiction. Virtually no governments (not even the U.S.) recognize Israel's annexation of occupied Arab East Jerusalem, and numerous UN resolutions have reaffirmed that East Jerusalem is occupied territory. The Israeli settlements in East Jerusalem (known as neighborhoods, not settlements) include over 200,000 Israeli settlers, and they will remain in Israeli hands. The Israeli position in Annapolis will call for continuing Israeli control of all of Jerusalem, with some kind of Israeli-controlled "autonomy" for Palestinian neighborhoods and parts of the Old City's Muslim shrines. If the U.S.-Israeli agenda for Annapolis succeeds with an official Palestinian imprimatur, the already reduced legitimacy of the Palestinian Authority could diminish further, and the existing Palestinian political crisis, especially the Fatah-Hamas divide, could be seriously exacerbated. It is important to remember that the U.S. as well as Israel bear significant responsibility for the divisions, tensions and violence inside the Palestinian polity. In his leaked confidential report, former UN representative to the so-called Quartet, Peruvian diplomat Alvaro de Soto stated directly that "the U.S. clearly pushed for a confrontation between Fatah and Hamas - so much so that, a week before Mecca [the Saudi-brokered unity agreement between the two factions], the U.S. envoy declared twice in an envoys' meeting in Washington how much 'I like this violence,' referring to the near-civil war that was erupting in Gaza in which civilians were being regularly killed and injured, because 'it means that other Palestinians are resisting Hamas'." The talks in Annapolis will likely not even address the current humanitarian (as well as political) crisis currently ravaging the 1.6 million people of Gaza. The U.S.-Israeli-led international boycott of Gaza, as well as Israel's designation of Gaza as an "enemy entity" will remain in place. Israel's restrictions on the supply of fuel and electricity to Gaza have already begun to bite; with electricity supplies down, the availability of fresh water is diminishing, and the declining stocks of transport fuel are expected to reach crisis point some time in the next few days. New U.S. aid to the Palestinians recently proposed by the Bush administration remains stalled in Congress pending "success" at Annapolis; in any case, that aid is almost entirely limited to support, especially military/security assistance, for the Fatah-led government in Ramallah, with virtually nothing designated for the desperately impoverished Gaza Strip. ________________________________ Phyllis Bennis is a Fellow of the Institute for Policy Studies and serves on the steering committee of the U.S. Campaign to End Israeli Occupation. She is author of Understanding the Palestinian-Israeli Conflict: A Primer. 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