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Last week
at the United Nations sponsored NGO Network for a Palestinian-Israeli Peace,
the key word was definitely “unity.” That call for unity is coming from the very
core of Palestinian society and its national institutions, as an answer to the
US-Israeli attempts to provoke splits and divisions. Keeping unity is not only
a demand to be addressed to the national leadership and the various political
parties, but also a call to preserve the political platform around which a
broad Palestinian consensus has been defined throughout the years.
It is
precisely when the national movement is in crisis and the pressures on its
unity are growing, that the need to almost fanatically keep the political
borders fixed by that national movement is most urgent. Individual initiatives
challenging the national consensus are playing right into the hands of the
US-Israeli offensive; sometimes they are even directed by them.
One of the
red lines established by the Palestinian national movement, and fully endorsed
by all the Palestinian movements, parties and NGOs, was the unambiguous
rejection of normalization with Israeli institutions, businesses and
organizations. Normalization—Tatbiyeh, in Arabic—means collaboration
with Israeli institutions aimed at creating the impression of normality, while
the context remains one of Israeli military occupation and the depriving of fundamental
rights for the Palestinian people. During the Oslo process, and even more so
after its failure, tens of millions of dollars and euros were invested by the
international community in order to create this false impression of normality,
while occupation and its crimes continued and the colonization of the occupied
Palestinian territories was growing like mushrooms after a rain. This
orchestrated mystification plan was strongly rejected by the entire Palestinian
society and its national bodies, and the few Palestinian individuals who dared
to cross the line of normalization, were immediately called to order.
Of course,
rejection of normalization did not mean the stopping of cooperation with
Israeli organizations and movements that were involved in the struggle against
occupation and colonization. In that struggle, Palestinians and Israeli
anti-occupation forces have been united and will continue to be united.
The present
weakness of the Palestinian movement and its internal division gives
opportunities for US/European sponsored attempts to try today what failed 10
years ago, using huge sums of money to seduce Palestinian organizations to
break the rules, and increase Palestinian disunity. This is how an organization
like Panorama is ready to openly cooperate with an Israeli organization that,
to say the least, in not at the forefront of the struggle for the legitimate
rights of the Palestinian people. The Peres Center for Peace is, as its name
indicates, connected to Shimon Peres, who has been—until being elected
President of the State of Israel—a central actor in the Israeli government. Throughout
the past decades, Peres has been either Prime Minister or a cabinet minister in
various occupation-governments. More recently, he was Deputy Prime Minister in
the government that initiated and led the last aggression against Lebanon. You cannot
be for peace and participate in a war/occupation government; or, more
precisely, WE should unmask such hypocrisy and definitely not collaborate with
it. It is politically unacceptable, and morally disgusting.
Shimon
Peres is definitely an enemy of the Palestinian people, of human rights and of peace,
and any kind of collaboration by a Palestinian organization with the Peres Center
is scandalous. In order to break the boycott, organizations like the Peres
Center are offering to Palestinian organizations large amounts of money, which,
in the difficult days we are in, could tempt a few of them. The Palestinian
civil society can be proud that the great majority of its organization cannot
be bribed or corrupted!
The
collaboration of Panorama with the Peres
Center has been strongly
and publicly denounced by PNGO, which represent the great majority of
Palestinian civil society organizations. Though it is true that Panorama is a
quite irrelevant NGO inside the occupied Palestinian territories and Israel—very few,
in fact, have even heard about it, and it has been totally external to any
mobilization or substantial political action—the fact that it is opening a
breach in the national consensus within Palestinian civil society must be
unequivocally denounced.
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