If Kosovo, why not Palestine?

It is time for the Ramallah-based Palestinian
leadership to challenge the international community on
Palestinian independence

By John Whitbeck

22/02/08 "Al-Ahram Weekly" -- - -As expected, Kosovo
has issued its unilateral declaration of independence,
the United States and most European Union countries,
with whom this declaration was coordinated, rushing to
extend diplomatic recognition to this "new country".
This course of action should strike anyone with an
attachment to either international law or common sense
as breathtakingly reckless.

The potentially destabilising consequences of this
precedent (which the US and the EU insist, bizarrely,
should not be viewed as a precedent) have been much
discussed with reference to other internationally
recognised sovereign states with strong separatist
movements practising precarious but effective
self-rule, such as Abkhazia, South Ossetia,
Transniestria, Ngorno-Karabakh, Bosnia's Republika
Srpska, the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus and
Iraqi Kurdistan, as well as to discontented minorities
elsewhere. One potentially constructive consequence
has not yet been discussed.

American and EU impatience to sever a portion of a UN
member state (universally recognised, even by them, to
constitute a portion of that state's sovereign
territory), ostensibly because 90 per cent of those
living in that portion support separation, contrasts
starkly with the unlimited patience of the US and the
EU when it comes to ending the 40-year-long
belligerent Israeli occupation of the West Bank and
the Gaza Strip (no portion of which any country
recognises as Israel's sovereign territory and as to
which Israel has only asserted sovereignty over a tiny
portion, occupied East Jerusalem). Virtually every
legal resident of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip
seeks freedom, and has for over 40 years. For doing
so, they are punished, sanctioned, besieged,
humiliated and, day after endless day, killed by those
who claim to stand on the moral high ground.

In American and EU eyes, a Kosovar declaration of
independence from Serbian sovereignty should be
recognised, even if Serbia does not agree. However,
their attitude was radically different when Palestine
declared independence from Israeli occupation on 15
November 1988. Then the US and EU countries (which, in
their own eyes, constitute the "international
community", to the exclusion of most of mankind) were
conspicuously absent as over 100 countries recognised
the new State of Palestine, and their non-recognition
made this declaration of independence "symbolic",
unfortunately for most Palestinians as well.

For the US and the EU, Palestinian independence, to be
recognised and effective, must be directly negotiated
on a wildly unequal bilateral basis between the
occupying power and the occupied people with emphasis
laid on attaining the final agreement of the occupying
power. For the US and the EU, the rights and desires
of a long-suffering and brutalised occupied people, as
well as international law, are irrelevant. For the
same US and the EU, Kosovar Albanians, having enjoyed
almost nine years of UN administration and NATO
protection, cannot be expected to wait any longer for
their freedom, while the Palestinians, having endured
over 40 years of Israeli occupation, can wait forever.

With the "Annapolis process" going nowhere, as was
clearly the Israeli and American intention from the
start, the Kosovo precedent offers the Ramallah-based
Palestinian leadership -- accepted as such by the
"international community" because it is perceived as
serving Israeli and American interests -- a golden
opportunity to seize the initiative, reset the agenda
and restore its tarnished reputation in the eyes of
its own people. If this leadership truly believes,
despite all evidence to the contrary, that a decent
"two-state solution" is still possible, now is an
ideal moment to reaffirm the legal existence (albeit
under continuing belligerent occupation) of the State
of Palestine, explicitly in the entire 22 per cent of
Mandatory Palestine that was not conquered and
occupied by the state of Israel until 1967, and to
call on all those countries that did not extend
diplomatic recognition to the State of Palestine in
1988 -- and particularly the US and the EU states --
to do so now.

The Kosovar Albanian leadership has promised
protection for Kosovo's Serb minority, which is now
expected to flee in fear. The Palestinian leadership
could promise to accord a generous period of time for
Israeli colonists living illegally in the State of
Palestine, and Israeli occupation forces, to withdraw,
as well as to consider an economic union with Israel,
open borders and permanent resident status for those
illegal colonists willing to live in peace under
Palestinian rule.

Of course, to prevent the US and the EU from treating
such an initiative as a joke, there would have to be a
significant and explicit consequence if they were to
do so. The consequence would be the end of the
"two-state" illusion. The Palestinian leadership would
make clear that if the US and the EU, having just
recognised a second Albanian state on the sovereign
territory of a UN member state, will not now recognise
a Palestinian state on a tiny portion of the occupied
Palestinian homeland, it will dissolve the Palestinian
Authority (which, legally, should have ceased to exist
in 1999, at the end of the five-year "interim period"
under the Oslo Accords) and the Palestinian people
will thereafter seek justice and freedom through
democracy, through the persistent, non-violent pursuit
of full rights of citizenship in a single state in all
of Israel/Palestine, free of any discrimination based
on race and religion and with equal rights for all who
reside there.

Palestinian leaderships have tolerated Western
hypocrisy and racism and played the role of gullible
fools for far too long. It is time to kick over the
table, constructively, and to shock the international
community into taking notice of the fact that the
Palestinian people simply will not tolerate unbearable
injustice and abuse any longer.

If not now, when?

The writer is an international lawyer and author of
The World According to Whitbeck 

© Copyright Al-Ahram Weekly

 


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