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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sunday, February 26, 2017
Palestinians seek unity as new threats, political bickering mar gathering
Around 4,000 Palestinians from 50 countries gather in Istanbul to claim an integral part in ending the Palestinian nation’s woes
A unity conference has attracted thousands of Palestinians taking part in Istanbul (Suraj Sharma/MEE)
Suraj Sharma-Saturday 25 February 2017
ISTANBUL, Turkey – As 4,000 Palestinians gathered in Istanbul on Saturday, their message was
simple: put an end to political short-sightedness and the pursuit of
personal ambitions and instead fight for Palestinian rights which are
under threat like never before.
Palestinian
flags were waving and the mood was largely jubilant and defiant, as
patriotic songs blared into a large conference centre in Istanbul. The
Palestinians, from 50 countries, are coming together for over two days
to make themselves heard and to say that they are an integral part of
ending the Palestinian nation’s woes.
The
sight of so many ordinary Palestinians with views ranging right across
the political spectrum united in their demands for their rights was
pleasing to many of the attendees as they fear the worst of times with
US President Donald Trump now in office.
This
show of unity was, however, marred by the ever-present curse of
domestic Palestinian political infighting and bickering casting a dark
shadow on the conference.
The
Palestinian Authority (PA) and the Palestine Liberation Organisation
(PLO) sought to discredit the Palestinians Abroad conference from the
very outset, saying it wasn't representative of the Palestinian people
and that the job of organising and uniting the Palestinian diaspora
belongs to the PLO only.
Others
criticised the choice of Istanbul as the location for the conference,
saying that alone was enough to show that the conference was not being
organised along non-factional lines.
Khalid Turaani, a spokesperson for the conference, told Middle East Eye that none of the criticism was valid.
Thousands
of Palestinians from all over the world are in Istanbul to attend a
unity conference for Palestinians abroad (Suraj Sharma/MEE)
"Single-issue
leftists and Arab nationalist supporters of the Assad regime in Syria
oppose this conference only because it is being held in Istanbul," said
Turaani. "In response, I can only ask them to name one Arab capital that
can hold such a conference at this time."
'We have to be proud of our people, and we are here raising our voice for the rights of all Palestinians,' - Hisham abu Mahfouz, head of the conference preparatory commission
He also said the PA and those who are the beneficiaries of PLO largesse
are wilfully denying that the founding committee of this event asserted
the desire to reinvigorate the PLO and its institutions.
Turaani
said the conference for Palestinians Abroad had no official
representation from any of the factions and that many attendees come
from schools of thought not aligned with the two major Palestinian
groups - Fatah and Hamas.
There were very few among the attendees who identified with Fatah though, even in an unofficial capacity.
"Why
are there people out there opposed to the gathering of our own people?
We have to be proud of our people, and we are here raising our voice for
the rights of all Palestinians," said Hisham abu Mahfouz, head of the
preparatory commission of the conference.
He
received a huge cheer when he called on those gathered to remember that
the right to return was the greatest and most basic right that
Palestinians needed to defend.
Another
speaker, Anees Fawzi Kassem, the head of the conference, said the Oslo
Accords were the worst deal possible and had resulted in Palestinians
being unable to represent Palestinians.
"We are gathered here today to demand that we the people of Palestine be given our voice back," he said.
He went on to slam the PA, saying it had sold out the Palestinian nation.
"The PA gets a helping hand from Israel, but we the people are the
legitimate representatives of the Palestinian people," he said.
Spokesperson Turaani said that ending the Hamas–Fatah divide, which he
called a "deep wound" in the body of the Palestinian issue was crucial
to creating a framework for better cooperation among the Palestinian
diaspora.
But Turaani also warned of the current threat facing Palestinians and questioned the competence of the PA in its present form.
He
said even though every US administration during the past 50 to 60 years
had asserted its total commitment to supporting Israel financially,
militarily, politically and in every other possible form, the current
time was of special concern, given that both the United States and
Israel have "ultra-extreme" governments.
"It
is high time that Palestinians come together to ensure that a weak
donor-bondaged PA doesn't give away any more of our legal historic and
moral rights in Palestine," said Turaani.
Mood different among attendees
For most of the attendees, it was a festive occasion where they hoped to present a unified Palestinian voice to the world.
Rabih Azad-Ahmad had travelled from Denmark with his wife and young child.
Rabih Azad-Ahmad is at the Palestinians Abroad conference in Istanbul with his wife and child (Suraj Sharma/MEE)
An
official at the Department of Culture and Citizens’ Services in the
Danish city of Aarhus, he told MEE that it filled him with joy to see
Palestinians from the world over gathered under one roof and shouting in
one voice.
'This is about Palestine. I don't know about the politics and the political sides. My family and I are here to show our unity for Palestine' - Rabih Ahmed, attendee
"It
is the best and only way to let the world know about our issues. I am
for anything that serves the Palestinians. I would have attended this
conference regardless of the city it is being held in," he said.
Amer
al-Kadah, an 18-year-old student came from Saudi Arabia with his family
to attend the conference. He said his family tries to attend all such
conferences where the plight of the Palestinians is discussed and
solutions sought.
"This
is about Palestine. I don't know about the politics and the political
sides. My family and I are here to show our unity for Palestine," he
said.
Ghinda Shaban was part of a 250-person group that had come from the UK.
"To see such conferences on Palestine and the unity brings tears to my
eyes. I have known only difficulty for our people," she said.
"My mother was eight when they left for a refugee camp in 1948. In 1993,
we moved to the UK. I hope that we can become one voice and that the
exile for us Palestinians ends someday," said Shaban.
She said that now with Trump in office Palestinians really needed to band together.
"It
is crazy. I am very afraid. Imagine even the English people are afraid
of Trump, so just think what it must be like for Palestinians."
The speeches were set to go on for most of Saturday and Sunday at the Palestinians Abroad conference. Some antagonistic, others conciliatory.
But in Turaani’s view, the conference had already created history and could be considered a major success.
"Over 4,000 Palestinians from across 50 countries have come together
with the simple desire to have a place on the proverbial Palestinian
National table and to have a say in how their fate and national identity
is being decided."