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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Thursday, April 30, 2020
Annexation of occupied territory is a crime
Locals inspect a two-storey building belonging to Palestinians after it was demolished by Israeli forces in Hebron, West Bank on 25 September 2019 [Mamoun Wazwaz/Anadolu Agency]
Israel is about to annex large swathes of the occupied West Bank, making
the territory formally part of the Zionist state according to Israeli
law. The millions of Palestinians living in the West Bank will continue
to be denied the vote and even the most basic of human rights by the
despotic Israeli regime.
The West Bank is home to some 2.2 million Palestinians
and about 600,000 Israeli colonists. The Gaza Strip and West Bank
together represent 22 per cent of historic Palestine, although this is a
somewhat arbitrary division of the land, based on the “Green Line”, the
armistice line drawn up in 1949 after the ethnic cleansing of
Palestine.
Between 1947 and 1949, Zionist militias and the nascent Israeli army
expelled about 800,000 Palestinians from Palestine, around two-thirds of
the indigenous population. The goal of Zionism was to create a Jewish
state in Palestine, despite the fact that the population of the country
was overwhelmingly non-Jewish. Therefore it was inevitable that the
Zionist project was always going to be a racist project that required
the violent expulsion of the majority Arab population.
In 1967, Israel engaged in another war against the neighbouring Arab
countries, invading and occupying the remaining 22 per cent of historic
Palestine. Israel has imposed a military dictatorship against the
Palestinians there ever since the Naksa (Setback), but it was unable to expel as many Palestinians as it did during the Nakba (Catastrophe) of 1948.
Israel’s aim was to establish an ethnocracy, a state created to serve
the interests of one ethnic group alone. Hence, although it desired to
possess the land, at the same time it wanted the land to be free of
non-Jews: “Maximum land, minimum Arabs”.
Such a state comes with a price to pay, of course. As Israeli war criminal and late Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin once wished of
the Gaza Strip, “If only it would just sink into the sea.” Israel
wanted the land, but it did not want to give the millions of
Palestinians living on it human, political or national rights.
It was crucial for the Zionist project that the Palestinians in the West
Bank and Gaza Strip should not be given a vote in the self-proclaimed
“only democracy in the Middle East”. With demographic trends being what
they are, that would have almost certainly led to the end of the Jewish
majority in the “Land of Israel”, which in any event was always an
artificial majority, having been violently gerrymandered by 1948’s act
of ethnic cleansing.
This explains why Israel has so far not formally annexed the West Bank,
despite having occupied it for almost 53 years. The 2.2 million
Palestinians there outnumber the 600,000 Israeli colonial-settlers.
Millions of Palestinians suddenly on the electoral roll would mean the
end of Zionist dominance in Israel’s parliament, the Knesset. The Joint
List, the only non-Zionist party (most of whose voters and MKs are
Palestinians) could become the largest in the Knesset. That would, in
turn, create a constitutional crisis, because a non-Zionist, Arab party
has never formed any part of the government of Israel.
Now, though, Israel is making moves towards the annexation of the West Bank. Why, and why now?
Over the past year, Israel has held three inconclusive General
Elections, each resulting in political deadlock. This was finally broken
this month with the announcement of a “national unity”
government between incumbent Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his
main contender in the election, former General Benny Gantz. Having sworn
during the election campaigns never to enter a coalition with Netanyahu
— who is facing corruption charges — Gantz has now split his Blue and
White party in order to renege on his oath and go into such a coalition.
As I noted in a column just
before the last election in March, one thing that all of Israel’s
Zionist political parties agree on is the continuation of their racist
military dictatorship in the West Bank targeting Palestinians on an
indefinite basis. It is, therefore, no surprise that the supposed
opposition Blue and White agreed with Netanyahu’s Likud on increasing
Israel’s control of the occupied territory.
Boosted by US President Donald Trump’s approval with his “deal of the
century peace plan”, both parties now want to annex a large part of what
Zionists call “Judea and Samaria”. Their solution for what they see as
the “demographic threat” of too many babies of the “wrong” ethnicity
being born, is to avoid the annexation of those areas of the West Bank
where Palestinians are still the most populous. In practice, though,
with Palestinian population centres being isolated islands within a sea
of “Israeli” territory, the effect will be the same as if Israel had
annexed the whole West Bank.
A key clause of the coalition deal between Gantz and Netanyahu will
allow annexation to go ahead as soon as July, and it now seems certain
that Israel is going to use the Covid-19 crisis as cover to launch its
unprecedented illegal land grab.
It is nothing new for Israel to impose and increase its control of
Palestinian lands. Indeed, annexation itself was used by the rogue state
to declare Jerusalem as its “undivided” capital city, in defiance of
international law. Annexation on the scale proposed by Netanyahu and
Gantz, though, is a grave new step in the 130 years of Zionism’s war
against the indigenous population of Palestine. It is a crime of massive
proportions, even by Israeli standards.