http://www.usatoday.com/news/comment/ncoppf.htm
Palestinians' Rights Ignored
By Edmund R. Hanauer, USA Today, 07/26/00
At Camp David, President Clinton and Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak pressed Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat to agree to a settlement reflecting Israel's superior power, not an agreement based on international law and human rights.
On each issue in dispute, the Palestinians are supported by international law and human-rights covenants. In each case, "compromises" mean denial of the legal and human rights of Palestinians, not of Israelis.
Palestinians already made the major concession - recognition in 1993 of Israel (without Israeli acceptance of a Palestinian state) on 78% of their former territory, British Mandatory Palestine. A 1967 United Nations Security Council resolution requires Israel to withdraw from all Arab lands occupied in 1967 in return for Arab acceptance of Israel. The Palestinians have done their part.
Regarding Jewish settlements, international law prohibits Israel from settling civilians on land seized from Palestinians; 200,000 Jewish settlers are illegally using land and water resources taken from Palestinians.
On Jerusalem, Palestinians seek a shared city. But Israel, in violation of international law, insists on continued control of East Jerusalem, where 200,000 Palestinians suffer from what Israel's leading human rights group, B'Tselem, calls a "history of dispossession and discrimination."
During the 1948 war, Israel drove out hundreds of thousands of Palestinians and destroyed more than 400 Palestinian villages. Since 1948, Israel has ignored U.N. resolutions supporting the right of Palestinian refugees to repatriation to Israel. Last year, 1,100 U.S. religious leaders called on the United States to press Israel to recognize the right of return for Palestinian refugees.
The Clinton administration has opposed U.N. resolutions aimed at getting Israel to recognize the human rights of Palestinians. The United States gives more than $3 billion each year, which enables Israel to flout international law, ignore world opinion and pursue policies that would give a fraction of the Palestinian people a fraction of their rights on a fraction of their land.
Americans should demand a better deal for the Palestinian people. And President Clinton might heed the wisdom of Pope Paul VI: "If you want peace, work for justice."
Edmund R. Hanauer is an American Jewish human-rights activist and director of Search for Justice and Equality in Palestine/Israel, a Boston-based human rights group.