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- Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive
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- From: ww%nyxfer%igc.apc.org@MIZZOU1.missouri.edu (Workers World Service)
- Subject: Palestinians Set Up Fight Over Expulsions
- Message-ID: <1993Jan11.231000.18986@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
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- Resent-From: "Rich Winkel" <MATHRICH@MIZZOU1.missouri.edu>
- Date: Mon, 11 Jan 1993 23:10:00 GMT
- Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Lines: 139
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- Via NY Transfer News Collective * All the News that Doesn't Fit
-
-
- Palestinians step up fight over expulsions
-
- By Lyn Neeley
-
- Israel's unprecedented expulsion of 418 Palestinians has enraged
- people living in the occupied territories, triggered mass
- resistance by Arabs living in Israel and generated world
- condemnation of Israeli aggression.
-
- Since the expulsions, Israeli forces have killed 13 Palestinians
- and wounded hundreds. On Jan. 3, an 18-year-old youth, was shot
- to death and nine other Palestinians were injured.
-
- A protracted 24-hour curfew imposed on most of the occupied
- territory has caused food shortages, severe health risks and a
- loss of millions of dollars to Palestinians unable to travel to
- their jobs inside Israel.
-
- Washington's rhetorical condemnation of the expulsions is
- eclipsed by the $10.1 million it sends Israel daily. Israel, the
- number-one recipient of U.S. aid, could not have carried out the
- expulsions and disregarded world condemnation without the consent
- of its sponsor in Washington.
-
- The United Nations called the expulsions a violation of the
- Fourth Geneva Convention. But the UN has no plans to take action
- against Israel.
-
- Dr. Edward Said, a leading spokesperson for Palestinians in the
- U.S., said on "Interview," the British television show: "American
- public opinion, according to a poll which was done as recently as
- two weeks ago, is I would say massively, solidly in support of
- Palestinian self-determination, even for a Palestinian state."
-
- TERRIBLE CONDITIONS FOR PALESTINIANS
-
- On Dec. 16, after arresting 1,600 Palestinians, Israeli soldiers
- handcuffed, blindfolded and abruptly expelled 418 Arab men,
- dumping them on the Lebanese border in Israel's so-called
- "security zone." Families of those expelled were notified days
- later.
-
- The expellees are living in tents in below-freezing weather. The
- lack of drinking water has made many of them sick. "We are
- thirsty, cold and hungry," said Dr. Abdel Aziz al-Rantisi,
- spokesperson for the expelled.
-
- On Jan. 3, Israel fired a barrage of shells toward the camp to
- discourage nearby villagers from smuggling supplies to the
- Palestinians.
-
- According to the Egyptian newspaper Al-Ahram, many of the
- expelled Palestinians--labeled "terrorists" by Israel--are
- professionals, include 10 medical doctors, 18 engineers, 43
- professors and 108 Muslim religious teachers. Egypt has condemned
- Israel for the expulsions.
-
- Hashem Mahameed, Palestinian members of the Israeli parliament,
- gave a speech in Gaza. He said: "As long as the occupation
- continues, so will our struggle, and not by stones alone. The
- Palestinian people must fight occupation by any means."
-
- Another Arab legislator, Tawfik Ziyad, was suspended for five
- sessions after he angrily spoke out against the expulsions.
-
- Arab leaders in Israel plan both a day of fasting in solidarity
- with the expelled Palestinians, and a hunger strike near Israeli
- Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin's office. Angry mass protests in
- front of Rabin's office have taken place almost daily since the
- expulsions.
-
- The Dec. 22 one-day general strike in the occupied territories
- was the strongest action in the five-year history of the Intifada
- (uprising).
-
- Arab students and workers living in Israel--who are central to
- Israel's economy--are outraged at that country's double standard
- about "terrorist" activities. "If the government wants to expel
- those involved in terrorism then why don't they send the
- foreign-born members of Jewish extremist groups back to their
- countries of origin?" asked a Palestinian professor. "Jewish
- terrorists who plant bombs and shoot Arabs are tolerated, and
- Arab terrorists are not."
-
- Rana Othman, a 17-year-old high school student in Israel, said:
- "If today they expel 400 people, tomorrow it will be 500 and the
- next day 600. It will be the beginning of the transfer of all the
- Palestinians out of the country."
-
- Moledet, a right-wing Israeli group with three seats in
- parliament, is calling for the immediate expulsion of all Arabs
- from Israel and the occupied territories.
-
- Arab leaders met with James Jonah of the UN demanding that Israel
- permit the shipment of food, fuel and drinking water to the
- Palestinian camp. Leaders representing a large political
- spectrum--from those who support the peace process to those who
- oppose it--have condemned the expulsions and demanded the
- international community take strict measures against Israel.
-
- Sari Nusseibeh, head of a Palestinian technical team that met
- with European and American diplomats, called the expulsions "an
- act of revenge" not related to any security threats to the state
- of Israel.
-
- ISRAEL SCARED
-
- Worldwide condemnation of the expulsions and fear that the
- Intifada will spread inside Israeli borders have made Israeli
- officials nervous. Israel's Haaretz newspaper wrote: "If the
- unrest spreads, it could cause serious damage to the delicate
- relations between Israeli Jewish and Arab citizens. It is in our
- interest to calm the atmosphere."
-
- In its first admission that mistakes were made, the Israeli Army
- announced on Dec. 28 that 10 Palestinians were expelled "without
- legal decision to deport them." But the army said the others
- would be tried and given long jail terms if they return.
-
- Prime Minister Rabin has been forced to say the rest of the
- expelled Palestinians could return to Israel after nine months if
- the Intifada, "violence and terror" stop. Palestinians flatly
- rejected Rabin, saying he could not impose conditions for the
- return of those expelled.
-
- (Copyright Workers World Service: Permission to reprint granted
- if source is cited. For more info contact Workers World, 46 W. 21
- St., New York, NY 10010; via e-mail: ww%nyxfer@igc.apc.org or
- workers@igc.apc.org or workers@mcimail.com.)
-
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