Palestinian refugees deserve justice
By Leslie Bravery | http://www.palestine.org.nz/ | 02 March 2014
In Syria, the plight of the 570,000 Palestinians exiled from their homeland by Israel raises yet again the
responsibility of the world community for the safety and human rights of a people who, for over sixty years, have been
denied justice. The predicament in which Palestinian refugees find themselves is directly attributable to decisions
taken by great powers, over the heads of a native people. The first step towards ending this humanitarian disaster is
for the world community to shoulder its responsibility and require Israel, under threat of sanctions, to abide by its
obligations under international law, in particular the provisions of the Fourth Geneva Convention.
Set up by the UN General Assembly in 1949 and mandated to provide assistance and protection to a population of some five
million registered Palestinian refugees in Jordan, Lebanon, Syria, the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, UNWRA does its work
on behalf of the world community. But the financial support UNRWA receives has not kept pace with increasing demand for
services caused by growing numbers of refugees and deepening poverty. After six decades it is time to call Israel to
account. Massively subsidised by the US taxpayer, the nuclear-armed Zionist state conducts its inhumanities, not only
with impunity but also with the benefit of diplomatic and material rewards, such as preferential trade deals provided by
the world's most powerful and influential states.
In a speech at the American University of Beirut on 25 February 2014, Filippo Grandi, the Commissioner-General of UNRWA,
described conditions in the Yarmouk refugee camp: “The stark greyness of the people and the rubble remind me of the
black-and-white archive pictures from the Palestinian diaspora in 1948: children in tattered clothes and unkempt hair
warming themselves on small fires, old people looking into the camera, their lined and leathered faces deep with
concern.” Filippo Grandi also observed that: “The continued disenfranchisement of Palestinians from rights and
livelihoods in Gaza and the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, has been the main impediment to serving Palestine
refugees to the benefit of their future and that of the region.”
While Israel continues to deny the Palestinian refugees their UN-recognised right of return, Zionist-inspired Israeli
law determines that Jewish citizens who are native by birth in other lands, have a right of 'return' to Palestine.
Palestinians, on the other hand, are discriminated against by Israel and denied access to their native land solely
because they are not Jewish. That is undeniable racism. As a Palestinian mother in Yarmouk, Um Ahmed, asked the UNWRA
Commissioner-General “What are we supposed to do, where are we supposed to go?”
The forced exile of Palestinian refugees since 1948 is an intolerable war crime and the uncritical legitimacy that has
routinely been granted to the Zionist state's founding ideology must be challenged and reconsidered. Where Zionism's
discriminatory purposes conflict with international humanitarian law – and the tragic evidence for this is plain for all
to see – the world community has a duty to demand an end to Israel's intransigence. No amount of so-called 'peace talks'
can legitimately negotiate away the human rights of millions of refugees or, thereby, deny them the justice they so
truly deserve. Zionism, as the purpose of Israel's existence, must surely give way to a saner, more humane philosophy
that would allow a transition away from ever-more discriminatory legislation. With the right international encouragement
– and pressure – such a change of heart could open the possibility of allowing a more inclusive multi-ethnic community
to take shape in the Holy Land.
The growing success of the Boycott Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement has been spurred by the outrage engendered by
Zionism's inhumanities. It is high time our political leaders and governments (so quick to selectively invoke sanctions
elsewhere in the name of democracy) joined with the rest of humanity and acknowledged the legitimacy and efficacy of the
movement; their wholehearted participation in BDS would bring about, so much sooner, the just and peaceful outcome we
all long for. Let reason and humanity prevail.