Justice for Palestine is the key to Gaza peace
Both sides must stop killing civilians & respect human rights
Gaza escalation risks a major regional conflict
Support an independent Palestinian state
London - 21 November 2012
“The Israeli seizure and occupation of Palestinian land, and the denial of a Palestinian state, is the root cause of the
on-going conflict and the current flare up in Gaza. There can be no peace without first securing justice for the people
of Palestine,” said Peter Tatchell, Director of the London-based human rights organisation, the Peter Tatchell
Foundation.
“Palestinians have a right to their own homeland – just like Jews. It is time for peace, justice, equality and security
for all - Palestinians and Israelis - with two co-existing states based on the 1967 borders,” he said.
Urge world leaders to press for an end to the Israeli occupation of Palestinian land and for the creation of an
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“While rocket attacks on Jewish civilians are wrong, Israel’s escalation in Gaza risks sparking a major regional
conflict, possibly involving Iran and its proxy, Hezbollah. This is not in the interest of the people of Israel,
Palestine or the wider region,” added Mr Tatchell.
“Palestinians are justified to non-violently resist Israel’s seizure of land, demolition of houses, destruction of crops
and the killing of civilians. The divisive, sectarian ‘apartheid wall’ and the building of illegal Jewish settlements on
the West Bank undermines the prospects for peace and plays into the hands of Islamist extremists.
“Israel’s oppression of the Palestinians does not justify Islamists firing rockets into Jewish civilian areas. Nor do
rocket attacks justify Israel’s bombardment of Gaza and the consequent civilian deaths. Israeli actions are tantamount
to the terrorisation and collective punishment of the Gaza population, which is illegal under international law.
“Killing civilians is a war crime – whoever does it, for whatever reason. The human rights of both Israelis and
Palestinians must be protected.
“The cycle of attack and counter-attack, revenge and pay-back, is immoral and futile. Neither side gains. Insecurity is
compounded and the seeds of further conflict are sown.
“An-eye-for-an-eye leaves everyone blind.
“The Hamas regime in Gaza is guilty of serious human rights abuses against its own Palestinian citizens, including
unfair trials, torture and executions.
“See, as one example, the Human Rights Watch report: ‘Abusive System: Failures of Criminal Justice in Gaza’, October
2012:
“Hamas has also sanctioned rocket attacks on Israeli civilians.
“It is truly shocking the way some western pro-Palestinian, anti-war and left-wing groups variously defend or excuse
Hamas. As well as being anti-Semitic, Hamas is an authoritarian, reactionary movement.
“While people are right to be critical of Israel's stance towards the Palestinians, it is also important to defend the
Jewish people against Islamists and other anti-Semites.
“As to the way forward for peace in the Middle East:
“The long-term interests and security of the Jewish people would be best served if Israel seized the moral high ground
by unilaterally withdrawing from its illegal occupation of the West Bank (illegal according to the UN and international
law), ending the siege of Gaza and dismantling the separation wall (which unjustly divides Palestinian communities from
each other and often from their farmland).
“Israel should simultaneously recognise an independent Palestinian state based on the 1967 borders and join with the
international community, including Western nations, to fund Palestinian schools, houses, roads, libraries and hospitals,
to reassure the Palestinian people and win their hearts and minds.
“Such an initiative would have a huge positive impact. It would win worldwide praise for Israel and do more than
anything else to counter the de-legitimation that it fears.
“This grand gesture of justice and reconciliation would seriously weaken Hamas and the jihadists. They would lose the
raison d'etre for their hardline stance. They would become marginalised. Many (possibly most) ordinary grassroots
Palestinians would begin to change their attitudes to Israel and be won for peace - healing wounds and building new
bonds between Jew, Arab, Christian and Muslim.
“A just peace where Jews and Arabs live together in equality and harmony sounds hard to believe right now, but it can
happen with political will on both sides, supported by the international community.
“In northern Ireland, the idea of arch enemies, the Democratic Unionist Party and Sinn Fein, sharing political power in
a joint government administration was, only a few years ago, deemed fanciful. Now it has happened. If peace can come to
northern Ireland, why not to Israel and Palestine?
“It is time to: Give peace a chance,” urged Mr Tatchell.
For further information:
Peter Tatchell, Director, Peter Tatchell Foundation
ENDS