United Arab Political Parties
 
Their campaign is slowly causing Tel Aviv to lose favour and legitimacy as a state among law-abiding nations
 By As'ad Abdul Rahman, Special to Gulf News

Published: 00:00 March 3, 2012

No matter how truthful and brilliant a message can be, its success always depends on the messenger who transmits it. And so are causes in our world which
have utterly failed in spite of their validity because the transmitters were not
up to the task to creatively project to others their righteousness. Indeed, we
see great religious thoughts that were and still are being misused by
non-spiritual minds that turned them into pure unadulterated evil. The number of
innocent souls that perished in the name of religion that is supposed to save
them as a primary goal is almost beyond any calculation. Therefore, it is always
the messenger together with the message that makes the difference.                           

Our focus here is Palestine. The validity of its righteous cause is beyond
question, but the immense abuse it had experienced at the hands of the Zionists/
Israelis and even some Palestinians and Arabs is also beyond question and doubt.
Yet, the Palestine cause has never witnessed a public relation campaign that reached a creative
level bonding with millions of hearts and minds across the world like the
Palestinian Solidarity Campaign (PSC). The organisation has been raising public
awareness about the occupation of Palestine and the legitimate daily struggle of
the Palestinians which, slowly but surely, is causing Israel to lose favour and
even its legitimacy as a state among law-abiding nations.    

Because of the many campaigns of the PSC, Israel has increasingly become one
of the most hated states in our world, similar to apartheid South Africa in the
1980s. This civil Palestinian organisation has been turning an ever-growing
number of Jewish and Israeli minds and hearts to support the basic rights of the
Palestinian people. One of its latest general achievements was a vote of support
by the British Trade Union Congress (TUC), representing 6.5 million workers in
the United Kingdom. TUC voted on September 14, 2011 "to support Palestine and
review links with organisations complicit with Israel's occupation". Such a
development calls for appreciation of the organised efforts of the PSC which is
an independent, non-governmental and non-party political organisation with
members from many communities across the world who have come together from all
faiths and political parties, student organisations and trade unions to work for
justice for the Palestinian people. Indeed, the PSC with a head office in
central London is opposed to all forms of racism, including anti-Jewish
prejudice and Islamo-phobia. PSC has an executive committee of 20 members in
addition to two members representing the PSC's trade union advisory committee.
The organisation depends on volunteers to manage and run specific campaigns and
branches across the world in addition to producing publications. As an example,
some of its activities included during October, 2011, the "Negev Bedouin Story"
event held in Oxford highlighting the plight of thousands of Bedouins facing
transfer from their lands by Israel. Another event held in Cambridge focused on
‘Israel's Hidden Victims' while a day of films was dedicated to Palestine in
Southampton entitled ‘Gazawood'. The ‘ Revolutionary Change in the Arab World:
What Prospects for the Palestinians?' was the main focus of an activity held in
London. A major campaign of PSC is the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS)
drive against Israel, primarily initiated by a
grassroots movement that grew in the Occupied Territories. Omar Barghouti, a
fellow Palestinian and a leader of the movement managed, together with his
colleagues, to found the BDS (which has spread across the world) as early as
2005 with a campaign of and a call for boycotts, divestment and sanctions
against Israel until it complies with international law and Palestinian
rights.                           

truly global movement against Israeli apartheid is rapidly emerging in
response to this call. "Don't collaborate with Israeli apartheid" was an appeal
from Palestinian civil societies to European and American universities,
academies, students and people of conscience. All the time, BDS activists are
urging unions to review relations with the Israeli trade union (Histadrut) and
all western companies to stop their dealings with Israeli commercial enterprises
which are exploiting Occupied Territories.


In addition to such activities, a number of resources are made available to
volunteers to run the various campaigns all over the world drawing attention to
the illegal status of the Israeli colonies and calling for a boycott of their
products.
Again, ‘it is the messenger together with the message', that can fulfil noble
goals. When the messenger and his colleagues in the PSC reach a high-level in
the service of their righteous cause, they are literally able to budge immense
rocks with the BDS campaign against the colonial Israeli rule in occupied
Palestine. Indeed, we are truly blessed to have the likes of Omar Barghouti and
his companions in the PSC who work tirelessly towards bringing justice to the
Palestinians.                          

 
Manar Ammar | 25 February 2012 
 
CAIRO: Egypt’s ultra-conservative “Salafists Call” condemned Hamas leader in Gaza Ismail Haniya shortly after he led a prayer in the al-Azhar Mosque on Friday, saying he met with Shiite leaders last week while all the killing in Iraq is ongoing and Sunnis are attacked almost daily.

“We refuse that Haniya leads the prayer in Egypt’s largest Sunni mosque after he shook hands with the Shiites, and Egypt is the country of the Sunni al-Azhar [and we] do not accept a man who put his hand into the hand that kills Sunnis in Iraq and Syria,” said a statement released by the Salafi Call on Friday.

Haniya is visiting Egypt for meetings with Egyptian officials on Gaza and the peace process with Israel.

The Call said that Haniya, who is being supported by the Muslim Brotherhood, follows a method of “lying, cheating and cunning and plays on all fronts after he shook hands with Shiite in Iran and Hezboallah and Bashar al-Assad and now he comes to Egypt to shake ours, despite he never condemned Assad even once.”

“What is the difference between Jews, Hezbollah and Iran when they are all gathered in going against God’s word and wish to break down Islam,” continued the Call.

“There is no difference between the massacres in Syria and Gaza, they are all Muslims,” the group added.

“Why do we only care about al-Aqsa and Jihad there and ignore Aleppo and the rest of Syria.”

The Call went on to criticize the Muslim Brotherhood, who in their opinion, tried its hardest to get Haniya to Egypt and failed to support the bearded police officers in their battle with the ministry of interior.

A number of police officers want to go against the code of the ministry and let their beards grow as they see it as part of their Islamic identity.

Hamas Leader Ismail Haniya is praying to god not for the Salafists.

Salafists should stop the bloodshed of Christians or prosecute
liberal Sunni Muslims.

Salafists should be the one's barred from praying at al-Azhar Mosque.

Palestine don't need Salafists drama.
 
The United Arab Political Parties Chairman Maher Khalil support the Unity of Palestine,struggles and liberation of Palestine.
 
patrick martin
GAZA CITY— From Thursday's Globe and Mail
Published Wednesday,
Feb. 22, 2012 9:39PM EST
Last updated Thursday,
Feb. 23, 2012 5:11AM EST

Just a few days after many called their political leader Khaled Meshaal a “dictator,” members of Hamas are putting on a united front, endorsing a transitional Palestinian unity government with their hated rival, Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, as prime minister.

It is a major victory for Mr. Meshaal, who among other things is severing the movement’s ties with Iran and adopting a more moderate position – all of which presents a serious challenge to Israel and raises the stakes in any future peace
process.

No longer will Mr. Abbas be speaking only on behalf of the West Bank or his own Fatah faction. He will speak for all Palestinians. And Israel, which insists it will have nothing to do with any government that includes Hamas members, may refuse to negotiate with Mr. Abbas.

Indeed, it’s quite possible Israel will quash any attempt at a Palestinian election if Hamas has a chance to win it.

Forming a unity government is a big step for both Hamas, which governs Gaza, and Fatah, the political movement that controls the Palestinian Authority in the West Bank. And members in both factions have strong reservations about the deal, especially members of Hamas.

The recent dispute – some describe it as a revolt – arose when Mr. Meshaal met in Doha earlier this month with Mr. Abbas and the Emir of Qatar. To everyone’s surprise, the Hamas leader signed a declaration that his movement would agree to the appointment of Mr. Abbas as prime minister.

Leading members of Hamas complained that the decision was taken without consultation and that it flew in the face of an
agreement signed last May in Cairo that stipulated that no one from either Hamas or Fatah would be members of the unity government.

Mahmoud Zahar, a senior Hamas figure in Gaza, was the most outspoken. He called Mr. Abbas “an idiot” and “a failure” and said that Mr. Meshaal “should apologize” for agreeing to Mr. Abbas’s appointment.

He didn’t stop there. Dr. Zahar, a surgeon, complained that Mr. Meshaal also recently supported the idea of a Palestinian state being based on the borders that existed in 1967 – that is, the West bank and Gaza – something completely contrary to established Hamas positions that call for liberating all of Palestine including Israel, and supported the notion of popular resistance (meaning non-violent resistance) instead of Hamas’s armed resistance.

“This is not a political party,” Dr. Zahar said. “It is a religious and resistance movement.” Indeed, Dr. Zahar has always seen resistance against the Israeli occupation as more important than governing the Palestinian territories.

So silencing Mr. Zahar and his many supporters is a significant victory for Mr. Meshaal.

Adnan abu Amer, a professor of history at al Ummah University in Gaza, attributes Mr. Meshaal’s victory to his unique access to money from international donors and to support from the leader of Hamas’s military wing, the al-Qassam Brigade, in Gaza.

“While most of the members in Gaza opposed what Mr. Meshaal was doing,” Mr. abu Amer said, “the support of 30,000 fighters means no one can stand up to him.”

As well, Mr. abu Amer said, “the majority of Hamas members in the West Bank support Mr. Meshaal,” a fellow West Banker who hails from a village outside Ramallah.

Though silenced for the time being, Dr. Zahar’s grievances against his leader and especially against Mr. Abbas remain, like a ticking bomb waiting to go off.

Indeed, many people in Gaza don’t share Mr. Meshaal’s view of the world. He is not a refugee as are most Gazans in Hamas, and has not suffered the kind of indignities that come with the blockade and attacks on Gaza.

However, said Mr. abu Amer, “as an outsider he has a clearer view of the big picture and can be more pragmatic.”

“He saw the need to act to save Hamas,” he said. “The Arab Spring was good or many Arabs, but its big loser was Iran,” said Mr. Amer. “And along with Iran, came Hamas, another loser.”

“Meshaal realized he had to support the other Muslim Brothers throughout the region,” he explained, “and that meant pulling out of Syria, something Iran tried to stop.”

 
Unitedly Palestinian leaders can hope to direct their attention to
Israeli violations which have destroyed hopes for a two-state solution


By Osama Al Sharif, Special to Gulf News

Qatari Emir Shaikh Hamad Bin Khalifa Al Thani, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and Hamas leader Khalid Mesha’al at the signing ceremony in Doha on Monday.

Good news associated with the Palestinians is very hard to come by these days, but February 6 was an exception. A Qatari initiative succeeded in bringing together two bitter rivals in Doha; Palestinian President and Fatah leader Mahmoud Abbas and head of Hamas' political bureau Khalid Mesha'al. The Doha Declaration represented the biggest leap forward on the road to securing Palestinian reconciliation.

Under the agreement Abbas will head an interim unity government that will oversee legislative and presidential elections. The agreement stipulates that work will intensify to overhaul the Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO), which Hamas will join, leading to a new Palestine National Council (PNC), the highest Palestinian body representing all Palestinians. 

Also the two sides agreed to workthrough committees to end issues relating to detainees, Gaza reconstruction, restructuring of Palestinian institutions and others. The next time both sides will meet it will be in Cairo on February 18 during which the new government will be announced.

Efforts to end the Palestinian rift and bring about reconciliation have been on and off since 2006, when Fatah and PNA officials were chased out of Gaza. All previous attempts have ended in failure because the two sides never trusted each other. But that is not the only reason.

US and Israeli pressure on Abbas not to go ahead with reconciliation initiatives has prevented a successful conclusion of
negotiations. Hamas too was careful not to antagonise its allies in Damascus and Tehran. Palestinian reconciliation was tossed around like a regional football but this time there are encouraging signs that both sides have a vested interest
in pulling it through.

Game changer

The Arab Spring has toppled a key regional player, former Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak, who had special ties with both
the PNA and Hamas. But few believed that he conducted the role of intermediary as an honest broker. His regime helped impose a siege on the Gaza Strip, often denying the passage of humanitarian aid to Gazans who were trying to recover from a vicious onslaught by Israel in 2009. A number of Hamas leaders were arrested or harassed as they crossed into Egypt.

With Mubarak out of the way, Hamas' relations with Egypt witnessed a dramatic change. Its leaders are now able to use the Rafah border at anytime while Cairo's new military leaders have kept it open for humanitarian uses. Moreover, Abbas has been
greatly disappointed by the Obama administration which has failed to convince Israel to restart the negotiations and halt colony activities. 

For Hamas, whose leaders have been hosted by the Damascus regime for years, the Syrian uprising has been a game changer. Mesha'al has refused to throw his support behind the Bashar Al Assad regime and as a result has been quietly disassociating himself from Damascus. The movement's leadership has been looking for new homes in Doha, Amman and Gaza.

Furthermore, Mesha'al has expressed admiration for the Arab Spring believing that non-violent popular uprisings are the way forward in the Occupied Territories. He has been distancing himself from Tehran and hoping to gain recognition in Europe and
elsewhere. Hamas does not recognise Israel but it has accepted a deal in which an independent Palestinian state is recognised within the pre-1967 war borders.

In addition to that Hamas has been thrilled by the success of fellow Sunni Islamist movements in Egypt, Tunisia and Morocco. US willingness to open dialogue with the Muslim Brotherhood, of which Hamas is an ideological relative, has given hope to Mesha'al that the time could come when his movement could be recognised as a major player in the Palestinian issue.

Hamas' way to reach such goals will have to start with Palestinian reconciliation. Abbas is hoping to strengthen his hand in any future negotiations although his new rapport with Hamas has been criticised by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu who said that the Palestinian leader has chosen to abandon the path of peace. 
 
Interestingly, the initial US reaction to the Doha Declaration was less critical. Washington described the deal as an internal Palestinian issue. But Abbas knows that many pro-Israel Congressmen will use the new deal as a pretext to deny PNA much needed funds. It is here that the Palestinians would need all the Arab and European help they could get.

The road to the February 18 deadline is difficult. Abbas will come under US and Israeli pressure to abandon the deal. Hamas too will have to recognise that its iron-fist rule of Gaza must come to an end if free and open elections will come next. For the time being the Palestinian people have a good reason to be joyful. The rift has cost them many opportunities and allowed Israel to pursue plans to colonise Palestinian land. 
 
If the reconciliation is successful and a new era begins the Palestinians can hope to direct their attention to Israeli violations which have destroyed hopes for a two-state solution.

Osama Al Sharif is a journalist and political commentator based in
Amman.


 
Start blogging by creating a new post. You can edit or delete me by clicking under the comments. You can also customize your sidebar by dragging in elements from the top bar.