The right to life and land
Two million Palestinians in the Gaza Strip
are slowly being suffocated. Over 40 per cent of Gazans are unemployed;
there is virtually no economy; no electricity; the water is
undrinkable; and the medical system has collapsed. It is the Israeli
occupation that is responsible for the suffering of Palestinians in Gaza
due to its 11-year-old siege imposed on the coastal enclave.
Since 2007, following Hamas’s victory in
internationally-monitored elections, Israel has retained absolute
control over the movement of people and goods via Gaza’s airspace,
territorial waters, and land borders. This blockade subjects Gaza’s
population to collective punishment, in contravention of international
law.
Confronted with such oppression and the
world’s silence in response to Israeli war-crimes, Palestinians in Gaza
have no other option than to raise their voices in protest. Seventy per
cent of Gaza’s population are refugees, or descendants of refugees, who
were violently expelled from their homeland in 1948 to make way for the
Zionist state of Israel. Israelis celebrate this land-grab as
“independence” but for Palestinians it is the Nakba (catastrophe
We, Palestinians have never been allowed
to return to our land, despite United Nations Security Council
Resolution 194 guaranteeing us this inalienable right. In the Israeli
apartheid state, Palestinians are stripped of their humanity; their
identity reduced to that of “demographic threat”.
Two million Palestinians in the Gaza Strip
are slowly being suffocated. Over 40 per cent of Gazans are unemployed;
there is virtually no economy; no electricity; the water is
undrinkable; and the medical system has collapsed. It is the Israeli
occupation that is responsible for the suffering of Palestinians in Gaza
due to its 11-year-old siege imposed on the coastal enclave.
Since 2007, following Hamas’s victory in
internationally-monitored elections, Israel has retained absolute
control over the movement of people and goods via Gaza’s airspace,
territorial waters, and land borders. This blockade subjects Gaza’s
population to collective punishment, in contravention of international
law.
Confronted with such oppression and the
world’s silence in response to Israeli war-crimes, Palestinians in Gaza
have no other option than to raise their voices in protest. Seventy per
cent of Gaza’s population are refugees, or descendants of refugees, who
were violently expelled from their homeland in 1948 to make way for the
Zionist state of Israel. Israelis celebrate this land-grab as
“independence” but for Palestinians it is the Nakba (catastrophe).
We, Palestinians have never been allowed
to return to our land, despite United Nations Security Council
Resolution 194 guaranteeing us this inalienable right. In the Israeli
apartheid state, Palestinians are stripped of their humanity; their
identity reduced to that of “demographic threat”.
Israeli
forces fire tear gas at Palestinians protesters at the Gaza and Israel
border during the Great March of Return on 4 May 2018 [Mohammad Asad /
Middle East Monitor]
Since 30 March, thousands of Palestinians have been participating in the Great Return March
(GRM), sending a united message to Israel and the world: We have the
right to return to our homeland that was stolen from us in 1948. We have
the right to move freely, to have electricity, to travel, to work.
Through the GRM movement, Palestinians are not only demanding the right
to return – but also the right to live.
The GRM is not Hamas-driven; it is
Palestinian-inspired and driven. It is the embodiment of Palestinian
popular resistance involving youth, women, and all Palestinians that
steadfastly refuse to collaborate with the occupiers, accept Israeli
occupation and submit to Zionist apartheid. They are fighting back,
armed only with their rights and international law.
The GRM also shows that the Palestinian
people are determined to achieve their freedom, their independence, and
their right to return to the villages that they were forced out of 70
years ago.
These protests have also shown the world
the brutality of the Israeli occupation government. Israeli forces use
jeeps and drones to fire tear gas at paramedics and children. Dozens of
snipers, armed with internationally-prohibited explosive bullets
designed to permanently maim, have been stationed along the border,
targeting and killing unarmed protesters like 15-year old Mohammed Ibrahim Ayoub, and journalists Yaser Murtaja and Ahmed Abu Hussein. Israeli bullets have, so far, killed 50 Palestinians and injured more than 7000 people over the last six weeks.
Official: Over 2m Palestinians live tragic situation in Gaza
By killing and wounding so many, Israel
had hoped that the masses would retreat, that the protests would subside
and, eventually, end. This was not the case, and popular resistance
will intensify as we approach 15 May, the 70th anniversary of the Nakba.
Like the apartheid South African
government, Israel justifies its decades of state terrorism by
demonising legitimate resistance movements, especially Hamas. Hamas was
established only in 1987. What then explains the ethnic cleansing of
Palestinians since 1948? What explains Israeli settlements and land
thefts, Palestinian home demolitions, forced displacement,
disproportionate use of force, detention without trial, arrest without
due process, denial of entry, land confiscations, and movement
restrictions against Palestinians for over 50 years? Israel can no
longer rationalise its oppression of Palestinians by blaming
Palestinians who exercise their natural and internationally-recognised
right to resist.
The GRM is a turning point, just as the
1960 Sharpeville massacre was a turning point in South Africa’s
liberation struggle. In Gaza, the world is witnessing an apartheid
military regime killing non-violent protesters. The world did not look
away from Sharpeville, and it must not look away from occupied Palestine
either. The Palestinian call for justice, freedom and dignity must be
heard and respected. Seventy years after hundreds of thousands of
Palestinians were forced to become refugees through Zionist massacres
and violence, we, our children and our grandchildren remain firm on our
desire to exercise our right to return home. For Palestinians – and
especially Palestinian refugees – the GRM represents a reclaiming of our
dignity, and an announcement to the world that we will not accept the
oppression of our people. We will continue resisting, the occupation
will end, and we will achieve our liberation.
Israeli
forces fire tear gas at Palestinians protesters at the Gaza and Israel
border during the Great March of Return on 4 May 2018 [Mohammad Asad /
Middle East Monitor]
Since 30 March, thousands of Palestinians have been participating in the Great Return March
(GRM), sending a united message to Israel and the world: We have the
right to return to our homeland that was stolen from us in 1948. We have
the right to move freely, to have electricity, to travel, to work.
Through the GRM movement, Palestinians are not only demanding the right
to return – but also the right to live.
The GRM is not Hamas-driven; it is
Palestinian-inspired and driven. It is the embodiment of Palestinian
popular resistance involving youth, women, and all Palestinians that
steadfastly refuse to collaborate with the occupiers, accept Israeli
occupation and submit to Zionist apartheid. They are fighting back,
armed only with their rights and international law.
The GRM also shows that the Palestinian
people are determined to achieve their freedom, their independence, and
their right to return to the villages that they were forced out of 70
years ago.
These protests have also shown the world
the brutality of the Israeli occupation government. Israeli forces use
jeeps and drones to fire tear gas at paramedics and children. Dozens of
snipers, armed with internationally-prohibited explosive bullets
designed to permanently maim, have been stationed along the border,
targeting and killing unarmed protesters like 15-year old Mohammed Ibrahim Ayoub, and journalists Yaser Murtaja and Ahmed Abu Hussein. Israeli bullets have, so far, killed 50 Palestinians and injured more than 7000 people over the last six weeks.
Official: Over 2m Palestinians live tragic situation in Gaza
By killing and wounding so many, Israel
had hoped that the masses would retreat, that the protests would subside
and, eventually, end. This was not the case, and popular resistance
will intensify as we approach 15 May, the 70th anniversary of the Nakba.
Like the apartheid South African
government, Israel justifies its decades of state terrorism by
demonising legitimate resistance movements, especially Hamas. Hamas was
established only in 1987. What then explains the ethnic cleansing of
Palestinians since 1948? What explains Israeli settlements and land
thefts, Palestinian home demolitions, forced displacement,
disproportionate use of force, detention without trial, arrest without
due process, denial of entry, land confiscations, and movement
restrictions against Palestinians for over 50 years? Israel can no
longer rationalise its oppression of Palestinians by blaming
Palestinians who exercise their natural and internationally-recognised
right to resist.
The GRM is a turning point, just as the
1960 Sharpeville massacre was a turning point in South Africa’s
liberation struggle. In Gaza, the world is witnessing an apartheid
military regime killing non-violent protesters. The world did not look
away from Sharpeville, and it must not look away from occupied Palestine
either. The Palestinian call for justice, freedom and dignity must be
heard and respected. Seventy years after hundreds of thousands of
Palestinians were forced to become refugees through Zionist massacres
and violence, we, our children and our grandchildren remain firm on our
desire to exercise our right to return home. For Palestinians – and
especially Palestinian refugees – the GRM represents a reclaiming of our
dignity, and an announcement to the world that we will not accept the
oppression of our people. We will continue resisting, the occupation
will end, and we will achieve our liberation.
![Palestinians seen protesting at the Gaza-Israel border as part of the sixth week of the Great March of Return on May 4, 2018 [Mohammad Asad / Middle East Monitor]](https://i2.wp.com/www.middleeastmonitor.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/05/IMG_9070.jpg?resize=500%2C333&quality=75&strip=all&ssl=1)
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