A Palestinian driver rammed his bus into a packed bus stop Wednesday,
killing seven Israeli soldiers and a civilian. It is unfortunately true
that all too often a seeming identification of "terrorism" with
Palestinians has clouded all reasonable discussion, coverage, and rational
thinking about the Palestinian-Israeli conflict. The myths and distortions
that have been assumed as reality have been appropriated by one side and
cast a shroud around any deeper understanding of the conflict. The
question is: what is the reality behind what happened at that bus stop?
The bus stop was located in what Israel calls Azur, an Israeli settlement
established in 1948 on the lands of the Palestinian village Yazur, 6
kilometers from Jaffa. On the 11 December 1947, Jewish immigrants launched
a terror attack against the Yazur village coffee house killing six
Palestinians. On 30 April 1948, this Palestinian village was under
complete control by Jewish forces and subsequently cleansed of its more
than 4,000 Palestinian inhabitants, now refugees. The village has been
mostly destroyed with the exception of two village shrines. Two small
structures have been converted into commercial buildings. The site contain
modern apartment blocks from two Israeli settlements, namely Miqwe Yisrael
and Azur.
What explains the Palestinian driver's actions? Khalil Abu Olbeh, the bus
driver, had no ties to any Palestinian faction. This is not strange.
Opinion polls show that since the past few years, most Palestinians in the
Westbank and Gaza have lost their ties with any factions.
According to Abu Olbeh's relatives, Khalil was distraught over the large
number of Palestinian casualties over the past few months. Between
September 28, 2000 and February 13, 2001, 359 Palestinians were killed and
eleven Palestinians have been assassinated of which 89 percent were
civilians. In that same period more than 12,000 Palestinians were injured,
including 1,500 with permanent disabilities.
Heavy shooting in the southern Gaza Strip the past few days had left Abu
Olbeh particularly aggrieved. But to friends and relatives, his emotions
were in tune with the rest of the neighborhood, and nothing seemed amiss
with the 35-year-old father of five.
Khalil Abu Olbeh had been driving Palestinian laborers from Gaza to jobs
in Israel for the past five years as an employee of the Israeli bus
company Egged. Abu Olbeh was among 15,000 Palestinians who had been
permitted to return to their jobs two weeks ago after Israel had eased an
earlier closure of the Palestinian areas. He worked as a taxi driver in
Gaza, but it brought in little money.
For the past four months, Khalil Abu Olbeh had been unemployed because of
Israel's closure of the Palestinian areas. Since September 2000, Israel
has tightened its policy of closures and curfews, a violation of
international law as a collective punishment.
Living conditions in Gaza and elsewhere have been deteriorating. Before
the recent Intifada, the unemployment rate for Palestinians in the West
Bank and Gaza Strip was estimated at anywhere between 11 percent and 24
percent. During the past few months, however, that figure has risen
dramatically because of the estimated 125,000 Palestinians unable to reach
their jobs in Israel.
The economic results have been devastating: the families of these workers
now suffer from a complete lack of income, threatening their ability to
sustain themselves. With an unemployment rate of 38 percent, over 30
percent of the Palestinian population are living under the poverty level,
earning less than $2 a day.
The impact of these measures on the Palestinian civilian people has been
disastrous. The economic gains Palestinians saw during the first half of
2000 have been completely erased. Workers have been unable to reach their
jobs in Israel, and are therefore unable to earn money essential for the
well being of their families and central to the local economy. Industry
and agriculture have suffered both in financial and material terms, and
development has all but ceased. An additional outcome of the closure
policy has been the general inability on many occasions to transfer
wounded individuals to and from hospitals in different locales.
Many Palestinians seeking medical treatment for chronic conditions and
emergencies have been denied access to hospitals and clinics, either by
being held up at checkpoints for inordinate amounts of time or because of
the siege surrounding many towns and villages in the West Bank and Gaza
Strip. The refusal of the Israeli authorities to comply with international
humanitarian law, specifically the Fourth Geneva Convention.
Israeli authorities said they were certain that Abu Olbeh's actions were
deliberate. Perhaps they were, perhaps not. The day before Abu Olbeh drove
his bus into the bus stop packed with Israeli soldiers, Israeli forces
assassinated 50 year-old Mas'oud Ayyad. Elsewhere in the Gaza Strip, at
Netsarim Junction, Israeli soldiers opened fire at a group of unarmed
demonstrators, killing 14 year-old Bilal Tawfiq Ramadan with a live bullet
to the heart, at one point sending a United Nations mission scurrying for
cover as shooting erupted around them during a visit to a refugee camp.
Perhaps a refugee camp hosting the native inhabitants of the Palestinian
village Yazur, who could see their place of origin in the newspapers, now
called Azur.
The author is a
Dutch-Palestinian political scientist, human rights activist and is affiliated
to the the Palestine Right to Return Coalition
(Al-Awda).
Source:
by courtesy & © 2001 Arjan El Fassed
by the same author: