Today is International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People. The United Nations chose this day, 29th November, in accordance
with mandates given by the General Assembly in its resolutions 32/40 B
of 2 December 1977, 34/65 D of 12 December 1979, 56/34 of 3 December
2001, and other relevant resolutions.
The date of 29 November chosen has meaning and significance to the Palestinian people. Because on that shameful day in 1947, the General Assembly adopted resolution 181(II), which came to be known as the Partition Resolution. That resolution provided for the establishment in Palestine of a “Jewish State” and an “Arab State”, with Jerusalem as a corpus separatum under a special international regime. Of the two States to be created under this resolution, only one, Israel, has so far come into being.
This United Nations decision unleashed a catastrophe whose reverberations Palestinians continue to experience until today. On 14 May, 1948, the state of Israel was formed.Three-quarters of a million Palestinian Arabs—who were the majority of the population of historic Palestine, fled for their lives after experiencing or learning of massacres by Zionist paramilitary organizations, or were expelled from their homes during the ensuing Arab-Israeli war of 1948. By the 1949 armistice, the original partition lines had shifted violently so that Israel’s footprint became much larger than envisioned by the proposed partition plan, it was accorded 55 percent by the plan, but seized an additional 25% of Palestinian territory.
The date of 29 November chosen has meaning and significance to the Palestinian people. Because on that shameful day in 1947, the General Assembly adopted resolution 181(II), which came to be known as the Partition Resolution. That resolution provided for the establishment in Palestine of a “Jewish State” and an “Arab State”, with Jerusalem as a corpus separatum under a special international regime. Of the two States to be created under this resolution, only one, Israel, has so far come into being.
This United Nations decision unleashed a catastrophe whose reverberations Palestinians continue to experience until today. On 14 May, 1948, the state of Israel was formed.Three-quarters of a million Palestinian Arabs—who were the majority of the population of historic Palestine, fled for their lives after experiencing or learning of massacres by Zionist paramilitary organizations, or were expelled from their homes during the ensuing Arab-Israeli war of 1948. By the 1949 armistice, the original partition lines had shifted violently so that Israel’s footprint became much larger than envisioned by the proposed partition plan, it was accorded 55 percent by the plan, but seized an additional 25% of Palestinian territory.
At present, the drastically reduced Palestinian
land continues to be occupied by the Israeli military and Jerusalem is
occupied and divided with Israel controlling and limiting access to
religious sites. Palestinians originally displaced during the Nakba (the
Arabic word for Catastrophe—what the Palestinians call the 1948 war
when they lost their homeland) are still prevented from exercising the
right to return to their homes in what is now Israel. And contrary to
the resolution (and to the Fourth Geneva Convention )
Israel has continued to expropriate additional vast tracts of Palestinian territory
for its own use and especially for the building and transfer of its own
Israeli citizens to illegal settlements on occupied Palestinian land.
The Palestinian people, who now number more than 8 million, live primarily in the Palestinian territory occupied by Israel since 1967, including East Jerusalem, part of which is now administered by the Palestinian Authority; in Israel; in neighbouring Arab States; and in refugee camps in the region.
The International Day of Solidarity has traditionally provided an opportunity for the international community to focus its attention on the fact that the question of Palestine is still unresolved and that the Palestinian people is yet to attain its inalienable rights as defined by the General Assembly, namely, the right to self-determination without external interference, the right to national independence and sovereignty, and the right to return to their homes and property from which they had been displaced.
The Palestinian people, who now number more than 8 million, live primarily in the Palestinian territory occupied by Israel since 1967, including East Jerusalem, part of which is now administered by the Palestinian Authority; in Israel; in neighbouring Arab States; and in refugee camps in the region.
The International Day of Solidarity has traditionally provided an opportunity for the international community to focus its attention on the fact that the question of Palestine is still unresolved and that the Palestinian people is yet to attain its inalienable rights as defined by the General Assembly, namely, the right to self-determination without external interference, the right to national independence and sovereignty, and the right to return to their homes and property from which they had been displaced.
Today reminds the world that the threats facing the Palestinian people intensify day by day, and our
only response can be to give even more, and to do even more as the Israeli government continues to press ahead with its gross
violations of international law and Palestinian human rights,
accelerating the ongoing colonisation of yet more Palestinian land, continues to demolish Palestinian homes and buildings in the
Occupied West Bank and continues to subject
Gaza to an ever-tightening land, air and sea blockade, making life
insufferable for the nearly two million Palestinians, the majority of
them refugees from Israel’s ethnic cleansing, trapped in the enclave, like Palestinian refugees everywhere, are denied the right to
return to the homes from which they, their parents or grandparents were
expelled.
For decades the world has been helplessly watching the Palestinian
tragedy unfold as the people of this land are being driven out of their
homes that are being destroyed. They are forced to wander as they are
constantly harassed and deprived of the very basic necessities such as
water. They have no freedom of movement, as they are being arrested
arbitrarily, even little children and women have been detained.
Recent actions by the Israeli Government have illustrated the continuing nature of Israel’s illegal occupation and the denial of the rights of Palestinian peoples with the use of militarised violence and forced displacements. The attacks on Gaza in August 2022 killed 44 Palestinians, including 15 children, and were described by the UN Special rapporteur as an act contrary to international law. The Israeli army’s killing of the Palestinian journalist Shireen Abu Akleh; the attacks on the Al Aqsa mosque and the outlawing of 7 NGOs who spoke up for Palestinian rights.
According to the Palestinian Ministry of Health, the Israeli occupying forces have killed over 200 Palestinians so far- 51 of that number are children, the majority shot by Israeli forces or armed settlers in the occupied West Bank.
As recent Israeli elections recorded a swing to the far-right and the targeting of activists and peaceful protesters has vastly increased, the conditions for Palestinian prisoners mirror those on the ground. Currently, 4760 Palestinian political prisoners are held in Israeli occupation prisons, including 160 children and 33 women. Of that number, 820 are administrative detainees, held without charge or trial based on undisclosed "secret information," four of whom are children, and three are women.
All the above being just some examples of the seriousness of the situation facing the people of Palestine, that is confirmed by the the continuing de facto annexation of Palestinian land by accelerated settlement building alongside statements of Israel’s continuing intention to proceed with annexation, show it is clearer than ever that the Israeli State is intent on eliminating any prospects of Palestinian self-determination.
These are threatening, uncertain times for Palestinians living in Gaza, the West Bank, and East Jerusalem. No Palestinian is untouched as we see the intensification of settler colonialism and occupation.More soldiers, more checkpoints, more harassment and more settler attacks.
There is no room for normalcy.The Palestinian Rights can no longer be "exceptions to the rule" of International law. As their advocates, our steadfastness is critical.
It is a testament of hope and perseverance that today the recognition of Israel as an apartheid state and the demand for it to be held accountable for this crime against humanity is becoming mainstream worldwide. Just as in southern Africa, relentless indigenous grassroots struggle and meaningful global solidarity have made this year a remarkable one for the Palestinian anti-apartheid struggle to end Israel’s ongoing Nakba. Beginning with Amnesty International’s milestone report on Israel’s apartheid, in high level UN meetings several states have acknowledged and condemned Israel’s apartheid regime and, in some cases, called for international pressure to end it.
Although the circumstances of Palestinians have changed over the years,
their core demands for liberation and return – and the need for
resistance and solidarity to achieve this – have not.The tenacity of
Palestinians in struggling for their most basic of rights, and the
continued solidarity of people across the world in response, offer a ray
of hope that neither alarming rightward drift of Israeli politics nor
the bleak geopolitical landscape can diminish. The ongoing challenge for
Palestinians, and those engaged in their struggle, this 29 November, is
to translate this sentiment of hope into tangible structures capable of
moving towards a different political reality.
Today and everyday lets re-affirm our solidarity with all Palestinians in
historic Palestine and their right
to self-determination' with Palestinian political prisoners (women, men
& children) in Apartheid Israel's jails, and with the millions of
refugees struggling to make their legally guaranteed right of Return a
reality.
A struggle that should concern people with humanitarian values everywhere. We can amplify the Palestinian people’s call for freedom, justice, equality, security and dignity and the right of return,by supporting “effective measures” including sanctions, as called for by Palestinian civil society, against actions by the Israeli state that are illegal according to international law. This must include action to ensure that Israel stops the building of settlements, reverses any annexation, ends the occupation of the West Bank, ceases the blockade of Gaza, brings down the Wall and respects the right of refugees to return to their homes under international law.
The UK government must take action too by banning trade with illegal Israeli
settlements and implementing sanctions, including a two-way arms
embargo, until Israel complies with international law. Public bodies
also need to take action to ensure that they are not investing funds or
procuring contracts with companies complicit in Israel’s human rights
abuses.
In drawing attention to the struggle of the Palestinian people we cannot
but remember the firm stand that the United Nations took against racism,
against the evil of Apartheid and supported the liberation struggle of
the people of South Africa.
At the time his people were liberated, the celebrated leader of the
liberation struggle for South Africa Nelson Mandela made a profound
statement, which resonates around the world to this day.
He said: “For many years the United Nations stood firm against racism.
Because of that a worldwide consensus was built against this unfair
system. We know too well that our freedom is incomplete without the
freedom of the Palestinians.”
Today on International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People wherever you are in the world you can activate your solidarity by joining and sharing existing campaigns that can put an end to Israel;s impunity. Apartheid is still a crime against humanity. From the rivers to the sea, Free Palestine!
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