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What Palestinian unity is all about

Jun 10,2014 - Last updated at Jun 10,2014

Palestinians are yet to achieve national unity despite the elation over the national unity government now in operation in Ramallah.

There is a clear in the distinction between a Hamas-Fateh political arrangement necessitated by regional and international circumstances, and Palestinian unity.

What has been agreed upon in the Shati’ refugee camp in April, which lead to the formation of a transitional government in the West Bank in June, has little to do with Palestinian unity. The latter is a much more comprehensive and indispensable notion. Without it, the Palestinians risk losing more than a unified political platform, but their ability to identify with a common set of national aspirations wherever they are in the world.

Thus, a hurried agreement in Gaza that left many points of contention to be discussed and settled by various sub-committees with uncertain chances of success is hardly the prerequisite to true and lasting national unity.

Most media pundits are mixing Palestinian national unity with the “unity” government of 14 ministers that were sworn in, in Ramallah.

Most of the supposed technocrats are recognised for their overt or subtle loyalty to Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas. The transitional government is tasked with administering areas in the Israeli-occupied West Bank and Gaza.

The PA is allowed to operate in the West Bank under the watchful eye of the Israeli army. In return for allowing the PA a space of operation, PA forces are involved in “security coordination” aimed at securing illegal Jewish settlements, reining in Palestinian resistance and offering a line of defence for the Israeli army, which in reality is the one and only ruler of the West Bank and East Jerusalem.

It is still unclear how the security coordination will affect the way Israel controls Gaza, which thus far has been secured through a hermetic siege intensified since the Hamas election victory in 2006 and the brief Hamas-Fateh civil war in 2007.

Hamas is unlikely to allow a security coordination arrangement similar to the one in the West Bank, or through which Gaza itself was controlled — by 10 separate PA security branches — before 2006.

In fact, Gazans grew resentful of Fateh — then under the control of Mohammad Dahlan and a few notorious Fateh officials — exactly because of such practices. Despite the unity agreement, Abbas still sees collaboration with the Israeli army as sacred.

But even if some alternative arrangement is found to prevent another split until the next elections, which are scheduled for early next year, what took place hardly qualifies as “unity”.

In recent weeks, the word unity has been used in many ways, some erroneous and others quite disingenuous.

Hamas and Fateh Party officials — all operating with expired mandates — have repeatedly infused a more sentimental meaning to “unity”, with few exceptions including that of Hamas leader Khaled Mishaal who, although optimistic about the potential of the agreement, understands that the transitional government is merely a first step in a long programme aimed at the unification of the Palestinian body politic.

Even The New York Times, known for its resolute support for successive Israeli governments, is also urging unity.

“If there is ever to be an Israeli-Palestinian peace agreement… the Palestinians must be united,” read its editorial of June 6.

If one evaluates the Times’ vision for Palestinian unity based on its editorial, one is to discover that such “unity” mainly aims at serving the interests of Israel and the United States.

“The United States has to be careful to somehow distinguish between its support for the new government and an endorsement of Hamas and its violent, hateful behaviour. To have some hope of doing that, the United States and Europe must continue to insist that Mr Abbas stick to his promises and not allow Hamas to get the upper hand,” said the Times, insisting that Hamas cannot play “a more pronounced role” in the future.

Unity tailored to serve Israeli interests and American funds is hardly what millions of Palestinians have been waiting for in the last seven years, not to mention the fact that ensuring that one party dominates another is not a democratic undertaking.

But Hamas and Fateh are also at fault. Their absurd infighting and allowing themselves to serve other parties’ agendas is both inexcusable and unforgivable.

To think that these two parties will continue to dominate the Palestinian leadership landscape for the coming years is not encouraging.

Palestine is not Hamas and Fateh, and Palestinian disunity did not start with these parties, but has been an integral part of the Palestinian national struggle.

The fragmentation of the Palestinian political identity is decades old. It was perhaps the departure of the Palestine Liberation Organisation from Lebanon, in 1982, that accentuated the split between the Palestinian people struggling for freedom and their leadership. It was then that Palestinian elitism truly rose to prominence.

Palestine then was reduced to factions, each with its own symbols, mantras, slogans, agendas and funders. The PLO served as a political platform whose sole purpose, at times, seemed to validate the ruling Fateh Party, and a particular Tunisia-based branch of that party.

The Palestinian parliament in exile — the Palestinian National Council — was later delegated to rubber stamp the political initiatives of Yasser Arafat, Mahmoud Abbas, Ahmed Qureia and a few others.

The age of Palestinian democracy was mostly over, and became confined to elections held by Palestinian political prisoners in Israeli jails and local student union elections in the occupied territories.

With a self-imposed mandate unchallenged by any democratic platform and validated by the Israeli occupation, the PA ruled the occupied territories as it pleased.

The rich became richer and the poor lined up in front of ATM machines at the end of every month, praying that their salaries made it to their bank accounts on time. On many occasions, that was not the case.

On June 5, Hamas and Fateh government employees scuffled with each other and at times with the police because Hamas workers did not get paid, while the Fateh counterparts did.

This is hardly the kind of scene that would accompany a state of national unity.

For true unity to take place, it has to be shaped entirely by Palestinian national priorities. It cannot be linked to aid and tribal political allegiances.

It should not be aimed to please the US and the EU, or to accommodate Israeli security.

True unity would have to go back to the original questions that split Palestinian communities in Palestine and around the world in the first place. It has to contend with important questions concerning Palestinian identity, national aspirations, resistance and the outlook of an entire generation that was born after the signing of the Oslo accords in 1993.

Palestinian unity is not a logistical question, but a major undertaking that requires new faces, new names, new thinking and, dare one says, a new leadership.

The writer, managing editor of Middle East Eye, is an internationally syndicated columnist, a media consultant, an author and the founder of PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is “My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza’s Untold Story” (Pluto Press, London). He contributed this article to The Jordan Times.

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