06 February 2011By Mazin Qumsiyeh
At bottom is a press release about recent rallies
throughout Palestine in solidarity with the Egyptian
and Tunisian Popular Uprisings and call for action
February 11.
I blog regularly about what is happening here
especially what is not seen in mainstream media. I
want to take this message to expose some things I have
alluded to only marginally before and then issue a
call to Palestinains (including the "Palestinian
authority" or PA). First a description of what
happened that prompts this emotional email.
No one expected what happened in Egypt, Tunisia,
Yemen, and Jordan. Demonstrations last week in support
of the Egyptian people were suppressed by the Hamas-ruled
authority in Gaza and by the Fatah-ruled authority in
the West Bank (both in violation of the Palestinian
laws that guarantee freedom of assembly and
expression). Thursday, plain-cloth security personnel
disrupted a peaceful gathering in Ramallah, arrested
participants and took their video footage.
Despite illegal orders from the PA, Friday's
demonstrations in Bil'in, Wad Rahhal, and elsewhere
emphasized Egyptian-Palestinian unity in the face of
oppression, and Saturday demos were held in Gaza,
Jerusalem, Beit Ommar, Ramallah, and Bethlehem. Over
1000 people gathered in Ramallah. Dozens of
plain-cloth PA personnel tried to disrupt the
demonstration and arrested people. Here are video
clips
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1HTEmUCti-U
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2OkZGTli3F8
Some individuals in Ramallah were harassed even before
the demonstration (thinking that if you scare those
you think are leaders, you can end the events).
Similar attempts were made in Bethlehem. I and at
least four other activists in Bethlehem received word
from relatives, friends, and even directly from
security agents saying "watch out". I recorded details
on all of these things for potential future legal
action. At the actual event in the Manger Square (50
participants), plain-cloth security agents tried many
tactics to discredit, disrupt, and intimidate. Some of
them represented themselves as demonstrators and
others just blatantly tried to interrupt speeches. One
person by the name of "Saddam" (who refused to give me
his last name) tried to disrupt every speaker. When
Yosef Sharqawi decided to speak, Saddam made a point
of appearing to whisper something in his ear and then
said Yousef used to work for the PA. Everyone already
knew this but, while I disagree with Yousef on some
political issues, he is entitled to speak his opinion.
This reminded everyone of Israeli intelligence
officers who use first names of activists in
demonstrations and wink at them to tell everyone: hey
he is with us, don't trust him. In another occasion he
and another person stated loudly that those who are
demonstrating "should ask to be paid like some others
are paid at the demonstration"! The PA agencies do
know very well that none of the key organizers is paid
by anyone and many actually spend from their own
pockets. Later, the uniformed police prevented us from
marching. Video of all of this is at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CNOEG5KnCb0
so you be the judge of what transpired.
Now I want to take a few lines to fellow Palestinians:
I just finished a book that chronicles 130 years of
inspiring acts of resistance, self-sacrifice and
decency. But yes, it also chronicles stories of
weakness, spineless, and even collaborative episodes
in our history.
>From this I learned that this period is most like
1928. After the end of the 1921 uprising, a class of
Palestinian elites rose, some of them co-opted from
the resistance movement. With political leadership
from prominent families, they were empowered under
British occupation but with "autonomy" and even their
own police forces. Their demands in 1928 were no
longer the end of British occupation or rescinding the
Balfour Declaration, but focused on more 'moderate'
requests, including changing British rules to employ
Palestinians and objections to the British granting
concessions to Zionist companies. The British, these
Palestinian officials, and most of the Palestinian
public thought things could not change.
Who remembers the names of those who tried to work
with Britain of the 1920s day. Many of them were
abandoned by their benefactors. Their descendants are
individuals who shy away from any mention of their
grandparents or what they did. But who among us have
not heard of Musa Kadhem Al-Husseini, the dean of
resistance in the 1920s who , at age 83 was beaten on
27 October 1933. We do not know if the policeman that
beat him was British or Arab working for the British.
Musa died shortly after likely due to complications of
the injuries on an old man. He was one of tens of
thousands of martyrs for the Palestinian struggle for
freedom. His detractors and those who tried to stab
him in the back died in shame and are long forgotten.
I urge you, no matter what your political affiliation,
to think of what kind of memory you will leave for
your children and grandchildren?
But most important: do not underestimate the people.
During the years of betrayal 1922-1928, who would have
predicted the uprising of 1929 (or for that matter
1936)? Who would have predicted in 1986 the intifada
of October 1987? Who three weeks ago would have
predicted the events in Egypt? I beg you to take these
lessons of history. Please listen to the people and
not through paid uneducated individuals that you send
to spy on your own people.
The Palestinian people demand an investigation and
punishment of those responsible:
- for use of "intelligence" agents to intimidate
activists and their families (mine included) to impose
their dubious agendas of silencing all opposition -
for use of plain-cloth security agents to disrupt
peaceful gatherings (as happened today in Ramallah and
Bethlehem)
- for use of heavily clad security forces to prevent
peaceful demonstrators from marching to places where
Israeli forces are illegally stationed on our land
(e.g. in Bethlehem during the assaults on Gaza)
- for all other instances where these forces and
officials violated Palestinian laws and violated basic
human rights.
-for cases of corruption that are well exposed now but
not punished. When officials (supposedly on small
government salaries) build multimillion-dollar villas,
there out to be accountability for the public money.
We implore those elites in power for your own sake and
for the sake of the future of Palestine not to
underestimate your people and instead to listen to
them even when they seem to fear you (for that too can
pass as happened in Egypt). People are saying to the
decent people of Fatah, please take matters into your
own hands by going back to your roots as a people
liberation movement and not an "authority" over a
bantustan. They are saying to the decent people in
other (mostly left) factions: please break your
silence and take matters into your own hands to
applying the Cairo agreements on reviving the PLO.
They are saying to Hamas and Fatah to get out of the
Oslo trap (being an "authority" without authority
under occupation). They also say to all of us that
Palestine will be free and that it will always be
multi-ethnic and multi-religious and it is inevitable
that it will be one country (not bantustans or a state
and two statelets).
The people give us hope. The child today that asked
me if he could carry the Palestinian flag brought
tears of joy to my eyes and this is worth more to me
than all of the political games and attacks we
receive. He knows and many of us know the meaning of
the old proverb in Arabic that "the sun cannot be
covered with a ghorbal (sieve)." Unfortunately,
Israel, the US, and some individuals in the Arab world
(including the PA) are trying to cover-up the sun and
prevent the inevitable.
http://www.anothervoice-palestine.org http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=143731855688303
Press release: Rallies Throughout Occupied Palestine
in Solidarity with Egypt and Tunisia
Ramallah, Feb. 5th, 2011
More than two thousand people rallied today in the
center of Ramallah at Al-Manara square in solidarity
with the popular uprisings in Egypt and Tunisia,
calling for freedom, social justice, democracy and
human rights. Parallel rallies took place in
Bethlehem and Nazareth. Previous rallies have been
held by Palestinian activists in Tel Aviv, Ramallah,
and Gaza.
The demonstrations were called for by independent
youth movements, the Palestinian NGO Network, trade
unions and professional syndicates. Al-Manara Square
overflowed with a diverse crowd of students, workers,
professionals, human rights activists and political
parties' representatives, with a prominent presence of
women. Protesters carried Egyptian, Tunisian, and
Palestinian flags and repeated the Egyptian chants of
"The people want to dismantle the regime" and "Down
with Mubarak." They also demanded an end to the
occupation, internal division, normalization,
oppressive regimes, and to US and Western complicity
in maintaining Israel's colonial system and protecting
despotic Arab regimes.
One of the protesters, Omar Assaf, said that "We, the
Palestinian people, send a message to the Arab world
to stand together for a better life against the
corruption of the authorities... we support the
Egyptian people but the Egyptians must elect their
leaders, Tunisian people must elect their leaders, and
we Palestinian must elect our leaders."
This was Ramallah's fourth and largest rally in
solidarity with the peoples of Egypt and Tunisia. The
previous three, organized by youth groups were
violently suppressed by Palestinian Authority agents,
funded primarily by the US and the EU. The PA also
sent in plain-clothes officers into today's crowd who
chanted pro-Abbas slogans and assaulted several of the
protesters.
The organizers stressed that they will continue
mobilizing events in support of human rights, against
the Israeli occupation and status quo, and in
solidarity with struggles around the world, especially
in Arab countries, for freedom, democracy and social
justice. The next upcoming event is a call by the
Popular Committees in Palestine to demonstrate in
front of Israeli embassies worldwide on Friday,
February 11th, against injustice and dictatorship and
in solidarity with persecuted nations under the slogan
"People can bring change and make the impossible,
possible."
Media inquiries can be directed to: Hanadi Omar, 972
59 543 6027 or Mazin Qumsiyeh, 972 59 893 9532
E-mail hirakalshabab@gmail.com Video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QWUuWB-wOmw
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