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By Mustafa
Barghouti
Friday, June 8,
2007
RAMALLAH, West
Bank:
As we enter the
41st year of Israel's military occupation, one of the more
sinister policies inflicted upon us is what Israel calls
"targeted killings."
Israel applies no
death penalty, except against Palestinians living under
Israeli military government in the West Bank and Gaza Strip.
There, suspected
opponents of Israel's occupation are routinely executed
without charge, judge or jury. Innocents who happen to be in
the vicinity of Israel's "target" just as often suffer
summary execution.
In April,
17-year-old Bushra Breghish was pacing her bedroom, studying
for an exam. An Israeli sniper, from a squad dispatched to
arrest her brother, shot her through the forehead, killing
her instantly. All she held in her hands was a book.
Last week in
Ramallah's central square, in broad daylight, Israeli
undercover forces shot a fleeing 22-year-old, Omar Abu
Daher, in the leg. After he fell, and was entirely
vulnerable to arrest, an Israeli assassin shot him in the
back of the head from close range, then kicked his body,
apparently to confirm the kill.
The deaths of
these young Palestinians are not rare, nor were they
unintentional. They were the victims of an openly
acknowledged policy.
For decades,
Israel murdered Palestinian leaders abroad, following the
macabre calculations of its political scientists and
intelligence experts that even a small number of
assassinations could retard, if not foil, our national
movement.
Israel claimed to
target those guilty of committing or planning acts of
violence. In reality, Palestinian political leaders, poets,
journalists and other professionals and artists were also
killed.
Israel began
"targeted killings" in the Gaza Strip in the 1970s, and
expanded this practice during the first Palestinian
intifada, which occurred from 1987-1993.
Palestinian
youths faced Israeli tanks with little more than slogans and
stones. Israel condemned their "targets" based on mere
suspicion. They have since signed the death warrants of
hundreds more, including bystanders like young Bushra
studying for final exams.
Since September
2000, more than 400 Palestinians have been murdered in
extrajudicial executions. Nearly half were innocent
bystanders and at least 44 were children. These
extrajudicial executions are war crimes.
The Palestinian
unity government has offered to end all forms of violence,
provided Israel reciprocates and ends its violence against
Palestinians in both the West Bank and Gaza Strip.
Our own security
forces are challenged, and we face acute internal political
differences. But we are committed to halting all attacks -
including by Qassam rockets - as long as Israel respects its
obligations under international law and stops murdering
Palestinians.
We have no hope
of succeeding in this goal if Israel will not meet us half
way. Palestinians would rightly reject a government that
protected Israeli lives while failing to protect
Palestinians, who have been slaughtered at 30 times the rate
of Israelis over the last 17 months.
Israel has
responded with escalating attacks against Gaza and
extrajudicial killings in the West Bank. Is its political
objective something other than peace? Israel's
assassinations over the past seven years have repeatedly
shattered unilateral truces by Palestinians and scuttled any
prospect of negotiations.
Why has Israel
consistently re-kindled violence? Is it possible that our
willingness to negotiate our differences is more dangerous
than any military threat our beleaguered population could
ever muster against the sixth most powerful military in the
world?
Could it be that
Israel seeks to finish the systematic dispossession of
Palestinians begun in 1948, when 750,000 Palestinians were
driven or fled in fear from their homes and homeland? Does
goading Palestinians into violence permit Israel to dodge
peace negotiations, and provide it cover to continue its
confiscation of Palestinian land and construction of Jewish
settlements in the lands it seized in 1967?
After all,
"security" was the initial justification for Israel's
settlements, and "military necessity" was the pretext for
the seizures of our lands.
"Security"
rationalizes the segregated road system Israel has
constructed in the West Bank, whisking Jewish Israeli
settlers wherever they wish to go, while Palestinians
negotiate a decrepit one.
"Security" is
allegedly served by the 500-plus Israeli roadblocks and
checkpoints that dot our territory, restricting travel and
smothering our economy, and by the "separation fence" that
Israel has built, penning our communities into small
Bantustans that function like open-air prisons.
"Security" is why
Israel says it will never give up the Jordan Valley, nearly
30 percent of the West Bank.
In fact, security
for both Israelis and Palestinians is mutually
interdependent, not mutually exclusive. Israel cannot have
security while denying it to Palestinians. When Israel is
willing to renounce violence, it will discover how ready we
have been as a partner for peace.
Dr. Mustafa
Barghouti is Minister of Information
for the Palestinian Authority. He is also the founder of
medical organizations which provide health services to more
than 1.5 million Palestinians each year.
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