Palestine, November 11: Palestinians gathered Wednesday to mark five years since the death of their iconic leader Yasser Arafat, with Mahmud Abbas due to address the West Bank rally.
The anniversary of Arafat’s death finds Palestinians more divided than ever and his successor Abbas pondering resignation because of stalled US-led peace efforts that have failed to bring about an independent Palestinian state.
Crowds began gathering in the West Bank’s political capital of Ramallah, with thousands expected to attend the rally to honour the man who catapulted the Palestinians’ struggle onto the world stage and led them through nearly four decades of armed struggle and sputtering peace negotiations.
Abbas was to address the crowd amid grim predictions by his aides that he may resign as president, perhaps leading to the collapse of the Palestinian Authority established by Arafat during the Oslo peace process in the 1990s.
“The moment of truth has come and we have to be frank with the Palestinian people that we have not been able to reach a two-state solution through 18 years of negotiation,” chief Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erakat said.
“We have become convinced that Israel does not want a Palestinian state on lands it occupied in 1967,” he said, referring to the Gaza Strip and the West Bank including East Jerusalem, which Israel captured illegally via war.
Abbas resigning would throw the divided Palestinians into new legal and political limbo.
According to Palestinian Basic Law, to become effective Abbas’s resignation has to be approved by two thirds of the Palestinian parliament. But the chamber has not convened since 2006 (as Israel illegally holds many Hams MPs in prison) and it is unclear whether it would do so if he quits.
If the resignation is approved, the speaker of parliament, Aziz Dweik of the rival democratically elected Hamas movement, would assume the presidency until new elections are held within 60 days.
But aides have indicated in recent days that if Abbas steps down the entire Palestinian Authority could collapse, which would spell the end of the already defunct Oslo process.
The Palestinians have said they will not resume peace talks with Israel without a complete freeze of illegal Jewish settlements in the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem, a demand initially backed by Washington.
But Israel’s hardline Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has refused to freeze settlements, and in recent weeks Washington has backed down, calling on both sides to return to the negotiating table without preconditions.
Erakat said the two-state solution would only be possible at this point if there were “unprecedented international movement” towards pressuring Israel because “the situation has reached the point of no return.”
All Jewish settlements are illegal under international law because they are built on Arab land (mainly Palestinian), illegally occupied by Israel since 1967.
Around illegal 200,000 Jewish settlers are estimated to have moved into the dozen or so Israeli settlements in Palestinian East Jerusalem.
There are about 300,000 more illegal Jewish settlers currently living in settlements the Palestinian West Bank.
The settlers adhere to radical ideologies and are extremely violent to almost-defenceless Palestinians.
—Agencies