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Shattering Democracy: Sharon's Plan for Palestine
by Remi Kanazi
Israeli Prime Minister, Ariel Sharon, showed his true colors last week
as his normative praise of "democratic values" subsided. "I announced as
clearly as I could that we formally oppose Hamas participation in the
election as long as it is not disarmed and has not cancelled the Hamas
charter, which is a horrible document," Sharon stated on Wednesday. On
Saturday, he went further in an interview with reporters in New York,
rejecting calls for democratic elections in the Occupied Territories,
"We will make every effort not to help [the Palestinians]. I don't think
they can have elections without our help."
Hamas plans to engage in the Palestinian political process, as it has in
previous municipal elections, so why hinder the charged peace process
after the successful "disengagement" of Gaza? Sharon realizes that Hamas
is gaining momentum in the Occupied Territories and understands how much
political power it can attain through sweeping parliamentary elections,
which will likely occur in January if Israel doesn't interfere. Keeping
a balance of power between the Palestinian Authority and Hamas
effectively destabilizes a unified Palestinian voice and further
advantages a politically savvy Israel. Israel supported Hamas in the
1980's as a counterweight to the Palestinian Liberation Organization
(PLO)--the de facto representative of the Palestinian people--because the
PLO was gaining political ground on the international front.
Sharon is trying to politically delegitimize Hamas by keeping it out of
the elections, while demonizing Abu Mazen for not cracking down on
"terror" and using the excuse of having "no partner for peace" as a ploy
to further expand settlements, the Apartheid Wall, and to impose greater
restrictions on Palestinian life in the West Bank and East Jerusalem.
Just this week as half the world was sleeping and the other half was
still dazed by the effects of Hurricane Katrina, Sharon stated on
Israeli radio, referencing the controversial Maale Adumim settlement,
"They [Maale Adumim and East Jerusalem] will be connected, and I don't
think that this will become a problem."
The militaristic mind of Ariel Sharon cannot forget the irony and
hypocrisy in demanding Hamas to disarm. The three major Jewish
militant--many claim, terrorist--groups, the Haganagh, Irgun, and Lehi,
were not disarmed before the creation of Israel. On the contrary, they
went on the offensive under the instruction of Haganagh leader David Ben
Gurion on March 10, 1948 when the groups implemented Plan Dalet (Plan
D). The effects of Plan D led to the dispossession of hundreds of
thousands of indigenous Palestinians and the massacre of nearly 120
Palestinians at Deir Yassin. There was no attempt by these Jewish groups
to put their faith in the political process and live with the indigenous
population in peace; rather they coveted the land on which the
Palestinians lived, and sought to expel them to create a Jewish
homeland. Hamas is doing something the founders of Israel never thought
to do: assimilate into the political process in the land on which they
live, and substantiate their voice by positive means. If the founders of
Israel and people like Ariel Sharon had done this, armed groups such as
Hamas wouldn't be fighting against the injustices that have plagued
Palestinian society for the last 58 years.
--Remi Kanazi, www.PoeticInjustice.net
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