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Interview met Karen AbuZayd

05-02-2010

UNRWA chief: Peace talks must deal with Palestinian refugees

 

By Akiva Eldar

 

Early in the second intifada, Karen Koning AbuZayd, then the newly appointed

deputy commissioner general of UNRWA (United Nations Relief and Works Agency

for Palestine Refugees in the Near East) traveled to Rafah, in Gaza, to

observe firsthand the situation of Palestinian refugees whose houses had

been razed by bulldozers of the Israel Defense Forces. AbuZayd saw an old

woman sifting through the ruins. The woman stretched out a hand to the

visitor so that she would not trip over the pieces of rubble. According to

AbuZayd, who has headed UNRWA since 2005, this was typical Palestinian

behavior: They are incredibly patient, she says and notes, with a sigh, that

she sometimes even became angry with them because they never raise their

voice.

 

Apparently, no one in the world is as knowledgeable about refugees as

AbuZayd, a fair-skinned woman from Chicago who arrived here after having

provided shelter to the refugees of the horrible war in the Balkans. Before

that, she was busy with the refugee camps in Africa. (AbuZayd is the name of

her husband, a Sudanese professor who recently died.) In an interview on the

eve of her departure from her post at UNRWA, she speaks as a major advocate

of the Palestinian refugees and, for the first time in her career at the

United Nations, without diplomatic kid gloves.

 

"From my perspective as the head of the Agency mandated to assist and

protect Palestine refugees," she begins, "it is particularly vexing that the

prevailing approach fails - or refuses - to accord the refugee issue the

attention it deserves. Over 60 years, dispossession has faded from the focus

of peace efforts. The heart of where peace should begin is absent from the

international agenda, pushed aside as one of the 'final status' issues, one

that belongs to a later stage of the negotiation process. As forced

displacements continue across the West Bank, as Palestinians are evicted

from their homes in East Jersualem, I ask a simple question. Is it not time

for those engaged in the peace process to muster the will and the courage to

address the Palestine refugee question?

 

"Make no mistake, not a single conflict of contemporary times has been

resolved, no durable peace achieved unless and until the voices of the

victims of those conflicts were heard, their losses acknowledged and redress

found to injustices they experience. In addition, it has been a truism of

peace making in recent times that all parties to a conflict are given a seat

at the negotiating table. Failing to engage with the refugee issue and

consciously shunting it to one side has served only to disavow the refugees'

significance as a constituency with a prominent stake in delivering and

sustaining peace. This has left many with a dangerous cynicism about the

peace process, thus strengthening the hands of those who argue against peace

itself."

 

What is unique about the plight of the Palestinian refugees?

 

"Palestine refugees are unique in the contemporary refugee experience, as

they have no state to return to, nor are they allowed to return to their

homes. But the Palestinians are also in a unique place for other reasons.

The world community talks about reducing and eliminating poverty, and yet in

Gaza an occupied people is under extreme trade and economic sanction as a

matter of political choice. And in the West Bank the closure regime - part

of the military occupation - is leading to the continuing rise in poverty

rates.

 

"The observance of human rights is seen as a given in all peacemaking

efforts. Yet Palestinians are being deprived of a full spectrum of human

rights - some as a result of deliberate political choice - to an extent

unequaled elsewhere. The occupation, now over 40 years old, becomes more

entrenched with every infringement of human rights and international law in

the occupied Palestinian territory. Political actors hold in their hands the

power to redress the travesties Palestinians endure. Yet, the approach has

been, at best, to equivocate over the minutiae of the occupation - a

checkpoint here, a bag of cement there - or, at worst, to look the other

way, to acquiesce in or even support the measures causing Palestinian

suffering."

 

In light of her years of experience working with refugees, does AbyZayd

believe that there can be a solution to the Palestinian-Israeli dispute

without the implementation of a "right of return" for the Palestinian

refugees?

 

"The right of individuals to return to their country is a fundamental human

right found in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the International

Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, and the International Convention on

the Elimination of all Forms of Racial Discrimination. Resolution 194,

adopted in 1948 by the General Assembly, is understood by many jurists and

by the refugees as affirming the right of the refugees to choose whether to

return to their ancestral homes or receive compensation for lost property.

The claim to a right of return continues to constitute part of the refugees'

identities and aspirations. UNRWA does not have a mandate to search for

durable solutions for the refugees, but I believe that, for a resolution to

be sustainable, it will have to be perceived as fair and just by major

constituencies, including the refugees. This may very well require that the

principle of the right of return be recognized or that other acknowledgments

be made in a peace

agreement, but to know for sure, we must talk with the refugees."

 

AbuZayd is highly critical of both Israel and the international community.

What does she have to say about the extent of the solidarity that Arab

leaders have expressed with their refugee brothers and sisters?

 

"In 2009, Arab countries contributed only 1 percent to our regular budget,

namely the general fund that covers our basic services, primary education

and primary health care, some 70 percent of which is for salaries for our

29,680 staff. This is far short of the 7.8 percent, which is the target set

by the Arab League itself 20 years ago.

 

"But there are some genuine misconceptions in Israel - and elsewhere - about

how generous the Arab states have been, especially as far as our emergency

programs are concerned. Kuwait's $34 million for the Gaza Emergency Response

is one of the largest single donations the Agency has ever received .... The

Saudi Committee for the Support of the Palestinian People has pledged over

$10 million this year for Gaza, more than most governments, Western or Arab

.... The King of Saudi Arabia has pledged $1 billion for the reconstruction

of Gaza, and other Gulf leaders have offered similarly large amounts. Much

of this is for destroyed or damaged buildings. All that is preventing Arab

leaders from being tested on these pledges is the Israeli government's

refusal to allow the entry of construction materials into Gaza. It is worth

mentioning as well the contribution of the host countries - Jordan, Syria

and Lebanon - to infrastructure and services for the refugees."

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Bron: Haaretz