Times of Malta

The Nakba did not start or end in 1948

- DANIA HADDAD and YANA MINTOFF Yana Mintoff and Dania Haddad are political activists for justice, equality and peace. ĠUSTIZZJAG­HALLPALEST­INA@GMAIL.COM

Adate forever inked in the Palestinia­n memory for generation­s. Palestinia­ns refer to it as ‘Al Nakba’, which literally translates as ‘The catastroph­e’. It refers to the mass exodus of at least 750,000 Palestinia­ns from Palestine. Though most believe this event began in 1948, in fact, Al Nakba began decades earlier.

In November 1947, the United Nations decided to partition British-mandated Palestine into two states – one Arab and one Jewish. The UN designated Jewish State still contained a substantia­l minority of Palestinia­ns despite increased immigratio­n from Europe to Palestine under British rule.

In a premeditat­ed military campaign, the Zionist militia killed thousands of Palestinia­ns, destroyed hundreds of villages, forcibly expelled hundreds of thousands of Palestinia­ns and captured 78 per cent of Palestine. The remaining 22 per cent was divided into what are now called the occupied West Bank and the besieged Gaza Strip.

In 1949, following the expulsion of Palestinia­ns, the UN founded the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) with the aim of relieving destitute Palestinia­n refugees. Today, there are at least 5.8 million registered Palestinia­n refugees living in dozens of camps in the occupied West Bank, the Gaza Strip, Jordan, Syria and Lebanon.

Thus, 70 per cent of Gaza residents are originally refugees living in large refugee camps after being expelled from their homeland in 1948. Some people who lived through 1948 Nakba are reliving it again amid the Gaza war that broke out in October 2023 following Hamas’s unpreceden­ted attacks on Israeli settlement­s.

The images of distressed Palestinia­n families in Gaza living in makeshift tents, walking miles to flee the bombing while carrying bundles of their belongings, mirror the long-standing images imprinted in Palestinia­n heritage of ‘Nakba, diaspora, refugee camps, displaceme­nt’.

Palestinia­ns in Gaza are enduring worse than the worst event in their recent history, displaced from one place to another under heavy bombardmen­t with nowhere to go to, trapped inside a small area with a dire lack of food and water, the collapse of the healthcare system and repeated electricit­y and communicat­ions blackouts.

The targeting of UN staff and UN facilities and heavy shelling and closure of borders makes it impossible for the UNRWA and other organisati­ons to carry out their relief work and support duties of Palestinia­ns in Gaza.

The recent Israeli right-wing plan to forcibly relocate Gaza residents into a large refugee camp in the Sinai Desert was not accepted by Egypt. Neither has an alternativ­e proposal to divide the residents of Gaza between neighbouri­ng countries (Jordan, Iraq, Yemen, Turkey) been agreed to.

Neverthele­ss, fears persist that mandatory displaceme­nt will be extended to Palestinia­ns residing in the West Bank and East Jerusalem, forcing them to leave for neighbouri­ng countries – further worsening the refugee crisis and abrogating all efforts towards a two-state solution.

The recognitio­n of a Palestinia­n State in the UN General Assembly, along with a permanent ceasefire in Gaza and the release of all hostages from both

sides, are all crucial steps to resolving the ongoing conflict, cycle of violence and humanitari­an crisis in Gaza.

Supporting the peace talks and halting the war would also reduce the high tensions in the region following the Iran-Israel clashes. Thus, the path adopted by EU countries – including Malta, Ireland, Spain and Slovenia – to recognise the State of Palestine on May 21 is an important step in the direction of peace.

Malta has been playing a vital diplomatic role in promoting equality and peace by supporting the Palestinia­n cause and advocating in the UN General Assembly and the European Council for the recognitio­n of a Palestinia­n State.

The clear stance Malta recently took at the UNGA 10th Emergency Special Session, voting in favour of the resolution upgrading the rights of the Permanent Observer Mission of the State of Palestine, highlights Malta’s commitment to the establishm­ent of a viable State of Palestine, with Israelis and Palestinia­ns living side by side in peace and security.

However, the desire for peace warrants more effective work. To stop war in the region and to promote a permanent ceasefire, tangible measures must be implemente­d to promote freedom, justice and equality for the Palestinia­n people.

The disproport­ionate invasion of Gaza, the carpet bombing and deliberate starvation, the mass graves, the arming and increasing of illegal Israeli settlement­s in the West Bank and detaining thousands of Palestinia­ns as hostages without trials in inhumane conditions are clear examples of violations of human rights.

Over the past three months following the ICJ ruling, Israel has not abided by internatio­nal humanitari­an law and has continued to commit genocide against the Palestinia­n people in the Gaza Strip. Just recently, on May 10, South Africa submitted an urgent request for additional provisiona­l measures in this regard.

In order to apply necessary pressure on Israel to cease its assault on Rafah – the last ‘safe zone’ for Palestinia­ns in Gaza and home to 1.1 million children – we call for an EU suspension of military aid to Israel.

Illegalisi­ng the sale of lethal weapons to Israel is in line with the latest US decision to block a shipment of bombs and weapons to Israel.

Suspending relations, trade and investment with Israeli entities complicit in Israeli occupation­s of Palestinia­n territorie­s is in compliance with UN resolution 242, which states that the withdrawal of the Israeli military occupation of Palestinia­n territorie­s is a preconditi­on to the establishm­ent of an independen­t Palestinia­n State.

Honouring UN resolution 194, which refers to the right of return for Palestinia­n refugees to their homeland, is also a key to moderating the current apartheid discrimina­tory system, while promoting the peaceful coexistenc­e between Palestinia­ns and Israelis.

70% of Gaza residents live in refugee camps after being expelled from their homeland in 1948*

 ?? PHOTO: CHRIS SANT FOURNIER ?? A pro-Palestinia­n rally held in Sliema last Wednesday.
PHOTO: CHRIS SANT FOURNIER A pro-Palestinia­n rally held in Sliema last Wednesday.

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