An Urgent Call for Transparency and Participation
Palestinian Grassroots Anti-apartheid Wall Campaign, , Sep  7, 2011
 At not more than 15 days from the UN General  Assembly session on Palestine, during which the Palestinian official  leadership will present an initiative on the Palestinian state to the  world community, many pros and cons are being hotly debated. Yet, even  without entering these debates, one of the most serious concerns is the  fundamentally flawed process underlying the UN bid. It appears to be a  distressing dejá-vu of past mistakes.
At two weeks from the crucial date of September 21 still no one knows  what the text and details of the proposed initiative at the UN are. As  many Palestinian organizations, intellectuals, and activists have  stated, we will not and cannot support an initiative, the content of  which we do not know. The core of the issue is the fact that our  leadership has moved this initiative forward without any open discussion  about it and now wants the Palestinian people to blindly support it.  This is indicative of a much deeper problem within the Palestinian body  politic and begs an urgent call for transparency, accountability, and  popular participation.
Palestinians all remember the moment in 1993 when the Palestinian  leadership took everyone by surprise presenting them with the fully  negotiated Oslo Accords. After decades of struggle, sacrifice, and  suffering of a people in its entirety there was trust in the leadership.  We believed them when they assured us that the Oslo Accords were a step  towards the attainment of our rights. Nobody was really informed about  the Paris Accords, the economic agreement that completed the Oslo  Accords and further strangled Palestinian life.
In the following twenty years, the same people that negotiated Oslo  continued negotiations in secretive meetings and without any publicly  and collectively agreed upon terms of reference. As the Palestine Papers  published by al-Jazeera ultimately revealed, the many rumours told  about those endless negotiations behind closed doors were real: far too  many times our negotiators have negotiated about our rights themselves  rather than for ways to attain them.
Today, the “peace process” and the associated negotiations are almost  unanimously considered a failure, an instrument at the hands of Israel  to continue the colonization of our land, the theft of our resources,  and the displacement of our people. On top of it, the Oslo process was a  circus mirror depicting occupation and apartheid as peace and  understanding. However, the same people responsible for the two decades  of failed “peace” process ask us now once again to trust another  initiative, the risks and content of which is still kept away from the  public.
It almost seems as if the Palestinian official leadership does not want  to acknowledge the massive gap that separates it from the people; as if  it wanted us to forget that the elections for the PNA and Palestinian  Legislative Council did not provide accountability and legitimacy  because of Western interference, that the structures of the PLO have  been lingering in neglect since the early nineties, and that their  representativity has been eroded. All the while, the Palestinian leftist  parties are seemingly caught in the same position of indecision as in  1993, unable to propose an alternative or even to offer a significant  intervention on this issue. Thankfully, Palestinian society as such has  learned two lessons from the past two decades: first, where the destiny  of an entire people is concerned, the people must have their word and  second, don’t believe in processes without aims and deadlines.
Unsurprisingly, one of the founding demands of the Palestinian youth  movement that has emerged in the wake of the Arab Spring is the call for  immediate and direct elections to the PLO National Council to allow  peoples' participation in the political processes. Yet another  generation of Palestinians is growing to pick up the struggle from where  we brought it to and to join the popular resistance. However, once  again the Palestinian leadership expresses the same attitude of  arrogance in front of its people. The PNA instead of supporting its  people in the struggle continuously seeks to limit and control popular  mobilization in the areas under its administrative control.  Confrontations with the occupation are curtailed in an attempt to  transform popular resistance into a manifestation of support for this or  that initiative. As a result, true popular resistance today is only  growing in areas C, where the PNA does not exercise any police presence.
While there is certainly a wide consensus within the Palestinian people  that a shift in strategy away from negotiations is overdue, there is as  well an urgent need to collectively, democratically, and openly discuss  where to go next. Rethinking and re-strategizing of the Palestinian  struggle is indeed necessary and cannot be left in the hands of a few.  The Palestinian leadership must not lose the notion of service to its  people and expect instead that the people serve the leadership.
The proposed move at the UN might potentially – depending on the still  opaque content of the proposal – be a monumental shift away from the  national liberation struggle towards a dispute between a factual and a  virtual state, a move that could jeopardise venues for claims regarding  Palestinian refugee rights and change structures of official  representation. Others argue that instead the UN initiative does not  touch on any of these issues and would only bring Palestinians more  opportunities to hold Israel accountable in international forums. This  begs the question why the PLO has so far not used the instruments  already at hand. Why in seven years has there never been any attempt at  activating the decision on the legal consequences of the Wall issued by  the International Court of Justice on July 9, 2004? Does the PLO  actively support Turkey in its intention to bring the siege on Gaza  before the same international court? Why is the Goldstone report not  used to hold Israel accountable for its war crimes?
In conclusion, the current UN initiative marks the peak of a crisis  within the political structures of representation and urgently requires  short term and long term responses. In the short term, we need immediate  clarity on the exact content of the UN initiative and an open and  inclusive forum of discussion where popular and expert concerns are  taken seriously and integrated into the proposal; a forum that includes  Palestinians and their political and social expressions from all over  our homeland and from the diaspora. In the mid and long term, direct  elections for the National Council of the PLO and a general reversal of  the current attitude of our leadership towards greater respect, trust,  and support for the struggle of the people are essential. Only in this  way can we build new processes that make possible a true consensus on a  post-Oslo Palestinian national strategy.
If in the coming two weeks our leadership shows readiness for a truly  transparent, accountable, and participatory process then not only will  the UN initiative profit from it, but this approach could open the way  to a restructuring of the Palestinian body politic, close the gap  between the leadership and the people, and lay the basis for an  effective rethinking of the Palestinian national strategy.
Until then: we will not buy anything within a closed bag.        
  
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