Khaled Abu
Toameh March 9, 2015
The
latest PLO and Fatah campaign is not directed only against settlement products. Rather, it is targeting anything made in Israel, as a part of an
"anti-normalization" movement, whose goal is to thwart any encounters
between Israelis and Palestinians, including peace conferences.
While
some Israelis, Americans and Europeans are talking about the need to revive the
peace process after the March 17 elections in Israel, the Palestinians are
clearly moving in a different direction.
"We
are headed for confrontation with Israel." — Mahmoud Aloul, senior Fatah
official.
The
Palestinian Authority's strategy now is to intensify its campaign to isolate
and delegitimize Israel in the international community, and promote all forms
of boycotts of Israelis and Israeli goods; to force Israel to make concessions
through international pressure and through campaigns of boycott and divestment.
These
campaigns are further radicalizing Palestinians, driving many of them into the
open arms of radical groups such as Hamas and Islamic Jihad.
If Abbas
is interested in returning to the negotiating table (as he sometimes declares
he is), then he needs to prepare his people for that and not incite them even
more against Israel.
Those
who are opposed to the presence of Israeli products in their villages and
cities will be the first to oppose the resumption of peace talks between
Palestinians and Israelis.
One
of the reasons why it would be very difficult for the Palestinian Authority
(PA) to return to the negotiating table with Israel is the massive campaign the
Palestinians have launched to promote boycotts of Israel.
This
campaign is being waged by PA President Abbas's loyalists in Fatah and the PLO.
Those
who are today calling for a boycott of Israeli products, such as milk and dairy
products, will be the first to stand against any attempt to resume the peace
talks between the Palestinians and Israel in the future.
Although
Abbas himself has publicly spoken against the international movement for
boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS) of Israel, now he seems to have given
his tacit support for the current campaign in the West Bank.
During
a visit to South Africa in late 2013, Abbas told reporters, "No,
we don't support the boycott of Israel. But we ask everyone to boycott the
products of the settlements."
But
the latest PLO and Fatah campaign is not directed only against settlement
products. Rather, it is targeting anything that is made in Israel, including
milk, biscuits and chocolate.
The
campaign against Israeli products is the latest in a series of anti-Israel and
anti-peace measures that PLO and Fatah activists have taken in recent years.
These measures include the establishment of an "anti-normalization"
movement whose goal is to thwart any encounters between Israelis and
Palestinians, including sports matches and peace conferences.
In
January last year, scores of Palestinians
attacked a hotel in Ramallah where Israelis and Palestinians
were holding a meeting to talk peace. The Israelis were evacuated under
Palestinian police protection and handed over to Israeli authorities.
It
is worth noting that Abbas and the Palestinian Authority leadership never denounced
the attack on the peace gathering, which occurred less than three miles away
from the PA president's office and private residence.
Because
of the "anti-normalization" campaign, it has become impossible and
even unsafe to organize any public meeting between Israelis and Palestinians,
not only in the West Bank, but also in other parts of the world.
A
number of Palestinian journalists who participated in a conference attended by
Israeli colleagues in a European capital were punished by being expelled from
the Palestinian Journalists Syndicate. Palestinian children who participated in
a soccer match with Israelis reported that they had received threats from
"anti-normalization" activists in the West Bank. A more recent
attempt to organize a meeting between Israeli and Palestinian peace activists
in Bethlehem was called off after organizers said they received death threats
from Palestinians.
Now
that the "anti-normalization" movement has succeeded in putting an
end to public meetings between Israelis and Palestinians, the PLO and Fatah are
moving on to the next stage, namely promoting boycotts of Israeli products.
After preventing Israelis from entering Palestinian communities, now they are
working toward blocking the entry of any goods made in Israel.
Mahmoud
Aloul, a senior Fatah official who is closely associated with Abbas, defended
the destruction of the dairy products and called for stepping up boycott
campaigns against Israel.
"Fatah
is working toward consolidating the culture of boycotting Israeli products in
Palestinian society by all means so that it would become an essential part of
the upbringing and education of Palestinian generations," Aloul explained. "We are
headed toward confrontation with Israel."
Following
the confiscation of the truck in Ramallah, Palestinian merchants in another
West Bank city, Jenin, complained that
Fatah activists have demanded they stop selling Israeli products, accompanied
by threats. The merchants were told that they had one week to get rid of eight
Israeli products or else they would face punishment.
When
Aloul and other Palestinian officials talk about preparations for another
"confrontation" with Israel, they are referring to the Palestinian
Authority's efforts to promote boycotts of Israel in the local and
international arenas, as well as filing "war crimes" charges against
Israelis at the International Criminal Court.
So
while some Israelis, Americans and Europeans are talking about the need to
revive the peace process after the March 17 elections in Israel, the
Palestinians are clearly moving in a different direction.
The
PA's strategy now is to intensify its campaign to isolate and delegitimize Israel
in the international community and promote all forms of boycotts of Israelis
and Israeli goods. The PA is now convinced that the only way to force Israel to
make concessions is through international pressure and the promotion of
campaigns of boycott and divestment.
This
strategy was reflected in this week's resolution by the PLO Central Council in
Ramallah. After a two-day meeting, the Council decided to suspend all forms of
security coordination with Israel and called for boycotting Israeli goods.
"The
PLO's Central Council reaffirms the continuation of boycotting Israeli goods as
a form of popular resistance," the Council said.
"It calls on the free people of the world and the committees of solidarity
with the Palestinian people to boycott Israeli goods and withdraw
investments."
Campaigns
calling for the boycott of Israelis and Israeli products are further
radicalizing Palestinians, driving many of them into the open arms of radical
groups such as Hamas and Islamic Jihad. If Abbas is interested in returning to
the negotiating table with Israel (as he sometimes declares he is), then he
needs to prepare his people for that and not incite them even more against
Israel.
Those
who destroy milk and dairy products in the center of Ramallah will also lynch
any Israeli Jew they see in their city. This has happened before and could
happen once again if the Fatah and PLO campaign of incitement against Israel
continues.
And
those who are opposed to the presence of Israeli products in their villages and
cities will be the first to oppose the resumption of peace talks between
Palestinians and Israelis.
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