Reacting to antagonized Palestinian
snowballing protests to her government’s decision on June 5 to reverse a
47-year old bipartisan consensus on describing eastern Jerusalem as “occupied,” Foreign Minister
Julie Bishop on June 13 denied any “change in the Australian government’s
position.”
On
June 5, Australian Attorney-General George
Brandis in a statement said: ''The description of East
Jerusalem as 'Occupied East Jerusalem' is a term freighted with
pejorative implications, which is neither appropriate nor useful.''
The new Australian
terminology provoked Jordan, the third largest importer of Australian sheep in
the Middle East, to summon Australia's charge d'affaires, John Feakes, to
convey its “concern” because “The Australian government's decision violates
international law and resolutions that consider east Jerusalem as an integral
part of all Palestinian territories occupied in 1967.”
Similarly,
the
Australian Representative in Ramallah, Tom Wilson, was summoned by the
Palestinian Ministry of Foreign Affairs to convey “deep concern” because Brandis’ remarks “contradict all international resolutions.” They requested “official
clarification.”
Bishop’s “no change” statement came in response. It
was followed on June 14 by Prime Minister Tony Abbott who said, while on a trip to North America , that his government had made only a
“terminological clarification.”
Abbot
two days earlier stated that the Occupied
Palestinian Territories
(OPT) are in “truth … disputed territories."
“I think we just call the West Bank, ‘the West Bank ,’ as a geographical entity without adding any
adjectives to it, whether ‘occupied’ [the Palestinian position] or ‘disputed’
[the Israeli position]. We’ll just call it what it is, which is ‘the West Bank. ’,” he told the Tablet. However, this is not
official yet, he said.
“There has been no change in the Australian
government’s position on the legal status of the Palestinian
Territories , including East Jerusalem ,” Bishop “clarified” in her statement. She
was not convincing. The credibility of Bishop’s and Abbot’s denial of “change”
could hardly be plausible.
It is a “radical change in
the Australian position on Palestine ,”
Palestinian Foreign Minister Riyad al-Maliki said. The head of the
Palestinian delegation to Canberra , Izzat Abdulhadi, said Australia ’s new stance is “very
provocative.”
On June 12, Arab and
Islamic ambassadors from 18 countries, including Saudi
Arabia , Egypt
and Indonesia , protested to Australia 's
Department of Foreign Affairs in Canberra .
The Australian on June 10
reported from Jerusalem that the 57-member OIC will
hold a joint emergency meeting this month with the 22-member Arab League to decide their
response to Australia ’s
“terminology” declaration.
Secretary General of the
Arab League, Nabil al-Arabi sent Bishop a “letter of protest” requesting
“official clarification,” his deputy Ahmad bin Hilli said last Monday.
Palestinians are on record
to invoke the multi-billion annual Australian agricultural exports to the
member states in the discussions. Australian Deputy Prime Minister Warren
Truss told reporters last Friday that “we will work very hard with them … to
maintain the trade,” but so far his government has shown no signs to that
effect.
Bishop’s and Abbot’s “no change” statements
tried to imply that their country’s policy has not changed and that if there
was a change it is a linguistic one only.
Either
case the change in “terminology” serves neither Australian nor Palestinian
interests. Coming ahead of Israeli Prime Minister Benyamin Netanyahu’s upcoming
visit to Australia this
summer, to be the first ever sitting Israeli premier to visit Canberra , it serves only as a free of charge
welcoming present.
However, coming on the 47th
anniversary of the Israeli occupation of the Palestinian territory in eastern
Jerusalem, West Bank and Gaza Strip and in 2014, which the United Nations
proclaimed an International Year of Solidarity with the Palestinian People, the
Australian “change of language” was “absolutely disgraceful and shocking,”
according to the member of the Executive Committee of the Palestine Liberation
Organization (PLO), Hanan Ashrawi.
“Such inflammatory
and irresponsible statements … are not only in blatant violation of
international law and global consensus, but are also lethal in any pursuit of
peace and toxic to any attempt at enacting a global rule of law,” Ashrawi was
quoted as saying by the Times of Israel on June 6.
In fact, describing the
Palestinian territories, eastern Jerusalem
inclusive, as “occupied” is not only a Palestinian position.
The Israeli annexation of East Jerusalem
has not been recognized by the international community and all 193 countries of
the UN, including the U.S. ,
refuse to have their embassies in Jerusalem
because it would imply their recognition of the city as Israel ’s capital.
Published by The Guardian on this June 11,
Ben Saul wrote: “Calling east Jerusalem ‘occupied’ simply recognizes the
near-universal legal status quo, namely that it is not sovereign Israeli
territory.”
“Declaring that east Jerusalem will not be described as ‘occupied’ implies that
Australia
rejects the application of international humanitarian law … The term
"occupation" is therefore not pejorative or judgmental.” Saul said, adding that “Australia ’s
new view … corrodes the international rule of law and violates Australia ’s international law obligations” in
accordance with the Geneva conventions to which
both Australia and Israel are
signatories.
The UN Security Council Resolution 478
on August 20, 1980 censured “in the strongest terms the enactment by Israel of
the ‘basic law’ on Jerusalem,” affirmed “that the enactment of the ‘basic law’
by Israel constitutes a violation of international law” and determined “that
all legislative and administrative measures and actions taken by Israel, the
occupying Power, which have altered or purport to alter the character and
status of the Holy City of Jerusalem, and in particular the recent ‘basic law’
on Jerusalem, are null and void and
must be rescinded forthwith.”
Ninety UNSC resolutions, let alone 40
others vetoed by the U.S. ,
rule accordingly. Now Australia
is the only other nation that joins and supports Israel
in its violation of all these resolutions. Aside from Israel , it is also the only nation to change its language on the Palestinian Occupied Territories .
Australian linguistics in context
The Palestinian people are
not known for their short memory. They view the Australian government’s
“terminological clarification” in the context of the country’s recent pro-Israel
changes of policy as well as in Australia ’s
historical anti-Palestinian policies.
Last month, Ambassador Sharma met in East Jerusalem with the Israeli Minister of Housing Uri
Ariel, who is in charge of the illegal construction of the colonial settlements
in the OPT.
In January this year, while on an official
visit to Israel, Foreign Minister Bishop told the Times of Israel that she isn’t convinced that Israeli construction of
illegal settlements in OPT is a violation of international law, and called
international boycotts of these settlements “anti-Semitic” and “Hypocritical
beyond belief.”
Last November, Australia failed to join 158 nations who
supported a UN General Assembly resolution calling for an end to Israeli
settlements or to join 160 countries which supported another resolution calling
on Israel
to “comply scrupulously” with the 1949
Geneva Conventions.
In November 2012,
Australia abstained from supporting the UNGA recognition of Palestine as a “non-member
observer state” by a vote of 138 to 9, rendering PM Abbot’s latest
“clarification” that Australia
still “strongly” supports the “two-state solution” a hollow statement.
Quoted by Emeritus
Professor Peter Boyce AO, President of the Australia Institute of International
Affairs in Tasmania , a 2010 study found that
78% of Australians were opposed to Israel ’s
settlements policy and only 22% thought Jerusalem
should be recognized as Israel ’s
capital. More recently, at the time of the 2012 General Assembly vote on
Palestinian non-member observer State status, 51% of Australians thought their
country should vote “Yes” and only 15% “No.”
“Australia has had an important role in the
establishment of the Israeli state” and it “stood alone among western
governments in its uncritical alignment with Israel ,” Professor Boyce wrote.
Certainly Boyce had
history in mind. Australia
in its capacity as the Chairman of the UN General Assembly's Ad Hoc Committee on Palestine helped to push through the UN Partition Plan on
November 29, 1947. It was the first UN member state to vote in favor of Israeli
statehood and the first to grant Israel
de-jure recognition when the U.S.
recognized it de-facto only. Israel
was also the first Middle East country with which Australia established diplomatic
relations in 1949.
* Nicola Nasser is a veteran Arab
journalist based in Birzeit, West Bank of the Israeli-occupied Palestinian
territories. nassernicola@ymail.com
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