Wednesday, March 10

Khalid Amayreh interviewed

Guest Post
Khalid Amayreh
Khalid Amayreh
Khalid Amayreh (*) is a journalist who lives in Hebron, a city brutalized and bloodied daily by armed Jewish settlers who are driving the authentic inhabitants by force. He is what might be called a true Palestinian; a man of integrity who was never seduced by financial rewards and prestige; a man standing who has remained with his martyred people in order to witness every day the atrocities he suffers at the hands of the Israeli army, but also, and this is the most painful, at the hands of the authorities of Ramallah. He himself has been imprisoned, savagely beaten without knowing why, by this Palestinian police to the training of which Bernard Kouchner is so pleased to have participated.

His articles, to which he devotes all his energies and time, by love for his country that Israel has turned into a nightmare, reflect daily the torture, the arrests, the abductions, the humiliations, the massacres that the Israeli army imposes constantly to his destitute people, abandoned by the world. He calls a spade a spade when he documents the racist remarks of the Jewish religious and political leaders advocating the mass murder of Palestinians. He compares the Israeli military to the Nazis when they behave as such. He describes the Israeli anti-Muslim racism, which resembles in many respects the “anti-Jewish propaganda of Nazi Germany in the 1930s”. He challenges the colonization presented as a "return to their original homeland”. He deserves our full consideration. It is appalling that witnesses of his calibre are ignored by the mainstream media. He responds here to the questions of Silvia Cattori.

Silvia Cattori: You have written countless articles explaining in detail what is happening in Palestine. When you see that the crimes of Israel, you are documenting in your articles – which are translated in many languages, and well reported in the Arab medias and in the new medias – remain largely ignored in the mainstream western medias, aren’t you sometimes discouraged?

Khalid Amayreh: No, not at all, the evilness of the Israeli regime instils in us a greater determination to keep up the struggle. With every murderous crime committed by the Zionists, whom I often call the “Nazis of our time”, we acquire new evidence that the evil regime’s end is inevitable. Evil can’t be sustained for ever. Eventually it will destroy itself along with the evil doers. This often happens due to purely internal factors, but it could be also as a result of a combination of internal and external factors. The fact that Israel is trying to censor the messages and punish the messengers (e.g. international observers and human rights activists operating in occupied Palestine) shows that Israel has much to hide from the eyes of the world. Nonetheless, Israel is fighting a losing battle as many Israelis are finding out that Zionist criminality can’t be sustained for ever. In a world where everything can be denied, there are forces undeniable. And on earth, where nothing is sure, we have our certainties. As an oppressed people our certainty is to be free. True, our freedom is not around the corner, but, nonetheless it is a certainty.

Silvia Cattori: Deceit is everywhere. While large international solidarity associations with the Palestinian cause immediately publish all the writings of Israeli militants and journalists like Michel Warschawski, Uri Avnery, Amira Hass, or Gideon Levy, few of your articles pass the censorship. This shows well that the discourse in the solidarity movement is biased, truncated at will; of course they condemn the occupation but they do not question the legitimacy of Israel, the dispossession of Palestine in 48, etc. Better to be Israeli Jewish to report on Israel Palestine?

Khalid Amayreh: Your observations are unfortunately correct. However, it is always better to view the half-full part of the proverbial glass. That these people don’t publish my articles is unfortunate, however, the fact that they have brought themselves to realizing that Israel is committing crimes and violating the basic human rights of the Palestinian people is a laudable act in itself.

What is more important is that a revolutionary act can’t occur outside its natural historical and political milieu. We just can’t expect people who were breast-fed with the holocaust religion all their life to suddenly convert to anti-Zionism. In France, as in the United States and much of the West, turning one’s back completely to Israel and Zionism means losing a certain part of one’s identity. Hence, many people are just not ready to undergo the desired transformation. My personal impression is that the final transformation will ultimately occur as the universal resistance to Zionism becomes deeper and irreversible as the futility of the so-called peace process become clearer, which is happening now.

Silvia Cattori: The murder of a Hamas military executive, Mahmoud al-Mabhouh, has been largely commented. Never has been Israel’s image so degraded. But should we not see that no Western State condemns the Israeli policy of targeted killings of Palestinians fighters? Doesn’t this demonstrate that Western politicians do not want to see the ugly and brutal policy of the current Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman [Khalid Amayreh: You see, international politics is very much like a house of ill-repute. Principles, including so-called moral principles, mean nothing as opposed to statecraft. In western countries, leaders and politicians would go to a great extent asserting the ideals of freedom, human rights and democracy. However, when these principles collide with expediency or pass through a real test (e.g. Hamas’s election victory in 2006), they are let down in the name of realism and pragmatism.





















Khalid Amayreh: In my opinion, Fayyad is a man who is effectively striving to carry out the Netanyahu concept of “economic peace” whereby Palestinians, or a majority of them, would accept trading off their national aspirations for jobs and money. In other words, he wants to us to settle for a deformed “state”, one without dignity, without freedom, without authority, without anything, for a little-whore of a state that would be perpetually subject and subservient to Israel. As to Jerusalem, the right of the refugees, the numerous Jewish colonies that continue to expand throughout our land, this is none of his concerns. His ultimate concerns is to achieve “economic prosperity” but at the expense of our legitimate and inalienable rights, including the right to freedom from Israeli Nazism.







Silvia Cattori: An intelligence officer of the Palestinian Authority, Fahmi Shabana al-Tamimi [Khalid Amayreh: No, he hasn’t been heard and is unlikely to be heard. The reason is clear. For the Palestinian Authority to truly and sincerely fight corruption, it would have to demolish the entire Palestinian Authority apparatus because corruption, in its various forms, is the other side of the Palestinian Authority regime. In fact, there is an umbilical relationship between the Palestinian Authority and corruption. This might sound as an exaggeration to many, especially in the west. But this is taken for granted here. In short, corruption infests every aspect of the Palestinian Authority so much so that only a thorough and complete overhaul of the Palestinian Authority would stem the plague of corruption.




















  [1] Benjamin Netanyahu, born in 1949, is the current prime minister and head of the extreme right-wing Likud party. He was the first to ever be voted prime minister via direct elections in 1996, and later served as foreign minister and finance minister under Ariel Sharon.
Avigdor Lieberman, born on 1958 in Kishinev, Moldavia, is the current foreign minister and leader of the extreme right-wing Yisrael Beiteinu party, which after the 2009 general elections has become Israel’s third largest party. Lieberman immigrated to Israel in 1978. Shortly after arriving in the country, he enlisted in the Israel Defence Forces and served in the Artillery Corps.
[2] Qana is a village in Southern Lebanon where many Lebanese civilians, who had taken refuge in a UN compound to escape the fighting, were killed by the Israeli artillery on April 18, 1996.
[3] An article in the daily Le Monde on February 22, 2010, “À quand l’État palestinien ?”, by Bernard Kouchner French Minister of Foreign Affairs, and Miguel Angel Moratinos, Spanish Minister of Foreign Affairs and Cooperation.
[4] See: “Europe should speak to Hamas now”, by Khalid Amayreh, November 2008.
[5] See: “Hedonism in Ramallah”, by Khalid Amayreh, 18 February 2010.
[6] See: “The Shi’a Threat in Palestine: between phobias and propaganda”, by Jean-François Legrain, 1st October 2009.

[7] See: “What is wrong with PFLP? ”, by Khalid Amayreh, 16 October 2008.
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