Israel's "Hot Winter" Offensive in Nablus

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6 March 2007Sonja Karkar

 

Every overture of peace made by the Palestinians in recent times, has been  met with Israeli silence or violence. Last week, Israel said it would not  negotiate with the Palestinian unity government signed off by Fatah and  Hamas leaders in the Saudi-brokered Mecca Agreement. A few days later,  Israel began a series of aggressive incursions into the beleaguered city of  Nablus, deep inside the occupied West Bank.  Returning again barely 24 hours  later, Israel continued the “Hot Winter” offensive by sending 100 tanks and  heavily armoured vehicles thundering into Nablus - a blatant provocation  that could well trigger a new spate of violence.

 

Israeli soldiers began forcing Palestinian families out of their homes at  gunpoint whilst looking for the relatives of “Wanted Palestinians”. Homes  were vandalised and young men were blindfolded, handcuffed and arrested.   There was no discriminating between the relatives: an old man with a heart  condition and a 5-month pregnant woman were amongst those rounded up and  kept under surveillance at a city school. Since the incursions began, some  150 Palestinian civilians have been detained.  One man was killed and at  least 30 people have been injured.

 

Large areas of this city of 50,000 people are now being held under military  curfew, and once again, Palestinians are being confined to their homes for  an indeterminate period.  This, of course, has terrible implications for the  sick and elderly who are not able to even seek medical assistance. Medics  have had to find ways of reaching patients in crisis putting their own lives  at risk, particularly since soldiers have taken up positions in peoples’  homes and are using the rooftops as sniper towers.  Soldiers have also  stationed themselves in the corridors of Rafidiya Hospital and are checking  IDs and the belongings of doctors, patients and staff. The old city of  Nablus is progressively turning into rubble as soldiers and bulldozers  arbitrarily destroy buildings that they decide are security risks.

 

There is nothing new in all this: Israel has been executing such military  operations in Palestinian cities and towns for decades.  However, Nablus has  borne the brunt of nightly military invasions that never make the media:  only some do.  Last year, a three day invasion destroyed priceless records  covering more than 100 years of Palestinian history from the Ottoman Empire  to the present day.  As well, thousands of personal identification records  were destroyed in a move seen by many as a deliberate act to strip the  Palestinians of their identity.   And what better way to break the economic  centre of the occupied West Bank than to cut Nablus off from every other  city and town.  It also gives Israel carte blanche to collectively punish  the civilian population using whatever methods will further subjugate a  people already suffering under its Machiavellian occupation.

 

On any level of human existence, humiliating and terrorising a city’s  population is bound to give rise to resistance. Israel’s claims that such  incursions prevent terrorist attacks have not been borne out. There will  always be those prepared to fight off their oppressors and the more brutal  the response from the military, the more intense the resistance will be.  This has been well and truly demonstrated in the forty years of oppression  the Palestinians have already endured. The only conclusion that one can draw  from Israel’s refusal to recognise the unity government, and Israel’s  dangerous provocations in an already volatile situation, is that Israel is  not interested in peace with the Palestinians.  This raises the question -  how does Israel expect to have peace without them?

 

If it’s not Nablus, it is Jenin or Gaza or any one of the other Palestinian  cities and neighbourhoods regularly targeted by Israel’s military that leads  to the seeds of discontent being sown from one generation to the next. The  damage Israel has wrought on Palestinian society is enormous.  Peace cannot  come by drawing up unilateral borders, but only through engaging, making  real concessions and genuine efforts to see justice done.  A “Hot Winter”  offensive is just a military solution by yet another euphemistic name.  In  such a milieu, peace will most likely be held to ransom indefinitely.

 

http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?SectionID=107&ItemID=12270