Family Reunification
in the Washington Peace Talks:
Human Rights Discussion
Stalled
Human rights issues were
on the agenda of the 6th round of the Washington peace talks, when the
old-new Israeli delegation expressed the new Israeli government’s readiness
to take measures to improve the living conditions in the Occupied Territories
in order to create a better climate for the peace negotiations among the
local Palestinian population.
During the 7th round, an
informal Israeli-Palestinian study group set out to discuss a list of 12
central human rights demands presented by the Palestinian delegation, among
others the issue of family reunification. Whoever might have had some hope
for a constructive discussion of human rights issues in this study group
was quickly disappointed by the Israelis’ stubborn rejection of all essential
elements. “They asked us to bring cases of persons who have a residency
problem. From the few answers they were ready to give we understand, that
they do not regard family reunification as a basic right, but as something
which has to be solved case by case. And they want us, the Palestinian
delegation, to take on the role of mediators between them and the distressed
families”, reports Dr. Mamdouh Al-Aker, Head of the Palestinian subcommittee
on human rights in the Washington peace talks. “We also understand that
the Israeli side wants to keep things basically unchanged in the interim
period, i.e. family reunifications will be granted to first degree relatives
only, after they are cleared by the Israeli intelligence - and there seems
to be some of an annual quota.”
The Key to the Bridge
will be Israeli - with Palestinian Border Police Allowed at the Bridge
...
The central question of
who will control movement between the Occupied Territories and Jordan over
the bridges during the interim period was not discussed explicitly. However,
from the complex somewhat puzzled audience of Arab and Palestinian delegates
it appears, that there is no intention on the part of the Israeli government
to concede its position as the sole decision-making authority to a Palestinian
administration. The only new Israeli suggestion views the presence of Palestinian
border police at the bridges, so that in the interim period, Palestinian
travelers will have the pleasure of being questioned by their co-nationals,
in addition to the Israeli and Jordanian security checks.
The informal study group
on human rights met three times without making any progress. “Following
this disappointing seventh round, and especially after frequent attempts
by the Israeli delegation to condition improvements in the field of human
rights on Palestinian consent to their apartheid scheme for the interim
period, we have decided to stall the discussion about human rights issues
until there will be a new Israeli offer.” (Dr. Mamdouh Al-Aker to ARTICLE
74).
The eighth round of the
Washington Peace Talks was just about to end - human rights matters had
not been raised. Palestinians had sent a reduced delegation in order to
protest against the lack of progress - when the issue of Palestinian physical
presence in the Occupied Territories was brutally set on the agenda, this
time by the Israeli government and its mass deportation of 413 alleged
Hamas activists. |