| Multilateral Negotiations
- Update
Who are the Central Actors? Representatives of 43 countries
attended the Paris Conference (November 15 - 16) and the most recent meeting
of the Multilateral Working Group on Refugee Affairs in Turkey (December
20 - 25). The agenda of these meetings - and of the multilateral talks
in general - have been set by a more limited number of countries with strong,
and conflicting, interests in the region. Their delegations have been dominating
the discussions and proceedings so far:
European countries and the
United Nations represent interested parties attempting to consolidate their
influence on the new order taking shape in the Middle East, in spite of,
and parallel to the efforts of the United States. Several additional European
countries act as the shepherds of the negotiations, taking responsibility
for coordinating talks on central issues, such as data (Norway), family
reunification (France), health (Italy), children’s health (Sweden), economic
and infrastructural development (European Union).
Current Issues of the Multilaterals - The immediate improvement
of living conditions for refugees in the areas administered by the PNA,
Jordan, and Lebanon has emerged as a priority of most of the participating
parties (despite disagreement concerning the scope of responsibilities
to be allocated to UNRWA). The emphasis on improved conditions contradicts
the Palestinian stand, which demands that political issues (right of return,
refugee compensation by Israel) be clarified, before measures improving
living conditions (and consequently integration) of refugees in their host
countries are discussed. The isolated stance of the Palestinian delegation
has been authorized to discuss immediate improvements of living conditions
that do not preclude the political rights of Palestinian refugees.
- The Four Party Committee for the negotiations on the return of Palestinian refugees of 1967 has not yet taken shape, although rumors concerning the first convention have made regional headlines since September 1993, when the committee was first announced as part of the Oslo Agreement. Currently, bilateral Palestinian-Egyptian and Palestinian-Jordanian meetings are being held in Cairo and Amman respectively. The names of future Arab delegates to the Committee have not been officially announced, but it appears that they will include some of the current Palestinian and Jordanian delegates to the multilateral working group on refugee affairs and PNA officials from Gaza. - The French delegation for
the multilateral working group on refugee affairs brought forward a proposal
to reactivate the special commission (“Bajolait Commission”) which dealt
with improvements of family reunification procedures prior to the Oslo
Accords. The Commission had confronted the Israeli delegation with demands
for transparency, clearly defined criteria, and a larger quota for family
reunification. The new French proposal is supported by the Palestinian
delegation which suggested an additional demand for a general amnesty of
all non-resident spouses of Palestinians in the occupied territories who
entered the country after August 1993 (See also below: “Deportations from
the West Bank Renewed).
Several months ago, the Jordanian delegation to the multilateral working group on refugee affairs compiled a list of 6,250 names of Palestinians who have been living in Jordan since Israel canceled their residency rights in the occupied territories. The names were submitted to the Israeli delegation for repatriation. The Jordanian request for repatriation is based on the agreement reached during earlier sessions of the multilateral negotiations, that Israel would consider the repatriation of such persons, whose total number is estimated at 80,000 - 90,000. Israel has not yet responded to this request. |
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