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WSWS : News
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East
International protests against assault on Palestinian Authority
By Julie Hyland
5 April 2002
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Mass protests have swept across the world in protest at Israels
murderous assault on the Palestinian Authority.
From the Middle East to Asia and Europe, tens of thousands
have condemned the Israeli armys brutal occupation of the
West Bank and Gaza Strip and demanded an end to the siege of Yasser
Arafat in Ramallah. Their anger has been directed in equal measure
against the regime of Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon and
the US administration of President George W. Bush, which is held
responsible for enabling Israels onslaught.
In the Lebanon, protests involving thousands of Palestinian
refugees housed in squalid displacement camps have sprung up.
Demonstrations took place in Rashidieh refugee camp, Bourj Shamali
and Lebanons largest camp and Ain Al-Hilweh on the outskirts
of Sidon. Shop owners in Sidon closed their businesses on April
2 in order to join the protests, which were the largest by Palestinians
in Lebanon since the 1991 Gulf War. Demonstrators chanted, We
want to blow up embassies if Arafat becomes a martyr. We want
to hijack planes if Arafat becomes a martyr.
Such demonstrations are now a daily occurrence. Two days earlier
in Sidon, 15,000 Lebanese and Palestinians demonstrated, setting
fire to US and Israeli flags. Thousands of protestors attempted
to march on the US embassy in Beirut, but were beaten back by
police using tear gas and truncheons. An undisclosed number were
injured.
Denunciations of the perfidy and cowardice of the Arab rulers
has been another feature of protests in the Middle East. One report
from a demonstration in a Lebanese refugee camp told of a 12-year-old
girl grabbing a microphone and shouting, (King) Abdullah,
son of Hussein, you are worth only two bullets, a cry taken
up by the rest of the protestors.
Protests have been especially violent in Jordan and Egypt,
the only two countries in the Middle East to maintain diplomatic
links with Israel. In Jordan, where 60 percent of the countrys
five million population are Palestinian refugees, there were at
least four major protests. In Zarqa, 27 kilometres northeast of
Amman, some 3,000 people gathered, chanting Death to Israel.
Riot police using tear gas and water cannons attacked some 500
students demonstrating outside the university in Amman, who were
demanding Jordan break off relations with Israel.
Similar police measures have been taken in Egypt, which is
witnessing its most violent protests since Israel imprisoned Arafat.
On April 2, Al-Jazeera reported that one million had taken
to the streets. In Alexandria about 10,000 people demonstrated,
whilst in Cairo, hundreds had responded to a call by artists and
intellectuals to march from the citys university to the
nearby Israeli Embassy. As protestors began to march, riot police
used tear gas and water cannons to contain the students on campus.
During the ensuing confrontation, which continued for seven hours,
30 protesters were arrested and 16 were hospitalised, mainly due
to the effect of tear gas.
In Syria, a thousand Syrians and Palestinian refugees demonstrated,
chanting Terrorism is Zionist and the weapons are American!
In the Sudanese capital, Khartoum, 20,000 marched demanding No
peace with the Zionists. In Tripoli, Libyan leader Colonel
Gadaffi led a demonstration of more than 20,000, whilst during
protests in Iraq, encouraged by the ruling Baath party,
Saddam Hussein called on the Arab states to cut off oil supplies
to the West.
In Yemen, more than 200 journalists gathered in front of the
US embassy in Sanaa carrying pictures of Arafat. They handed an
embassy official a letter accusing the US of bias toward Israel.
Protests were also held in Bangladesh, Bahrain and outside
the Palestinian Embassy in Beijing.
In Indonesia, mass rallies were held on university campuses
and outside the US embassy in Jakarta, as well as in Java and
in Makassar, the capital of South Sulawesi province. A declaration
by two militant Muslim groups that they would send fighters to
the Middle East to join a holy war against Israel led Indonesias
top security minister to warn against the countrys Muslims
taking up arms. Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono warned that whilst the
government understands the solidarity of Indonesian Muslims for
their brethren in Palestine, any aid had better not
be physical.
In the US, protests were held in Washington, Los Angeles and
Detroit. It was reported that the White House was bombarded with
email messages from Arab Americans protesting the US failure to
move against Israel. The email protest began after Jean Abadiner,
managing director of the Arab American Institute, complained that
the US, is aiding and abetting Israel by sitting on its
hands.
In Europe, some 7,000 demonstrated in Athens, Greece in one
of a series of demonstrations held over the last days. Outside
the Israeli embassy in the capital, demonstrators chanted, Americans
are assassins, whilst in the streets Palestinians and Greek
activists marched, demanding Freedom for Palestine.
More than 10,000 demonstrators marched in peace rallies throughout
Germany on Monday. In Berlin, many of the 2,000 protestors were
Palestinians and demonstrations in Hanover, Munich, Dusseldorf
and Stuttgart also had sizeable Palestinian contingents.
Demonstrations were also held in Norway and Sweden. In Stockholm
it was reported that violence had broken out after some of those
participating in a march past the Israeli and US embassies attacked
shops and destroyed Israeli-imported produce. In Sweden an opinion
poll found that most people held Sharon responsible for the Middle
East violence, but an even greater majority, 63 percent, felt
that the US had done little to prevent it.
In France, which is home to the largest number of Muslims and
Jews in Europe, pro-Palestinian protests have taken place throughout
the country. In central Paris on April 2, 1,000 demonstrated against
Sharons war policy, whilst 6,000 joined pro-Palestinian
rallies in Lyon, 3,000 in Lille and in Marseilles, around 2,000
shouted slogans against Sharon and Bush. Smaller demonstrations
were also held in Bordeaux, Toulouse and Rennes.
There are signs that some of the protests are taking on an
anti-Semitic character. During a protest organised by the Party
of French Muslims (PMF) in Strasbourg, eastern France, organisers
denounced from the platform some of the participants who had began
shouting anti-Jewish slogans. The protest was directed against
Israels policies, not the Jewish people, the organisers
insisted.
Several Jewish establishments in Europe have been attacked
in events thought to be related to Middle East events. In Berlin,
two young Jews from New York were attacked by a group of seven
or eight men after leaving a synagogue. The 21-year-olds were
asked if they were Jewish and knocked to the floor and beaten.
In Belgium, Molotov cocktails were thrown at a synagogue in
the Anderlecht district of Brussels but the most serious outbreaks
of violence have been in France. Over the weekend a synagogue
in Strasbourg were destroyed in a fire, another in Marseilles
was burnt to the ground and a Lyon synagogue was rammed by two
cars and set ablaze. A Jewish kosher butcher shop also came under
fire. The French government has agreed to deploy more than 1,000
riot police to protect synagogues and Jewish sites around the
country. The Palestinian Authoritys representative in France,
Leila Shahid, condemned the attacks as unacceptable.
On April 2, in another example of how Middle East tensions
are impacting in Europe, dozens of pro-Israeli and pro-Palestinian
protestors fought briefly at Paris Orly airport. Both sides
had gathered for the return of 11 French activists from Israel,
including farmers leader Jose Bove. All had been expelled
from Israel after visiting Arafat in the Ramallah offices and
joining protests against the Israeli occupation of the West Bank
town. Reports say that a scuffle broke out briefly at the airport,
with rival protestors throwing eggs and punches, and shouting
Killer Arafat! or Killer Sharon! before
being separated by police.
See Also:
Thousands of Israeli workers and youth
demonstrate against Sharon's war
[5 April 2002]
Chronology of a pogrom: How Sharon, US
prepared assault on Palestinians
[4 April 2002]
Thousands rally in Michigan against Israeli
attacks on Palestinians
[2 April 2002]
Israel and Washington debate murder of
Arafat, destruction of Palestinian Authority
[1 April 2002]
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