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Palestinian right of return

The Palestinian right of return[a] is the political position or principle that Palestinian refugees, both first-generation refugees (c. 30,000 to 50,000 people still alive as of 2012)[3][4] and their descendants (c. 5 million people as of 2012),[3] have a right to return and a right to the property they themselves or their forebears left behind or were forced to leave in what is now Israel and the Palestinian territories (both formerly part of the British Mandate of Palestine) during the 1948 Palestinian expulsion and flight (a result of the 1948 Palestine war) and the 1967 Six-Day War.

This artwork is titled Resolution 194, after the namesake UN General Assembly resolution. The keys symbolize those kept as mementos by many Palestinians who left their homes in 1948. Such keys and the Handala are common Palestinian symbols of support for the right of return.[1][2]

The right of return was initially formulated on 27 June 1948 by United Nations mediator Folke Bernadotte.[5] Proponents of the right of return hold that it is a human right, whose applicability both generally and specifically to the Palestinians is protected under international law.[6] This view holds that those who opt not to return, or for whom return is not feasible, should receive compensation. Proponents argue that Israel's opposition stands in contrast with its Law of Return that grants all Jews the right to settle permanently, while withholding any comparable right from Palestinians.[7]

Opponents of the right of return hold that it is an unrealistic demand with no basis in international law and that if Israel were to absorb approximately five million Palestinians with an already existing large Arab population, it would lead to the demise of the Jewish state.[8] The government of Israel does not view the admission of Palestinian refugees to their former homes in Israel as a right, but rather as a political issue to be resolved as part of a final peace settlement.[9][10][failed verificationsee discussion]

Background

Overview

The number of Palestinian refugees of the 1948 war is estimated at between 700,000 and 800,000, and another 280,000 to 350,000 people were refugees of the 1967 war.[11][12][13][14] Approximately 120,000–170,000 among the 1967 refugees are believed to have also been refugees from the 1948 war, fleeing a second time.[15] Today, the estimated number of Palestinian refugees and their descendants exceeds four million.[16] The right of return has been of great importance to Palestinians since then.[17]

The first formal recognition of a right of return was in UN General Assembly Resolution 194 passed on 11 December 1948 which provided (Article 11):

Resolves that the refugees wishing to return to their homes and live at peace with their neighbours should be permitted to do so at the earliest practicable date, and that compensation should be paid for the property of those choosing not to return and for loss of or damage to property which, under principles of international law or in equity, should be made good by the Governments or authorities responsible.

The UN General Assembly Resolution 3236, passed on 22 November 1974, declared the right of return to be an "inalienable right".[17]

The right of return was defined as the "foremost of Palestinian rights" at the 12th Palestine National Council meeting in 1974 when it became the first component of the Palestine Liberation Organization's trinity of inalienable rights, along with the right of self-determination and the right to an independent state.[18]

Since the birth of the refugee problem, Israel has consistently rejected the idea that Palestinians would have any inherent "right" of return. In June 1948, the Israeli government stated its position, which was reiterated in a letter to the United Nations on 2 August 1949, that a solution to the Palestinian refugee problem must be sought not through the return of the refugees to Israel, but through the resettlement of the Palestinian Arab refugee population in other states.[19]

1948 Palestinian exodus

The Palestinian refugee problem started during the 1948 Palestine War, when between 700,000 and 800,000 Arabs left, fled, or were expelled from their homes in the area that would become Israel. They settled in refugee camps in Transjordan, Lebanon, Syria, Egypt, and in the West Bank and the Gaza strip that were occupied by Transjordan and Egypt during the war.

From December 1947 to March 1948, around 100,000 Palestinians left. Among them were many from the upper and middle classes from the cities, who left voluntarily, expecting to return when the situation had calmed down.[20] From April to July, between 250,000 and 300,000 fled in front of Haganah offensives, mainly from the towns of Haifa, Tiberias, Beit-Shean, Safed, Jaffa and Acre, that lost more than 90% of their Arab inhabitants.[21] Some expulsions arose, particularly along the Tel-Aviv – Jerusalem road[22] and in Eastern Galilee.[23] After the truce of June, about 100,000 Palestinians became refugees.[24] About 50,000 inhabitants of Lydda and Ramle were expelled towards Ramallah by Israeli forces during Operation Danny,[25] and most others during clearing operations performed by the IDF on its rear areas.[26] During Operation Dekel, the Arabs of Nazareth and South Galilee could remain in their homes.[27] They later formed the core of the Arab Israelis. From October to November 1948, the IDF launched Operation Yoav to chase Egyptian forces from the Negev and Operation Hiram to chase the Arab Liberation Army from North Galilee. This generated an exodus of 200,000 to 220,000 Palestinians. Here, Arabs fled fearing atrocities or were expelled if they had not fled.[28] During Operation Hiram, at least nine massacres of Arabs were performed by IDF soldiers.[29] After the war, from 1948 to 1950, the IDF cleared its borders, which resulted in the expulsion of around 30,000 to 40,000 Arabs.[30]

The United Nations estimated the number of refugees outside Israel at 711,000.[31]

No Arab country except Jordan has to date assimilated a significant population of Palestinian refugees, nor given them full citizenship, and many rely on economic aid from the UN or persons in other countries.[citation needed] It is the position of most Arab governments not to grant citizenship to the Palestinian refugees born within their borders; this policy is in part due to the wishes of these Arab states for Palestinians to be allowed to return to their homes within Israel, in part due to these states wishing to relieve themselves of the refugees.[32][better source needed]

Causes and responsibilities

The causes and responsibilities of the exodus are a matter of controversy among historians and commentators of the conflict.[33] Although historians now agree on most of the events of that period, there is still disagreement on whether the exodus was due to a plan designed before or during the war by Zionist leaders, or whether it was an unintended result of the war.[34]

Absentees' property

During the Palestinian exodus, Israeli leaders decided against the return of the refugees. During her visit at Haïfa on May 1, 1948, Golda Meir declared: "The Jews should treat the remaining Arabs 'with civil and human equality', but 'it is not our job to worry about the return [of those who have fled]".[35] A group consisting of "local authorities, the kibbutz movements, the settlement departments of the National institutions, Haganah commanders and influential figures such as Yosef Weitz and Ezra Danin started lobbying against repatriation.[36] A Transfer Committee and a policy of faits accomplis were set up to prevent a refugee return.[37] In July, it had become an official policy:[38] "Absentees' property" was managed by Israeli government and numerous Palestinian villages were leveled.

A parallel has been drawn by some commentators between the state and private restitutions made from Germany to Israel over Holocaust confiscations and the compensation due to Palestinians evicted in the formation of Israel.[39] Others have compared Palestinians' claims for compensation to the claims of ethnic Germans who were expelled from eastern Europe in the aftermath of the Holocaust and World War II.[40]

In 1945, of 26.4 million dunams of land in Mandate Palestine, 12.8 million was owned by Arabs, 1.5 million by Jews, 1.5 million was public land and 10.6 million constituted the desertic Beersheba district (Negev).[41][42] By 1949, Israel controlled 20.5 million dunams (approx. 20,500 km2) or 78% of lands in what had been Mandate Palestine: 8% (approx. 1,650 km2) were privately controlled by Jews, 6% (approx. 1,300 km2) by Arabs, with the remaining 86% was public land.[43]

1967 Palestinian exodus

During the Six-Day War another Palestinian exodus occurred. An estimated 280,000 to 350,000[44] Palestinians fled or were expelled[45] from the West Bank, the Gaza Strip and the Golan Heights as a result of the Six-Day War; approximately 120,000–170,000 among them were believed to also be refugees from the first war, fleeing a second time.[46]

Relationship to Jewish exodus from Arab countries

 
Yemenite Jews en route from Aden to Israel

A comparison is often made between the situation of Palestinian refugees and the exodus of Jews from Arab countries who are now in Israel (or elsewhere).

It is estimated that 800,000 to 1,000,000 Jews were either forced from their homes or left the Arab countries from 1948 until the early 1970s; 260,000 reached Israel between 1948 and 1951, and 600,000 by 1972.[47][48][49]

In 2000, Bobby Brown, advisor to prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Diaspora affairs and delegates from the World Jewish Congress and the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations began an intensive campaign to secure official political and legal recognition of Jews from Arab lands as refugees. The campaign's proponents hoped their efforts would prevent acceptance of the "right of return" to Palestinians, and reduce the amount of compensation that would be paid by Israel for appropriated Palestinian property.[50] Then-president of the United States Bill Clinton gave an interview in July 2000 to Israel's Channel One and disclosed an agreement to recognize Jews from Arab lands as refugees, while Ehud Barak hailed it as an achievement in an interview with Dan Margalit.

In 2002, the organization "Justice for Jews from Arab Countries" (JJAC) was created and its Founding Congress (Election of a Board of Directors, Finalized By-Laws for the organization, etc.) met in London in June 2008. Beginning in November 2008, they planned to undertake major initiatives and that in 2009, they would hold a national conference in Israel.[51] Their achievement to date is described as "having returned the issue of Jews from Arab countries to the agenda of the Middle East."

Hometown return

In November 2012, Palestinian Authority President Mahmud Abbas repeated his stance that the claim of return was not to his original hometown, but to a Palestinian state that would be established at the 1967 border line. Hamas denounced this adjustment.[52][53] Abbas later clarified (for the Arab media) that this was his own personal opinion and not a policy of giving up the right of return. Israeli politicians denounced the clarification.[54]

UN General Assembly Resolution 194

The issue of the right of return of Palestinian refugees has been a very sensitive issue for Palestinians (and Arab countries in the region) since the creation of the refugee problem as a result of the 1948 Arab–Israeli War.[17] The United Nations UN General Assembly Resolution 194[55] which was passed on December 11, 1948, recognized the right of return for the first time.

Resolution 194 also deals with the situation in the region of Palestine at that time, establishing and defining the role of the United Nations Conciliation Commission as an organization to facilitate peace in the region.

Article 11 – Palestinian Refugees

Within United Nations General Assembly Resolution 194 (1948), it is (mainly) Article 11 which deals with the return of Palestinian refugees.

Article 11 of the resolution reads:

[The General Assembly] Resolves that the refugees wishing to return to their homes and live at peace with their neighbours should be permitted to do so at the earliest practicable date, and that compensation should be paid for the property of those choosing not to return and for loss of or damage to property which, under principles of international law or in equity, should be made good by the Governments or authorities responsible.

Interpretations

The exact meaning and timing of enforcement of the resolution were disputed from the beginning.

Since the late 1960s, Article 11 has increasingly been quoted by those who interpret it as a basis for the "right of return" of Palestinian refugees.

Israel has always contested this reading, pointing out that the text merely states that the refugees "should be permitted" to return to their homes at the "earliest practicable date" and this recommendation applies only to those "wishing to ... live at peace with their neighbors".[citation needed] In particular, David Ben-Gurion, the first Prime Minister of Israel, insisted in an interview with the members of the Conciliations Commission that as long as Israel could not count on the dedication of any Arab refugees to remain "at peace with their neighbors" – a consequence, he contended, of the Arab states' unwillingness to remain at peace with the state of Israel – resettlement was not an obligation for his country.[31]

Scope of the issue

Supporters' viewpoints

 
Protester with "Right of Return" poster, Washington, DC 2009

Supporters of the right of return assert it partly based on the following sources:

According to Akram,[59] although the status of Palestinian nationals/citizens after the creation of the State of Israel has been much debated, established principles of state succession[60] and human rights law confirm that the denationalization of Palestinians was illegal and that they retain the right to return to their places of origin.[59]

On March 15, 2000, a group of 100 prominent Palestinians from around the world expressed their opinion that the right of return is individual, rather than collective, and that it cannot therefore be reduced or forfeited by any representation on behalf of the Palestinians in any agreement or treaty. They argued that the right to property "cannot be extinguished by new sovereignty or occupation and does not have a statute of limitation", and asserted that "it is according to this principle that the European Jews claimed successfully the restitution of their lost property in World War II". Their declaration partly rested on the assertion that, on certain occasions, Palestinians were expelled from their homes in Israel. The declaration placed the number of towns and villages in which this occurred at 531.[61]

Some American libertarians have argued for the Palestinian right of return largely from a private property rights perspective. In "Property Rights and the 'Right of Return'", professor Richard Ebeling writes: "If a settlement is reached between the Israelis and the Palestinians, justice would suggest that all legitimate property should be returned to their rightful owners and that residence by those owners on their property should be once again permitted."[62] Attorney Stephen Halbrook in "The Alienation of a Homeland: How Palestine Became Israel" writes: "Palestinian Arabs have the rights to return to their homes and estates taken over by Israelis, to receive just compensation for loss of life and property, and to exercise national self-determination."[63] In "War Guilt in the Middle East" Murray Rothbard details Israel's "aggression against Middle East Arabs", confiscatory policies and its "refusal to let these refugees return and reclaim the property taken from them".[64]

Palestinian and international authors have justified the right of return of the Palestinian refugees on several grounds:[65][66][67]

  • Several authors included in the broader New Historians assert that the Palestinian refugees were chased out or expelled by the actions of the Jewish militant groups Haganah, Lehi and Irgun.[68][69]

A report from the military intelligence SHAI of the Haganah entitled "The emigration of Palestinian Arabs in the period 1/12/1947 – 1/6/1948", dated 30 June 1948 affirms that up to 1 June 1948:

"At least 55% of the total of the exodus was caused by our (Haganah/IDF) operations." To this figure, the report's compilers add the operations of the Irgun and Lehi, which "directly (caused) some 15%... of the emigration". A further 2% was attributed to explicit expulsion orders issued by Israeli troops, and 1% to their psychological warfare. This leads to a figure of 73% for departures caused directly by the Israelis. In addition, the report attributes 22% of the departures to "fears" and "a crisis of confidence" affecting the Palestinian population. As for Arab calls for flight, these were reckoned to be significant in only 5% of cases...[70][71][72][verify quotation]

Objectors' viewpoints

Objectors to a Palestinian right of return contend that such a right would destroy Israel as a Jewish state as it would leave Jews a minority in Israel. In a two-state solution framework, this would leave Israel as a bi-national state with a Jewish minority with an additional Palestinian state. Israelis see this demand as inherently contradicting the "two states for two peoples solution", and this has caused many Israelis to believe Israeli–Palestinian peace is not possible.[73]

Opponents of the right of return reject it partly based on the following sources:

  • There is no formal mechanism in international law to demand repatriation of refugees and their descendants in general, or Palestinians specifically. No international legislation, binding UN resolutions or agreements between Israel and the Palestinians require this.[74] Including:
  • That United Nations Security Council Resolution 242 does not mention a right of return or any other arrangement as a mandatory solution, and only calls for a "just settlement" to the refugee issue. According to Ruth Lapidoth, this also includes the issue of Jewish refugees from Arab and Muslim nations.[75][76]
  • That the Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees makes no mention of descendants and that the convention ceases to apply to a person who, inter alia, has acquired a new nationality.[77]

Israeli official statements and many accounts from supporters have long claimed that the 1948 refugee crisis was instigated by the invading Arab armies who ordered Palestinian civilians to evacuate the battle zone in order to allow the Arab armies freedom to operate. Israel officially denies any responsibility for the Palestinian exodus, stating that their flight was caused by the Arab invasion.[78]

Opponents of the right of return, such as Efraim Karsh, say that Israel is therefore not obligated to compensate Palestinians or allow them to return.[79] Karsh writes that the Palestinians were not the victims of a "Zionist grand design to dispossess them" but rather were "the aggressors in the 1948–49 war" and as such are responsible for the refugee problem. Karsh does not deny that some Palestinians were forcibly expelled, but places the blame for the bulk of the exodus on Palestinian and Arab elites and leaders who, he writes, fled prior to April 1948 and caused a "stampede effect". Karsh writes that Arab leaders and/or Arab military forces drove out huge numbers of Palestinians from their homes. Karsh states that most Palestinians chose their status as refugees themselves, and therefore Israel is absolved of responsibility.[79] Benny Morris argues that the newly formed Israeli state viewed, and rightly so in his view, the Palestinian refugees as enemies "who had just attacked the Jewish community" and if they were allowed to return could form a fifth column. He views the refugee problem as consequence of a war that they instigated.[80][81]

Some critics of the Palestinian right of return also argue that it is not supported by international precedent, drawing attention to the 758,000–866,000 Jews who were expelled, fled or emigrated from the Arab Middle East and North Africa between 1945 and 1956. These critics argue that since these refugees were neither compensated nor allowed return—to no objection on the part of Arab leaders or international legal authorities—the international community had accepted this migration of Jews as fait accompli, and thereby set legal precedent in the region against a right of return.[82] Former Israeli foreign minister Moshe Sharett asserted that the migration of refugees between Israel and the Arab world essentially constituted a population exchange. He argued that precedent, such as the exchange of 2.5 million people between Poland and the Soviet Union, as well as the 13 million Hindus and Muslims who crossed the IndiaPakistan border, showed that international law neither requires nor expects the reversal of population exchanges. He further argued that precedent does not require reversal even of one-directional refugee migrations, such as the expulsion of 900,000 Germans from Czechoslovakia following World War II. In Sharett's view, Israel was singled out as the exception to international law.[82]

Ruth Lapidoth has argued that U.N. General Assembly Resolution 194 does not specify a "right", but rather says refugees "should" be allowed to return. She has also noted that General Assembly resolutions are not legally binding on member states, and that this particular resolution based its recommendations on two conditions: that refugees wish to return, and that they be willing to "live at peace with their neighbors". She argues that the latter condition is unfulfilled, citing the actions of Palestinian militant groups. She concludes that Palestinian refugees have right to seek a negotiated compensation, but not a "right of return".[74]

According to Lapidoth, Stig Jägerskiöld in 1966 said that the right of return was intended as an individual and not a collective right, and that "there was no intention here to address the claims of masses of people who have been displaced as a by-product of war or by political transfers of territory or population, such as the relocation of ethnic Germans from Eastern Europe during and after the Second World War, the flight of the Palestinians from what became Israel, or the movement of Jews from the Arab countries".[74][83][84]

Andrew Kent, a Professor at Fordham University Law School, argues that Israel is not obligated to accept a Palestinian right of return, as international law at the time the 1948 Palestinian exodus occurred did not render Israeli actions illegal, with documents cited by proponents of the right of return such as the Fourth Geneva Convention and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights coming into force after the Palestinian exodus had taken place. Kent argues that these documents do not apply, as international law almost never applies retroactively. Kent concedes that international law almost certainly would mandate a right of return if a refugee displacement under similar circumstances were to occur today.[85]

Anthony Oberschall has argued that a full right of return by refugees and their descendants to their original homes would create chaos as the original Palestinian villages no longer exist and in their place are Israeli homes and property, writing that "the townhouses, villages, farms, olive groves, and pastures of 1948 do not exist anymore. They have become Israeli towns, apartment blocks, shopping centers, industrial parks, agribusinesses, and highways." He further argues that a settlement between two warring people would ideally have a separation between them and their respective states.[86]

Bearing on the peace process

The argument over the existence of such a right has perpetuated the Israeli–Palestinian conflict, and the failure of the peace process is due, in large part, to the inability of the two parties to achieve a solution with justice for both sides.

The majority of Palestinians consider that their homeland was lost during the establishment of Israel in 1948, and see the right of return as crucial to a peace agreement with Israel, even if the vast majority of surviving refugees and their descendants do not exercise that right. The Palestinians consider the vast majority of refugees as victims of Israeli ethnic cleansing during the 1948 Arab–Israeli War, and cite massacres such as Deir Yassin. All Palestinian political and militant groups, both Islamist and socialist, strongly support a right of return. The Palestinian National Authority views the right of return as a non-negotiable right.

Almost all Israeli Jews oppose a literal right of return for Palestinian refugees on the grounds that allowing such an influx of Palestinians would render Jews a minority in Israel, thus transforming Israel into an Arab-Muslim state. In addition to the right-wing and center, a majority of the Israeli left, including the far-left, opposes the right of return on these grounds. The Israeli left is generally open to compromise on the issue, and supports resolving it by means such as financial compensation, family reunification initiatives, and the admittance of a highly limited number of refugees to Israel, but is opposed to a full right of return.[87] The vast majority of Israelis believe that all or almost all of the refugees should be resettled in a Palestinian state, their countries of residence, or third-party countries. The Israeli political leadership has consistently opposed the right of return, but it has made offers of compensation, assistance in resettlement, and return for an extremely limited number of refugees based on family reunification or humanitarian considerations during peace talks.

Israel's first offer of any limited right of return came at the 1949 Lausanne Conference, when it offered to allow 100,000 refugees to return, though not necessarily to their homes, including 25,000 who had returned surreptitiously and 10,000 family-reunion cases. The proposal was conditioned on a peace treaty that would allow Israel to retain territory it had captured which had been allocated to a proposed Palestinian state, and the Arab states absorbing the remaining 550,000–650,000 refugees. The Arabs rejected the proposal on both moral and political grounds, and Israel quickly withdrew its limited offer. At the 2000 Camp David summit 52 years following Israeli independence, Israel offered to set up an international fund for the compensation for the property which had been lost by 1948 Palestinian refugees, to which Israel would contribute. Israel offered to allow 100,000 refugees to return on the basis of humanitarian considerations or family reunification. All other refugees would be resettled in their present places of residents, the Palestinian state, or in third-party countries, with Israel contributing $30 billion to fund their resettlement. During this time, most of the original refugees had already died without any compensation. Israel demanded that in exchange, Arafat forever abandon the right of return, and Arafat's refusal has been cited as one of the leading causes of the summit's failure.

The Palestinian right of return had been one of the issues whose solution had been deferred until the "final status agreement" in the Oslo Accords of 1993. Not only was there no final status agreement, but the Oslo process itself broke down, and its failure was a major cause of the Second Intifada and the continuing violence.

In 2003, during the Road map for peace, Israeli Foreign Minister Silvan Shalom stated that the establishment of a Palestinian state was conditional upon waiving the right of return. Prime Minister Ariel Sharon said that the Palestinian Authority must also drop its demand for the right of return, calling it "a recipe for Israel's destruction".[88]

In 2008, the Palestinian Authority issued a statement "calling on all Palestinians living abroad to converge on Israel by land, sea and air" to mark Israel's 60 anniversary.[89][failed verificationsee discussion]

Historic attempts at resolution

 
Identification Card of Ahmad Said, a Palestinian refugee

Since the Palestinian exodus of 1948, there have been many attempts to resolve the right of return dispute. These have produced minor results at best.

In 1949, Mark Etheridge, the American representative to the United Nations Conciliation Commission (UNCC), suggested that Israel agree to grant full citizenship to the 70,000 Arab residents in the Gaza Strip, as well as its 200,000 refugees, on the condition that the Gaza Strip—then part of Egypt—be incorporated into Israel. Israel's delegation to the UNCC accepted this offer, although this plan was rejected and criticized by Arab government, the United States, and even Israel's own government.[90]

In the Lausanne Conference, Israel announced to the UNCC on August 3, 1949, that it would allow up to 100,000 Palestinian refugees to return into Israel. But this plan was not designed as a panacea for the refugee crisis. Rather, it was to "form a part of a general plan for resettlement of refugees which would be established by a special organ to be created … by the United Nations." Israel reserved the right to permit settlement of the refugees only in areas in which settlement would not be detrimental to the security and economy of the state. The UNCC and Arab governments communicated unofficially at the matter. The Arab governments agreed to the offer, but under drastically different terms: that it apply only to the area originally allotted to Israel under the Partition Plan, that all refugees originating from areas allotted to Arabs or under international control be immediately allowed to return to their homes, and that Israel exercise no control over the location of resettlement. Since the parties failed to agree on the terms of the measure, it died in July of the following year, as Israeli Foreign Minister Moshe Sharett declared: "The context in which that offer was made has disappeared, and Israel is no longer bound by that offer."[90]

On August 23, 1949, the United States sent Gordon R. Clapp, chairman of the board of the Tennessee Valley Authority, on the Clapp Mission. This mission was tasked with economic surveying, to estimate Arab states' capability of absorbing Palestinian refugees. This mission failed dramatically in achieving this goal. Clapp explained on February 16, 1950, in front of the American House Foreign Affairs Committee: "Resettlement was a subject that the Arab governments were not willing to discuss, with the exception of King Abdallah [sic]". The mission concluded that, although repatriation would be the best solution to the refugee question, circumstances on the ground would only allow philanthropic relief. Moreover, it recommended that this relief be limited to four small pilot projects: in Jordan, the West Bank, Lebanon, and Syria.[91]

On December 2, 1950, the United Nations General Assembly passed resolution 393 by a vote of 46 in favor, 0 against, 6 abstaining.[92] This resolution allocated, for the period 1 July 1951 to 30 June 1952, "not less than the equivalent of $30,000,000" for the economic reintegration of Palestinian refugees in the Near East "either by repatriation or resettlement", their permanent re-establishment and removal from relief, "without prejudice to the provisions of paragraph 11 of General Assembly Resolution 194".[93] Toward this goal, Israel donated the equivalent of $2.8 million, and Arab states pledged almost $600,000. The United States accounted for the greatest pledge with $25 million.[92]

On November 29, 1951, John B. Blandford Jr., then director of UNRWA, proposed spending $50 million on relief for Palestinian refugees, and another $200 million on their integration into the communities where they resided. The New York Times reported that Blandford aspired to see 150,000 to 250,000 refugees resettled in Arab nations by building an economic infrastructure which would make their integration more plausible and sustainable for Arab societies. On January 26, 1952, the General Assembly accepted his proposal. In 1955, Henry Richardson Labouisse, who had by that time become UNRWA's third director, reported that "Resistance to self-support programmes is particularly evident in the case of large-scale development projects, since the latter inevitably appear to the refugees to carry serious political implications. Their cost, size and consequent permanence raise in the minds of the refugees the fear that to accept settlement on them will be tantamount to giving up the hope of repatriation."[94]

In 2002, former representative of the Palestinian Liberation Organization Sari Nusseibeh proposed a settlement between Israel and Palestine which would grant Palestinians a right of return to a Palestinian state, but not to Israel. The proposal failed.[95]

The 2003 Geneva Accord, which was an agreement between individuals and not between official representatives of the government of Israel and the Palestinian people, completely relinquished the idea of a Right of Return. This document is extra-governmental and, therefore, unofficial and non-binding.[95]

In 2013, Boston University hosted the Right of Return conference.[96]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Arabic: حق العودة الفلسطيني, romanizedḤaqq al-ʻAwdah al-Filasṭīnī; often shortened as العودة, al-ʻAwdah or al-Awda

References

  1. ^ Lavie, Aviv (12 August 2004). "Right of remembrance". Haaretz.
  2. ^ "Palestinians mark Al-Naqba Day". CBC. 15 May 2005.
  3. ^ a b "U.S. State Department Affirms Support for 5 Million 'Palestinian Refugees'". The Algemeiner. 30 May 2012. Retrieved 31 May 2012. [U.S.] Deputy Secretary of State Tom Nides (..) affirmed the State Department's view on the number of Palestinian refugees (..) that the UN and Works Agency for Palestinian Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) "provides essential services for approximately 5 million refugees," (..) Middle East Forum founder Daniel Pipes recently noted in an op-ed for Israel Hayom that only 1 percent of the refugees served by UNRWA fit the agency's definition of "people whose normal place of residence was Palestine between June 1946 and May 1948, who lost both their homes and means of livelihood as a result of the 1948 Arab-Israeli conflict." The other 99 percent are descendants of refugees.
  4. ^ Goldberg, Ari Ben (25 May 2012). "US Senate dramatically scales down definition of Palestinian 'refugees'". The Times of Israel. Retrieved 13 March 2024. According to the United Nations Relief and Works Agency – the main body tasked with providing assistance to Palestinian refugees – there are more than 5 million refugees at present. However, the number of Palestinians alive who were personally displaced during Israel's War of Independence is estimated to be around 30,000
  5. ^ Adelman, Howard; Barkan, Elazar (2011). No Return, No Refuge: Rites and Rights in Minority Repatriation. Columbia University Press. p. 203. ISBN 978-0-231-15336-2. As indicated earlier, the formulation of the right of return first appeared in Count Bernadotte's proposal of 27 June 1948... Bernadotte, who can correctly be viewed as the father of the right to return... But the murder of Bernadotte froze any further discussions on formulating a policy of resettlement.
  6. ^ a b Universal Declaration of Human Rights, Article 13 at WikiSource.
  7. ^ Abu-Laban, Yasmeen; Bakan, Abigail B. (9 September 2008). "The racial contract: Israel/Palestine and Canada". Social Identities. 14 (5): 637–660. doi:10.1080/13504630802343481. S2CID 143510358.
  8. ^ Sharnoff, Michael (13 October 2008). "Palestinian 'Right of Return' is not 'Inalienable'". Jewish Policy Center. Retrieved 13 March 2024.
  9. ^ Lapidoth, Ruth (15 January 2001). "Do Palestinian Refugees Have a Right to Return to Israel?". Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Retrieved 13 March 2024.
  10. ^ "Israel News - Online Israeli News Covering Israel & The Jewish World …". 8 July 2012. Archived from the original on 8 July 2012.
  11. ^ Yiftachel 2006, p. 58
  12. ^ Kimmerling 2003, p. 23
  13. ^ McDowall 1989, p. 84
  14. ^ Bowker 2003, p. 81
  15. ^ Arzt, Donna E. (1997). Refugees Into Citizens: Palestinians and the End of the Arab-Israeli Conflict. The Council on Foreign Relations. p. 17. ISBN 0-87609-194-X.
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  17. ^ a b c "The Palestinian Diaspora". Le Monde Diplomatique (in English). from the original on 16 June 2002. Retrieved 5 September 2007.
  18. ^ Schulz 2003, p. 141
  19. ^ Text of a statement made by Moshe Sharett on 1 August 1948, included in (PDF). 2 August 1948. Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 September 2008.
  20. ^ Benny Morris (2004), pp.138-139.
  21. ^ Benny Morris (2004), p.262
  22. ^ Benny Morris (2004), pp.233–240.
  23. ^ Benny Morris (2004), pp.248–252.
  24. ^ Benny Morris (2004), p.448.
  25. ^ Benny Morris (2004), pp.423–436.
  26. ^ Benny Morris (2004), p.438.
  27. ^ Benny Morris (2004), pp.415–423.
  28. ^ Benny Morris (2004), p.492.
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External links

  • Al Awda, The Palestinian Right to Return Coalition.
  • Right of return: Palestinian dream?, BBC News Online.
  • VIDEO: Muhammad Jaradat and Eitan Bronstein - "Acknowledging the Past; Imagining the Future: Israelis and Palestinians on 1948 and the Right of Return", April 1, 2008, Portland, Oregon. Eitan Bronstein of the Jewish Israeli group, Zochrot, and Muhammad Jaradat of the Badil Resource Center for Palestinian Residency and Refugees' Rights.

palestinian, right, return, confused, with, israeli, right, return, awda, redirects, here, other, uses, awda, disambiguation, political, position, principle, that, palestinian, refugees, both, first, generation, refugees, people, still, alive, 2012, update, th. Not to be confused with the Israeli right of return Al Awda redirects here For other uses see Awda disambiguation The Palestinian right of return a is the political position or principle that Palestinian refugees both first generation refugees c 30 000 to 50 000 people still alive as of 2012 update 3 4 and their descendants c 5 million people as of 2012 update 3 have a right to return and a right to the property they themselves or their forebears left behind or were forced to leave in what is now Israel and the Palestinian territories both formerly part of the British Mandate of Palestine during the 1948 Palestinian expulsion and flight a result of the 1948 Palestine war and the 1967 Six Day War This artwork is titled Resolution 194 after the namesake UN General Assembly resolution The keys symbolize those kept as mementos by many Palestinians who left their homes in 1948 Such keys and the Handala are common Palestinian symbols of support for the right of return 1 2 The right of return was initially formulated on 27 June 1948 by United Nations mediator Folke Bernadotte 5 Proponents of the right of return hold that it is a human right whose applicability both generally and specifically to the Palestinians is protected under international law 6 This view holds that those who opt not to return or for whom return is not feasible should receive compensation Proponents argue that Israel s opposition stands in contrast with its Law of Return that grants all Jews the right to settle permanently while withholding any comparable right from Palestinians 7 Opponents of the right of return hold that it is an unrealistic demand with no basis in international law and that if Israel were to absorb approximately five million Palestinians with an already existing large Arab population it would lead to the demise of the Jewish state 8 The government of Israel does not view the admission of Palestinian refugees to their former homes in Israel as a right but rather as a political issue to be resolved as part of a final peace settlement 9 10 failed verification see discussion Contents 1 Background 1 1 Overview 1 2 1948 Palestinian exodus 1 3 Causes and responsibilities 1 4 Absentees property 1 5 1967 Palestinian exodus 1 6 Relationship to Jewish exodus from Arab countries 1 7 Hometown return 2 UN General Assembly Resolution 194 2 1 Article 11 Palestinian Refugees 2 2 Interpretations 3 Scope of the issue 3 1 Supporters viewpoints 3 2 Objectors viewpoints 4 Bearing on the peace process 5 Historic attempts at resolution 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Sources 10 External linksBackgroundOverview The number of Palestinian refugees of the 1948 war is estimated at between 700 000 and 800 000 and another 280 000 to 350 000 people were refugees of the 1967 war 11 12 13 14 Approximately 120 000 170 000 among the 1967 refugees are believed to have also been refugees from the 1948 war fleeing a second time 15 Today the estimated number of Palestinian refugees and their descendants exceeds four million 16 The right of return has been of great importance to Palestinians since then 17 The first formal recognition of a right of return was in UN General Assembly Resolution 194 passed on 11 December 1948 which provided Article 11 Resolves that the refugees wishing to return to their homes and live at peace with their neighbours should be permitted to do so at the earliest practicable date and that compensation should be paid for the property of those choosing not to return and for loss of or damage to property which under principles of international law or in equity should be made good by the Governments or authorities responsible The UN General Assembly Resolution 3236 passed on 22 November 1974 declared the right of return to be an inalienable right 17 The right of return was defined as the foremost of Palestinian rights at the 12th Palestine National Council meeting in 1974 when it became the first component of the Palestine Liberation Organization s trinity of inalienable rights along with the right of self determination and the right to an independent state 18 Since the birth of the refugee problem Israel has consistently rejected the idea that Palestinians would have any inherent right of return In June 1948 the Israeli government stated its position which was reiterated in a letter to the United Nations on 2 August 1949 that a solution to the Palestinian refugee problem must be sought not through the return of the refugees to Israel but through the resettlement of the Palestinian Arab refugee population in other states 19 1948 Palestinian exodus Main article 1948 Palestinian exodus See also Killings and massacres during the 1948 Palestine War The Palestinian refugee problem started during the 1948 Palestine War when between 700 000 and 800 000 Arabs left fled or were expelled from their homes in the area that would become Israel They settled in refugee camps in Transjordan Lebanon Syria Egypt and in the West Bank and the Gaza strip that were occupied by Transjordan and Egypt during the war From December 1947 to March 1948 around 100 000 Palestinians left Among them were many from the upper and middle classes from the cities who left voluntarily expecting to return when the situation had calmed down 20 From April to July between 250 000 and 300 000 fled in front of Haganah offensives mainly from the towns of Haifa Tiberias Beit Shean Safed Jaffa and Acre that lost more than 90 of their Arab inhabitants 21 Some expulsions arose particularly along the Tel Aviv Jerusalem road 22 and in Eastern Galilee 23 After the truce of June about 100 000 Palestinians became refugees 24 About 50 000 inhabitants of Lydda and Ramle were expelled towards Ramallah by Israeli forces during Operation Danny 25 and most others during clearing operations performed by the IDF on its rear areas 26 During Operation Dekel the Arabs of Nazareth and South Galilee could remain in their homes 27 They later formed the core of the Arab Israelis From October to November 1948 the IDF launched Operation Yoav to chase Egyptian forces from the Negev and Operation Hiram to chase the Arab Liberation Army from North Galilee This generated an exodus of 200 000 to 220 000 Palestinians Here Arabs fled fearing atrocities or were expelled if they had not fled 28 During Operation Hiram at least nine massacres of Arabs were performed by IDF soldiers 29 After the war from 1948 to 1950 the IDF cleared its borders which resulted in the expulsion of around 30 000 to 40 000 Arabs 30 The United Nations estimated the number of refugees outside Israel at 711 000 31 No Arab country except Jordan has to date assimilated a significant population of Palestinian refugees nor given them full citizenship and many rely on economic aid from the UN or persons in other countries citation needed It is the position of most Arab governments not to grant citizenship to the Palestinian refugees born within their borders this policy is in part due to the wishes of these Arab states for Palestinians to be allowed to return to their homes within Israel in part due to these states wishing to relieve themselves of the refugees 32 better source needed Causes and responsibilities Main article Causes of the 1948 Palestinian exodus The causes and responsibilities of the exodus are a matter of controversy among historians and commentators of the conflict 33 Although historians now agree on most of the events of that period there is still disagreement on whether the exodus was due to a plan designed before or during the war by Zionist leaders or whether it was an unintended result of the war 34 Absentees property Main article Israeli land and property laws During the Palestinian exodus Israeli leaders decided against the return of the refugees During her visit at Haifa on May 1 1948 Golda Meir declared The Jews should treat the remaining Arabs with civil and human equality but it is not our job to worry about the return of those who have fled 35 A group consisting of local authorities the kibbutz movements the settlement departments of the National institutions Haganah commanders and influential figures such as Yosef Weitz and Ezra Danin started lobbying against repatriation 36 A Transfer Committee and a policy of faits accomplis were set up to prevent a refugee return 37 In July it had become an official policy 38 Absentees property was managed by Israeli government and numerous Palestinian villages were leveled A parallel has been drawn by some commentators between the state and private restitutions made from Germany to Israel over Holocaust confiscations and the compensation due to Palestinians evicted in the formation of Israel 39 Others have compared Palestinians claims for compensation to the claims of ethnic Germans who were expelled from eastern Europe in the aftermath of the Holocaust and World War II 40 In 1945 of 26 4 million dunams of land in Mandate Palestine 12 8 million was owned by Arabs 1 5 million by Jews 1 5 million was public land and 10 6 million constituted the desertic Beersheba district Negev 41 42 By 1949 Israel controlled 20 5 million dunams approx 20 500 km2 or 78 of lands in what had been Mandate Palestine 8 approx 1 650 km2 were privately controlled by Jews 6 approx 1 300 km2 by Arabs with the remaining 86 was public land 43 1967 Palestinian exodus Main article 1967 Palestinian exodus During the Six Day War another Palestinian exodus occurred An estimated 280 000 to 350 000 44 Palestinians fled or were expelled 45 from the West Bank the Gaza Strip and the Golan Heights as a result of the Six Day War approximately 120 000 170 000 among them were believed to also be refugees from the first war fleeing a second time 46 Relationship to Jewish exodus from Arab countries Main article Jewish exodus from Arab and Muslim countries nbsp Yemenite Jews en route from Aden to Israel A comparison is often made between the situation of Palestinian refugees and the exodus of Jews from Arab countries who are now in Israel or elsewhere It is estimated that 800 000 to 1 000 000 Jews were either forced from their homes or left the Arab countries from 1948 until the early 1970s 260 000 reached Israel between 1948 and 1951 and 600 000 by 1972 47 48 49 In 2000 Bobby Brown advisor to prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Diaspora affairs and delegates from the World Jewish Congress and the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations began an intensive campaign to secure official political and legal recognition of Jews from Arab lands as refugees The campaign s proponents hoped their efforts would prevent acceptance of the right of return to Palestinians and reduce the amount of compensation that would be paid by Israel for appropriated Palestinian property 50 Then president of the United States Bill Clinton gave an interview in July 2000 to Israel s Channel One and disclosed an agreement to recognize Jews from Arab lands as refugees while Ehud Barak hailed it as an achievement in an interview with Dan Margalit In 2002 the organization Justice for Jews from Arab Countries JJAC was created and its Founding Congress Election of a Board of Directors Finalized By Laws for the organization etc met in London in June 2008 Beginning in November 2008 they planned to undertake major initiatives and that in 2009 they would hold a national conference in Israel 51 Their achievement to date is described as having returned the issue of Jews from Arab countries to the agenda of the Middle East Hometown return In November 2012 Palestinian Authority President Mahmud Abbas repeated his stance that the claim of return was not to his original hometown but to a Palestinian state that would be established at the 1967 border line Hamas denounced this adjustment 52 53 Abbas later clarified for the Arab media that this was his own personal opinion and not a policy of giving up the right of return Israeli politicians denounced the clarification 54 UN General Assembly Resolution 194Main article United Nations General Assembly Resolution 194 The issue of the right of return of Palestinian refugees has been a very sensitive issue for Palestinians and Arab countries in the region since the creation of the refugee problem as a result of the 1948 Arab Israeli War 17 The United Nations UN General Assembly Resolution 194 55 which was passed on December 11 1948 recognized the right of return for the first time Resolution 194 also deals with the situation in the region of Palestine at that time establishing and defining the role of the United Nations Conciliation Commission as an organization to facilitate peace in the region Article 11 Palestinian Refugees Within United Nations General Assembly Resolution 194 1948 it is mainly Article 11 which deals with the return of Palestinian refugees Article 11 of the resolution reads The General Assembly Resolves that the refugees wishing to return to their homes and live at peace with their neighbours should be permitted to do so at the earliest practicable date and that compensation should be paid for the property of those choosing not to return and for loss of or damage to property which under principles of international law or in equity should be made good by the Governments or authorities responsible Interpretations The exact meaning and timing of enforcement of the resolution were disputed from the beginning Since the late 1960s Article 11 has increasingly been quoted by those who interpret it as a basis for the right of return of Palestinian refugees Israel has always contested this reading pointing out that the text merely states that the refugees should be permitted to return to their homes at the earliest practicable date and this recommendation applies only to those wishing to live at peace with their neighbors citation needed In particular David Ben Gurion the first Prime Minister of Israel insisted in an interview with the members of the Conciliations Commission that as long as Israel could not count on the dedication of any Arab refugees to remain at peace with their neighbors a consequence he contended of the Arab states unwillingness to remain at peace with the state of Israel resettlement was not an obligation for his country 31 Scope of the issueSupporters viewpoints nbsp Protester with Right of Return poster Washington DC 2009 Supporters of the right of return assert it partly based on the following sources Everyone has the right to leave any country including his own and to return to his country Article 13 2 Universal Declaration of Human Rights 10 December 1948 6 56 The Geneva Conventions of 1949 56 United Nations General Assembly Resolution 3236 which reaffirms also the inalienable right of the Palestinians to return to their homes and property from which they have been displaced and uprooted and calls for their return 57 United Nations Security Council Resolution 242 affirms the necessity for achieving a just settlement of the refugee problem 58 57 According to Akram 59 although the status of Palestinian nationals citizens after the creation of the State of Israel has been much debated established principles of state succession 60 and human rights law confirm that the denationalization of Palestinians was illegal and that they retain the right to return to their places of origin 59 On March 15 2000 a group of 100 prominent Palestinians from around the world expressed their opinion that the right of return is individual rather than collective and that it cannot therefore be reduced or forfeited by any representation on behalf of the Palestinians in any agreement or treaty They argued that the right to property cannot be extinguished by new sovereignty or occupation and does not have a statute of limitation and asserted that it is according to this principle that the European Jews claimed successfully the restitution of their lost property in World War II Their declaration partly rested on the assertion that on certain occasions Palestinians were expelled from their homes in Israel The declaration placed the number of towns and villages in which this occurred at 531 61 Some American libertarians have argued for the Palestinian right of return largely from a private property rights perspective In Property Rights and the Right of Return professor Richard Ebeling writes If a settlement is reached between the Israelis and the Palestinians justice would suggest that all legitimate property should be returned to their rightful owners and that residence by those owners on their property should be once again permitted 62 Attorney Stephen Halbrook in The Alienation of a Homeland How Palestine Became Israel writes Palestinian Arabs have the rights to return to their homes and estates taken over by Israelis to receive just compensation for loss of life and property and to exercise national self determination 63 In War Guilt in the Middle East Murray Rothbard details Israel s aggression against Middle East Arabs confiscatory policies and its refusal to let these refugees return and reclaim the property taken from them 64 Palestinian and international authors have justified the right of return of the Palestinian refugees on several grounds 65 66 67 Several authors included in the broader New Historians assert that the Palestinian refugees were chased out or expelled by the actions of the Jewish militant groups Haganah Lehi and Irgun 68 69 A report from the military intelligence SHAI of the Haganah entitled The emigration of Palestinian Arabs in the period 1 12 1947 1 6 1948 dated 30 June 1948 affirms that up to 1 June 1948 At least 55 of the total of the exodus was caused by our Haganah IDF operations To this figure the report s compilers add the operations of the Irgun and Lehi which directly caused some 15 of the emigration A further 2 was attributed to explicit expulsion orders issued by Israeli troops and 1 to their psychological warfare This leads to a figure of 73 for departures caused directly by the Israelis In addition the report attributes 22 of the departures to fears and a crisis of confidence affecting the Palestinian population As for Arab calls for flight these were reckoned to be significant in only 5 of cases 70 71 72 verify quotation Objectors viewpoints Objectors to a Palestinian right of return contend that such a right would destroy Israel as a Jewish state as it would leave Jews a minority in Israel In a two state solution framework this would leave Israel as a bi national state with a Jewish minority with an additional Palestinian state Israelis see this demand as inherently contradicting the two states for two peoples solution and this has caused many Israelis to believe Israeli Palestinian peace is not possible 73 Opponents of the right of return reject it partly based on the following sources There is no formal mechanism in international law to demand repatriation of refugees and their descendants in general or Palestinians specifically No international legislation binding UN resolutions or agreements between Israel and the Palestinians require this 74 Including That United Nations Security Council Resolution 242 does not mention a right of return or any other arrangement as a mandatory solution and only calls for a just settlement to the refugee issue According to Ruth Lapidoth this also includes the issue of Jewish refugees from Arab and Muslim nations 75 76 That the Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees makes no mention of descendants and that the convention ceases to apply to a person who inter alia has acquired a new nationality 77 Israeli official statements and many accounts from supporters have long claimed that the 1948 refugee crisis was instigated by the invading Arab armies who ordered Palestinian civilians to evacuate the battle zone in order to allow the Arab armies freedom to operate Israel officially denies any responsibility for the Palestinian exodus stating that their flight was caused by the Arab invasion 78 Opponents of the right of return such as Efraim Karsh say that Israel is therefore not obligated to compensate Palestinians or allow them to return 79 Karsh writes that the Palestinians were not the victims of a Zionist grand design to dispossess them but rather were the aggressors in the 1948 49 war and as such are responsible for the refugee problem Karsh does not deny that some Palestinians were forcibly expelled but places the blame for the bulk of the exodus on Palestinian and Arab elites and leaders who he writes fled prior to April 1948 and caused a stampede effect Karsh writes that Arab leaders and or Arab military forces drove out huge numbers of Palestinians from their homes Karsh states that most Palestinians chose their status as refugees themselves and therefore Israel is absolved of responsibility 79 Benny Morris argues that the newly formed Israeli state viewed and rightly so in his view the Palestinian refugees as enemies who had just attacked the Jewish community and if they were allowed to return could form a fifth column He views the refugee problem as consequence of a war that they instigated 80 81 Some critics of the Palestinian right of return also argue that it is not supported by international precedent drawing attention to the 758 000 866 000 Jews who were expelled fled or emigrated from the Arab Middle East and North Africa between 1945 and 1956 These critics argue that since these refugees were neither compensated nor allowed return to no objection on the part of Arab leaders or international legal authorities the international community had accepted this migration of Jews as fait accompli and thereby set legal precedent in the region against a right of return 82 Former Israeli foreign minister Moshe Sharett asserted that the migration of refugees between Israel and the Arab world essentially constituted a population exchange He argued that precedent such as the exchange of 2 5 million people between Poland and the Soviet Union as well as the 13 million Hindus and Muslims who crossed the India Pakistan border showed that international law neither requires nor expects the reversal of population exchanges He further argued that precedent does not require reversal even of one directional refugee migrations such as the expulsion of 900 000 Germans from Czechoslovakia following World War II In Sharett s view Israel was singled out as the exception to international law 82 Ruth Lapidoth has argued that U N General Assembly Resolution 194 does not specify a right but rather says refugees should be allowed to return She has also noted that General Assembly resolutions are not legally binding on member states and that this particular resolution based its recommendations on two conditions that refugees wish to return and that they be willing to live at peace with their neighbors She argues that the latter condition is unfulfilled citing the actions of Palestinian militant groups She concludes that Palestinian refugees have right to seek a negotiated compensation but not a right of return 74 According to Lapidoth Stig Jagerskiold in 1966 said that the right of return was intended as an individual and not a collective right and that there was no intention here to address the claims of masses of people who have been displaced as a by product of war or by political transfers of territory or population such as the relocation of ethnic Germans from Eastern Europe during and after the Second World War the flight of the Palestinians from what became Israel or the movement of Jews from the Arab countries 74 83 84 Andrew Kent a Professor at Fordham University Law School argues that Israel is not obligated to accept a Palestinian right of return as international law at the time the 1948 Palestinian exodus occurred did not render Israeli actions illegal with documents cited by proponents of the right of return such as the Fourth Geneva Convention and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights coming into force after the Palestinian exodus had taken place Kent argues that these documents do not apply as international law almost never applies retroactively Kent concedes that international law almost certainly would mandate a right of return if a refugee displacement under similar circumstances were to occur today 85 Anthony Oberschall has argued that a full right of return by refugees and their descendants to their original homes would create chaos as the original Palestinian villages no longer exist and in their place are Israeli homes and property writing that the townhouses villages farms olive groves and pastures of 1948 do not exist anymore They have become Israeli towns apartment blocks shopping centers industrial parks agribusinesses and highways He further argues that a settlement between two warring people would ideally have a separation between them and their respective states 86 Bearing on the peace processThe argument over the existence of such a right has perpetuated the Israeli Palestinian conflict and the failure of the peace process is due in large part to the inability of the two parties to achieve a solution with justice for both sides The majority of Palestinians consider that their homeland was lost during the establishment of Israel in 1948 and see the right of return as crucial to a peace agreement with Israel even if the vast majority of surviving refugees and their descendants do not exercise that right The Palestinians consider the vast majority of refugees as victims of Israeli ethnic cleansing during the 1948 Arab Israeli War and cite massacres such as Deir Yassin All Palestinian political and militant groups both Islamist and socialist strongly support a right of return The Palestinian National Authority views the right of return as a non negotiable right Almost all Israeli Jews oppose a literal right of return for Palestinian refugees on the grounds that allowing such an influx of Palestinians would render Jews a minority in Israel thus transforming Israel into an Arab Muslim state In addition to the right wing and center a majority of the Israeli left including the far left opposes the right of return on these grounds The Israeli left is generally open to compromise on the issue and supports resolving it by means such as financial compensation family reunification initiatives and the admittance of a highly limited number of refugees to Israel but is opposed to a full right of return 87 The vast majority of Israelis believe that all or almost all of the refugees should be resettled in a Palestinian state their countries of residence or third party countries The Israeli political leadership has consistently opposed the right of return but it has made offers of compensation assistance in resettlement and return for an extremely limited number of refugees based on family reunification or humanitarian considerations during peace talks Israel s first offer of any limited right of return came at the 1949 Lausanne Conference when it offered to allow 100 000 refugees to return though not necessarily to their homes including 25 000 who had returned surreptitiously and 10 000 family reunion cases The proposal was conditioned on a peace treaty that would allow Israel to retain territory it had captured which had been allocated to a proposed Palestinian state and the Arab states absorbing the remaining 550 000 650 000 refugees The Arabs rejected the proposal on both moral and political grounds and Israel quickly withdrew its limited offer At the 2000 Camp David summit 52 years following Israeli independence Israel offered to set up an international fund for the compensation for the property which had been lost by 1948 Palestinian refugees to which Israel would contribute Israel offered to allow 100 000 refugees to return on the basis of humanitarian considerations or family reunification All other refugees would be resettled in their present places of residents the Palestinian state or in third party countries with Israel contributing 30 billion to fund their resettlement During this time most of the original refugees had already died without any compensation Israel demanded that in exchange Arafat forever abandon the right of return and Arafat s refusal has been cited as one of the leading causes of the summit s failure The Palestinian right of return had been one of the issues whose solution had been deferred until the final status agreement in the Oslo Accords of 1993 Not only was there no final status agreement but the Oslo process itself broke down and its failure was a major cause of the Second Intifada and the continuing violence In 2003 during the Road map for peace Israeli Foreign Minister Silvan Shalom stated that the establishment of a Palestinian state was conditional upon waiving the right of return Prime Minister Ariel Sharon said that the Palestinian Authority must also drop its demand for the right of return calling it a recipe for Israel s destruction 88 In 2008 the Palestinian Authority issued a statement calling on all Palestinians living abroad to converge on Israel by land sea and air to mark Israel s 60 anniversary 89 failed verification see discussion Historic attempts at resolution nbsp Identification Card of Ahmad Said a Palestinian refugee Since the Palestinian exodus of 1948 there have been many attempts to resolve the right of return dispute These have produced minor results at best In 1949 Mark Etheridge the American representative to the United Nations Conciliation Commission UNCC suggested that Israel agree to grant full citizenship to the 70 000 Arab residents in the Gaza Strip as well as its 200 000 refugees on the condition that the Gaza Strip then part of Egypt be incorporated into Israel Israel s delegation to the UNCC accepted this offer although this plan was rejected and criticized by Arab government the United States and even Israel s own government 90 In the Lausanne Conference Israel announced to the UNCC on August 3 1949 that it would allow up to 100 000 Palestinian refugees to return into Israel But this plan was not designed as a panacea for the refugee crisis Rather it was to form a part of a general plan for resettlement of refugees which would be established by a special organ to be created by the United Nations Israel reserved the right to permit settlement of the refugees only in areas in which settlement would not be detrimental to the security and economy of the state The UNCC and Arab governments communicated unofficially at the matter The Arab governments agreed to the offer but under drastically different terms that it apply only to the area originally allotted to Israel under the Partition Plan that all refugees originating from areas allotted to Arabs or under international control be immediately allowed to return to their homes and that Israel exercise no control over the location of resettlement Since the parties failed to agree on the terms of the measure it died in July of the following year as Israeli Foreign Minister Moshe Sharett declared The context in which that offer was made has disappeared and Israel is no longer bound by that offer 90 On August 23 1949 the United States sent Gordon R Clapp chairman of the board of the Tennessee Valley Authority on the Clapp Mission This mission was tasked with economic surveying to estimate Arab states capability of absorbing Palestinian refugees This mission failed dramatically in achieving this goal Clapp explained on February 16 1950 in front of the American House Foreign Affairs Committee Resettlement was a subject that the Arab governments were not willing to discuss with the exception of King Abdallah sic The mission concluded that although repatriation would be the best solution to the refugee question circumstances on the ground would only allow philanthropic relief Moreover it recommended that this relief be limited to four small pilot projects in Jordan the West Bank Lebanon and Syria 91 On December 2 1950 the United Nations General Assembly passed resolution 393 by a vote of 46 in favor 0 against 6 abstaining 92 This resolution allocated for the period 1 July 1951 to 30 June 1952 not less than the equivalent of 30 000 000 for the economic reintegration of Palestinian refugees in the Near East either by repatriation or resettlement their permanent re establishment and removal from relief without prejudice to the provisions of paragraph 11 of General Assembly Resolution 194 93 Toward this goal Israel donated the equivalent of 2 8 million and Arab states pledged almost 600 000 The United States accounted for the greatest pledge with 25 million 92 On November 29 1951 John B Blandford Jr then director of UNRWA proposed spending 50 million on relief for Palestinian refugees and another 200 million on their integration into the communities where they resided The New York Times reported that Blandford aspired to see 150 000 to 250 000 refugees resettled in Arab nations by building an economic infrastructure which would make their integration more plausible and sustainable for Arab societies On January 26 1952 the General Assembly accepted his proposal In 1955 Henry Richardson Labouisse who had by that time become UNRWA s third director reported that Resistance to self support programmes is particularly evident in the case of large scale development projects since the latter inevitably appear to the refugees to carry serious political implications Their cost size and consequent permanence raise in the minds of the refugees the fear that to accept settlement on them will be tantamount to giving up the hope of repatriation 94 In 2002 former representative of the Palestinian Liberation Organization Sari Nusseibeh proposed a settlement between Israel and Palestine which would grant Palestinians a right of return to a Palestinian state but not to Israel The proposal failed 95 The 2003 Geneva Accord which was an agreement between individuals and not between official representatives of the government of Israel and the Palestinian people completely relinquished the idea of a Right of Return This document is extra governmental and therefore unofficial and non binding 95 In 2013 Boston University hosted the Right of Return conference 96 See alsoAl Awda ship Cham issue Israeli Palestinian conflict Law of Return List of Directors and Commissioners General of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East Palestinian return to Israel Repatriation Right of return Thawabit UN General Assembly Resolution 194Notes Arabic حق العودة الفلسطيني romanized Ḥaqq al ʻAwdah al Filasṭini often shortened as العودة al ʻAwdah or al AwdaReferences Lavie Aviv 12 August 2004 Right of remembrance Haaretz Palestinians mark Al Naqba Day CBC 15 May 2005 a b U S State Department Affirms Support for 5 Million Palestinian Refugees The Algemeiner 30 May 2012 Retrieved 31 May 2012 U S Deputy Secretary of State Tom Nides affirmed the State Department s view on the number of Palestinian refugees that the UN and Works Agency for Palestinian Refugees in the Near East UNRWA provides essential services for approximately 5 million refugees Middle East Forum founder Daniel Pipes recently noted in an op ed for Israel Hayom that only 1 percent of the refugees served by UNRWA fit the agency s definition of people whose normal place of residence was Palestine between June 1946 and May 1948 who lost both their homes and means of livelihood as a result of the 1948 Arab Israeli conflict The other 99 percent are descendants of refugees Goldberg Ari Ben 25 May 2012 US Senate dramatically scales down definition of Palestinian refugees The Times of Israel Retrieved 13 March 2024 According to the United Nations Relief and Works Agency the main body tasked with providing assistance to Palestinian refugees there are more than 5 million refugees at present However the number of Palestinians alive who were personally displaced during Israel s War of Independence is estimated to be around 30 000 Adelman Howard Barkan Elazar 2011 No Return No Refuge Rites and Rights in Minority Repatriation Columbia University Press p 203 ISBN 978 0 231 15336 2 As indicated earlier the formulation of the right of return first appeared in Count Bernadotte s proposal of 27 June 1948 Bernadotte who can correctly be viewed as the father of the right to return But the murder of Bernadotte froze any further discussions on formulating a policy of resettlement a b Universal Declaration of Human Rights Article 13 at WikiSource Abu Laban Yasmeen Bakan Abigail B 9 September 2008 The racial contract Israel Palestine and Canada Social Identities 14 5 637 660 doi 10 1080 13504630802343481 S2CID 143510358 Sharnoff Michael 13 October 2008 Palestinian Right of Return is not Inalienable Jewish Policy Center Retrieved 13 March 2024 Lapidoth Ruth 15 January 2001 Do Palestinian Refugees Have a Right to Return to Israel Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs Retrieved 13 March 2024 Israel News Online Israeli News Covering Israel amp The Jewish World 8 July 2012 Archived from the original on 8 July 2012 Yiftachel 2006 p 58 Kimmerling 2003 p 23 McDowall 1989 p 84 Bowker 2003 p 81 Arzt Donna E 1997 Refugees Into Citizens Palestinians and the End of the Arab Israeli Conflict The Council on Foreign Relations p 17 ISBN 0 87609 194 X Ishtayeh Nasser 7 May 2003 Palestinian premier rejects Israel s condition for talks Associated Press Archived from the original on 5 June 2003 Retrieved 7 September 2017 a b c The Palestinian Diaspora Le Monde Diplomatique in English Archived from the original on 16 June 2002 Retrieved 5 September 2007 Schulz 2003 p 141 Text of a statement made by Moshe Sharett on 1 August 1948 included in UN Doc IS 33 PDF 2 August 1948 Archived from the original PDF on 11 September 2008 Benny Morris 2004 pp 138 139 Benny Morris 2004 p 262 Benny Morris 2004 pp 233 240 Benny Morris 2004 pp 248 252 Benny Morris 2004 p 448 Benny Morris 2004 pp 423 436 Benny Morris 2004 p 438 Benny Morris 2004 pp 415 423 Benny Morris 2004 p 492 Benny Morris Righteous Victims First Arab Israeli War Operation Yoav Benny Morris 2004 p 538 a b General Progress Report and Supplementary Report of the United Nations Conciliation Commission for Palestine Covering the Period from 11 December 1949 to 23 October 1950 The United Nations 23 October 1950 Archived from the original on 13 August 2016 Retrieved 14 June 2007 Chomsky Noam 1983 The Fateful Triangle the United States Israel and the Palestinians Boston South End Press ISBN 0 89608 601 1 Shlaim Avi 1 December 2003 The War of the Israeli Historians users ox ac uk Retrieved 13 March 2024 Benny Morris 1989 The Birth of the Palestinian Refugee Problem 1947 1949 Cambridge University Press Benny Morris 1991 1948 and after Israel and the Palestinians Clarendon Press Oxford Walid Khalidi 1992 All That Remains The Palestinian Villages Occupied and Depopulated by Israel in 1948 Institute for Palestine Studies Nur Masalha 1992 Expulsion of the Palestinians The Concept of Transfer in Zionist Political Thought Institute for Palestine Studies Efraim Karsh 1997 Fabricating Israeli History The New Historians Cass Benny Morris 2004 The Birth of the Palestinian Refugee Problem Revisited Cambridge University Press Yoav Gelber 2006 Palestine 1948 War Escape and the Palestinian Refugee Problem Oxford University Press Ilan Pappe 2006 The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine OneWorld Benny Morris 2004 p 311 Benny Morris 2004 p 311 Benny Morris 2004 p 312 Benny Morris 2004 p 334 Lustick Ian S Negotiating Truth The Holocaust Lehavdel and al Nakba Retrieved 13 March 2024 Benkof David 23 January 2014 History and the Right of Return in Israel Palestine Foreign Policy in Focus FPIF Retrieved 13 March 2024 Before Their Diaspora Institute for Palestine Studies 1984 Archived from the original on 4 June 2011 Village Statistics of 1945 A Classification of Land and Area ownership in Palestine Retrieved 20 April 2023 Abu Sitta Salman 2001 From Refugees to Citizens at Home London Palestine Land Society and Palestinian Return Centre UN figures see Bowker p 81 Morris Benny 2001 Righteous Victims Vintage Books p 327 ISBN 0 679 74475 4 Altogether some 200 000 300 000 Arabs fled or were driven from the West Bank and Gaza Strip during the war and in the weeks immediately thereafter Another eighty to ninety thousand fled or were driven from the Golan Heights Bowker 2003 p 81 Schwartz Adi 10 January 2008 All I wanted was justice Haaretz permanent dead link Hillel Shulewitz Malka 2001 The Forgotten Millions The Modern Jewish Exodus from Arab Lands Continuum pp 139 155 ISBN 9780826447647 Aharoni Ada August 2002 The Forced Migration of Jews from Arab Countries PDF Historical Society of Jews from Egypt Retrieved 13 March 2024 Hitching a ride on the magic carpet Haaretz 15 August 2003 Any analogy between Palestinian refugees and Jewish immigrants from Arab lands is folly in historical and political terms permanent dead link Introducing Justice for Jews from Arab Countries PDF Archived from the original PDF on 13 July 2011 Abbas No Right Of Hometown Return Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty 2 November 2012 Retrieved 13 March 2024 via GlobalSecurity org Issacharoff Avi 3 November 2012 By keeping Abbas under a glass ceiling Israel is forgetting its real enemy Haaretz Retrieved 13 March 2024 Issacharoff Avi Ravid Barak 4 November 2012 Abbas clarifies I have not given up demand for Palestinian right of return Haaretz Retrieved 13 March 2024 A RES 194 III Palestine Progress Report of the United Nations Mediator unispal un org 11 December 1948 Archived from the original on 28 February 2017 Retrieved 9 August 2017 a b Bowker 2003 p 99 a b Radley Kurt Rene July 1978 The Palestinian Refugees The Right to Return in International Law The American Journal of International Law 72 3 586 614 doi 10 2307 2200460 JSTOR 2200460 James Paul Israel Palestine and the Occupied Territories The Right of Return of 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of 1948 Journal of Palestine Studies 16 4 3 26 doi 10 2307 2536718 JSTOR 2536718 Khalidi Rashid I Winter 1992 Observations on the Right of Return Journal of Palestine Studies 21 2 29 40 doi 10 2307 2537217 JSTOR 2537217 No peaceful solution Miron Rapaport interviewed Avi Shlaim for Ha aretz Friday Supplement PDF Haaretz 2005 Archived from the original PDF on 7 May 2006 Tessler Mark 1994 A History of the Israeli Palestinian Conflict Indiana University Press ISBN 0 253 20873 4 Morris Benny January 1986 The Causes and Character of the Arab Exodus from Palestine The Israel Defense Forces Intelligence Branch Analysis of June 1948 Middle Eastern Studies 22 1 5 19 doi 10 1080 00263208608700647 Kapeliouk Amnon Spring 1987 New Light on the Israeli Arab Conflict and the Refugee Problem and Its Origins Journal of Palestine Studies 16 3 21 doi 10 2307 2536786 JSTOR 2536786 Vidal Dominique 1 December 1997 The expulsion of the Palestinians re examined Le Monde diplomatique Retrieved 13 March 2024 Chiller Glaus Michael 2007 Tackling the Intractable Palestinian Refugees and the Search for Middle Peace Peter Lang pp 99 102 ISBN 9783039112982 a b c Lapidoth Ruth 1 September 2002 Legal Aspects of the Palestinian Refugee Question Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs Retrieved 13 March 2024 Do Palestinian Refugees Have a Right to Return to Israel Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs 15 January 2001 Archived from the original on 2 January 2016 Retrieved 8 March 2011 Zilbershats Yaffa 2007 International Law and the Palestinian Right of Return to the State of Israel Beitrage zum auslandischen offentlichen Recht und Volkerrecht Israel and the Palestinian Refugees Vol 189 Berlin Heidelberg Springer p 199 doi 10 1007 978 3 540 68161 8 7 ISBN 978 3 540 68160 1 Refugees forever The Jerusalem Post Archived from the original on 24 April 2009 Retrieved 25 August 2009 Erlanger Steven 31 March 2007 Olmert Rejects Right of Return for Palestinians The New York Times Retrieved 13 March 2024 a b Karsh Efraim June 2001 Rights and Wrongs History and the Palestinian Right of Return Australia Israel amp Jewish Affairs Council Archived from the original on 4 April 2007 Survival of the Fittest Cont Haaretz Retrieved 13 March 2024 Morris Benny 17 July 2011 My Response to Efraim Karsh American thinker a b Sachar Howard 1976 A History of Israel from the Rise of Zionism to Our Time New York Knopf pp 440 441 ISBN 0 394 48564 5 Lawand Kathleen October 1996 The Right to Return of Palestinians in International Law International Journal of Refugee Law 8 4 532 568 doi 10 1093 ijrl 8 4 532 Benvenisti Eyal 2003 The Right of Return in International Law An Israeli Perspective Stocktaking Conference on Palestinian Refugees Research in Canada Kent Andrew 2012 Evaluating the Palestinians Claimed Right of Return University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Law 34 Oberschall Anthony 2007 Conflict and Peace Building in Divided Societies Responses to Ethnic Violence p 210 doi 10 4324 9780203944851 ISBN 978 1 134 12814 3 Resolving the Refugee Question Key Issues McGill Faculty of Arts 16 June 2008 permanent dead link Israel Right Of Return is a Non Starter Israel National News Arutz Sheva 8 May 2003 Retrieved 13 March 2024 Satellite News and latest stories The Jerusalem Post fr jpost com a b Schechtman 1963 pp 212 213 Schechtman 1963 pp 214 215 a b Schechtman 1963 pp 219 222 United Nations General Assembly Resolution 393 PDF The United Nations General Assembly 2 December 1950 Archived from the original PDF on 2 April 2015 Retrieved 24 November 2012 Annual Report of the Director of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East covering the period 1 July 1954 to 30 June 1955 General Assembly Tenth Session Document A 2978 a b Sharp Heather 15 April 2004 Right of return Palestinian dream British Broadcasting Corporation Retrieved 13 March 2024 Ali Zarefa Ahsanuddin Sadia 5 April 2013 Right of Return for Palestinians The Huffington Post Retrieved 13 March 2024 SourcesBowker Robert P G 2003 Palestinian Refugees Mythology Identity and the Search for Peace Lynne Rienner Publishers ISBN 1 58826 202 2 Gelber Yoav 2006 Palestine 1948 Sussex Academic Press ISBN 1 84519 075 0 Gerteiny Alfred G 2007 The terrorist conjunction the United States the Israeli Palestinian conflict and al Qa ida Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 275 99643 7 Khalidi Walid July 1959 Why Did the Palestinians Leave Middle East Forum Reprinted as Khalidi Walid 2005 Why Did the Palestinians Leave Revisited Journal of Palestine Studies 34 2 42 54 doi 10 1525 jps 2005 34 2 042 Kimmerling Baruch 2003 Politicide Ariel Sharon s war against the Palestinians Verso p 23 ISBN 978 1 85984 517 2 ethnic cleansing palestinians McDowall David 1989 Palestine and Israel The Uprising and Beyond I B Tauris ISBN 1 85043 289 9 Morris Benny 2004 The Birth of the Palestinian Refugee Problem Revisited Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 00967 7 Pomerance Michla 1982 Self Determination in Law and Practice The New Doctrine in the United States Martinus Nijhoff Publishers ISBN 90 247 2594 1 Schechtman Joseph B 1963 The Refugees in the World New York Barnes Schulz Helena Lindholm 2003 The Palestinian Diaspora London Routledge ISBN 0 415 26820 6 Yiftachel Oren 2006 Ethnocracy land and identity politics in Israel Palestine Part 797 Illustrated ed University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 978 0 8122 3927 0 Zilbershats Yaffa 2007 International Law and the Palestinian Right of Return to the State of Israel In Eyal Benvenisti Chaim Gans and Sari Hanafi ed Israel and the Palestinian refugees Springer Publishers pp 191 218 ISBN 978 3 540 68160 1 External linksAl Awda The Palestinian Right to Return Coalition Right of return Palestinian dream BBC News Online VIDEO Muhammad Jaradat and Eitan Bronstein Acknowledging the Past Imagining the Future Israelis and Palestinians on 1948 and the Right of Return April 1 2008 Portland Oregon Eitan Bronstein of the Jewish Israeli group Zochrot and Muhammad Jaradat of the Badil Resource Center for Palestinian Residency and Refugees Rights Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Palestinian right of return amp oldid 1219036512, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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