Damascus, Syria
Thousands at congress affirm Palestinian Right of Return
By
Sara Flounders
Damascus, Syria
Published Dec 18, 2008 8:57 PM
More than 5,000 delegates filled the hall to overflowing at the Arab
International Congress for the Right of Return, held in Damascus, Syria, on
Nov. 23 and 24. Delegates came from 54 countries.
The gathering was a strong demonstration of support for the struggle of the
Palestinian people and their historic demands.
The two-day event was aimed at establishing the Right of Return of Palestinian
refugees, which was defined as a firm Palestinian and Arab principle that is
not subject to bargaining, concessions or trade-offs and cannot lapse with the
passage of time.
A ringing declaration on the Right of Return, adopted at the final plenary
session of the giant assembly, confirmed once again that this right is
considered inalienable and at the core of the Palestinian cause. It condemned
the expulsion of the Palestinian people as a crime of ethnic cleansing and a
crime against humanity. It also called for resistance to all “population
exchange” and “transfer” initiatives and settlements, as well
as to the racist wall that has been built by the Israeli state to change the
demographic and geographic identity of Palestine.
The congress hailed the continuing “culture of resistance” because
it is “the shortest way to achieve the return of Palestinians to their
homes” and called for protecting and fortifying this right at the
Islamic, national and international levels.
The congress was held in line with a year of activities to commemorate the 60th
anniversary of the Nakba (catastrophe), the Arabic term for the Zionist
usurpation of Palestine in 1948.
Organizers of the event explained that the 5,000 delegates came from a widely
inclusive range of organizations, associations, political parties and unions.
There were Palestinian, Arab, Islamic and international personalities of all
persuasions. Palestinian communities from all parts of the world were
represented.
Solidarity with Gaza, Jerusalem and prisoners
Almost every speaker at the two-day gathering also condemned the continuing
Zionist siege of 1.5 million Palestinians in the Gaza Strip as a crime against
humanity and a crime of genocide. Speakers and the congress declaration noted
that the siege, now in its second year, has isolated Gaza from the entire world
and deprived the population of the vital necessities of life.
The congress called for “immediate Egyptian steps to open the Rafah
Crossing, the only opening of the Gaza Strip to the outside world and their
only remaining lifeline. They must allow the Gaza Strip to import the
necessities of life, transportation and basic services such as water,
electricity, fuel and medicine. ... The complicity of the Egyptian government
does not represent the true nationalist and patriotic will of the Egyptian
people.”
Many speakers emphasized the need to break the oppressive siege imposed on the
Gaza Strip by all means and methods. Solidarity initiatives were highlighted.
These included the journeys to Gaza by the boats “Hope” and
“Dignity,” which brought aid in defiance of an Israeli
blockade.
Other declarations and speakers condemned Israel’s efforts to eradicate
the Palestinian identity of Jerusalem through continuing expulsions and the
destruction of homes, as well as its attempts to isolate the indigenous
Jerusalemite population from the rest of Palestine and restrict their movement
by building walls, fences and settlements.
The most honored guests at the gathering were Palestinian prisoners who had
served decades in Israeli prisons. Awards, waves of cheers and revolutionary
chants applauded their determination, perseverance and heroic
steadfastness.
The congress also sent a strong message of solidarity to the “12,000 male
and female prisoners still held in Zionist prisons who continue to face abuse,
torture and denial of their most basic rights.” It denounced the Israeli
kidnapping of the great bulk of parliamentarians democratically elected by the
Palestinian people, many of whom are now held in prison.
Other declarations focused on Sudan and Lebanon. The declaration on Sudan
condemned the Zionist role in the plots to dismember Sudan and undermine its
national unity and its Arab, African and Islamic identity. It opposed all forms
of colonial intervention, dubious internationalization and provocative
initiatives. The declaration on Lebanon saluted the resistance in Lebanon and
its great victory over the Israeli invasion of 2006.
U.S. harassment of delegates
It is hardly surprising that a meeting full of such revolutionary determination
received no coverage or attention in the Western corporate media. Nor is it too
unexpected that efforts to block attendance to the conference might come in
many different forms.
Cynthia McKinney was kept from boarding a flight to the congress in what she
termed a “misunderstanding” at the Atlanta airport. McKinney, this
year’s Green Party presidential candidate and a former six-term member of
Congress, released a press statement containing the speech she had prepared for
the conference. It commemorated the 60th anniversary of the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights and condemned the denial of the Right of Return to
Palestinians as a violation of the Universal Declaration.
[Flounders also had great difficulty boarding a flight from New York to attend
the International Right of Return conference. Almost three hours of technical
problems, sudden, inexplicable “visa problems,” and three extra
security checks held up her boarding until the final minute before the gates
were to close.—WW]
A statement from the International Action Center, based in New York, expressed
support for the fundamental and collective right of all Palestinian refugees to
return to their homes and to self-determination as well as political, economic
and civil equality. It also condemned the siege of Gaza.
The focus of the IAC statement was on U.S. support for Israel’s crimes:
“Coming from the U.S. it is important for us to say that U.S. imperialism
is the greatest roadblock to the Palestinian Right to Return and the greatest
impediment to any form of peace or justice in the entire region.
“Without the constant infusion of billions of dollars in arms and aid the
Zionist state of Israel could not exist one day. U.S. aid averages more than
$15 million a day, every day for the last 60 years. Under both Republican and
Democratic Party presidents Israel is always the largest recipient of U.S. aid
in the world every year. ... Why? Because Israel is carrying out U.S. policy in
the region. U.S. corporate power fully intends Israel to exist as a garrison
state and a continuing source of instability in the region....
“Over the past six decades the struggle of the Palestinian people has
inspired hundreds of millions of people worldwide because of its dynamism and
revolutionary fervor.”
Flounders, co-director of the International Action Center, was an invited
guest at the Arab International Congress for the Right of Return. The congress
resolutions and reports, as well as Cynthia McKinney’s statement and the
full IAC statement, will be available at iacenter.org.
Articles copyright 1995-2012 Workers World.
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