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Speech by UNRWA Commissioner-General Karen Koning
AbuZayd
New Zealand Institute of International Affairs
Palestine refugees in ongoing crises:
An UNRWA perspective
Victoria University; 8 October, 2007 |
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Thank you for that warm introduction. My sincere thanks also go to
the New Zealand Institute of International Affairs and the United
Nations Association of New Zealand for organizing this event.
Distinguished guests:
An invitation to speak to a gathering such as this is
a chance to introduce my agency, UNRWA, and to share with you the
challenges we face. Most importantly, it is an opportunity for facts
about Palestine refugees to be heard. I refer to the 4.4 million
Palestine refugees UNRWA serves in Jordan, Syria, Lebanon and the
occupied Palestinian territory.
I will begin this evening with a brief outline of the
services and roles that UNRWA performs. I will touch on some constraints
we face as an Agency, and offer a perspective on the circumstances
facing Palestine refugees in our areas of operation. I will devote some
time to the situation in the occupied Palestinian territory as that is
where refugees – and Palestinians in general – contend with the sternest
challenges. I will conclude with some brief reflections on how the role
of the international community might become more relevant.
UNRWA was established by the General Assembly in 1949
and began operations in May the following year. The rather staid moniker
handed us by the General Assembly - "Relief and Works Agency for
Palestine Refugees in the Near East" signaled the international
community’s readiness to assume responsibility for an important aspect
of fallout from the 1948 conflict. Over 7-800,000 people fled their
homes and were in urgent need of emergency assistance. There were a
number of undercurrents to the establishment of UNRWA and the mandate
fashioned for it. I will mention three of these as they will arise at a
later stage of our discussion.
First, there was recognition of the unique character
of the Palestine refugee issue in the Middle East, and its inextricable
connection to the geo-politics of the region. There was also an
intention to match the uniqueness of Palestine refugees with an Agency
exclusively dedicated to them. You will know that a separate agency, the
Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, was created
later to cater for the needs of refugees globally – with the express
exception of Palestine refugees. A second theme underlying UNRWA’s
establishment was the bifurcation of political and humanitarian roles.
Even though the political dimension is of significance to the refugee
issue, UNRWA’s mandate is entirely non-political in character and
confined to humanitarian and human development activities. A third theme
was that the Agency’s role was foreseen as finite and at the same time
dynamic. UNRWA is expected to prepare for a time when its services are
no longer required. To underscore this, my Agency is financed solely by
voluntary contributions and its mandate is renewed by the General
Assembly every three years.
In the fifty-seven years since UNRWA came into being,
these themes – the unique character of Palestine refugees; the interplay
between the political and the humanitarian; and the drive to help
prepare refugees for a better tomorrow – have played their part in
shaping the course of the Agency’s evolution. We have moved on from the
early years when our principal preoccupation was providing relief and
emergency assistance. Our vision is now centered on responding to the
humanitarian and human development needs of Palestine refugees. A
constant feature of our work is to enhance the well-being and skills of
refugees and to build their capacity to become self-reliant. We look
beyond today, keeping in view the prospect of a just solution, enabling
Palestine refugees to contribute their knowledge and skills to a viable
Palestinian State.
Each year, UNRWA’s schools seek to enhance the
learning potential of five hundred thousand refugee children, half of
whom are girls. Conscious of the volatile and conflict-ridden
environment in which they live, we devote considerable resources to
passing on contemporary, marketable skills while pioneering courses to
promote human rights, tolerance and peaceful conflict resolution.
UNRWA’s 127 clinics contribute to the physical and mental well-being of
refugees through comprehensive primary health care, and to a limited
extent, hospitalization and other services. We count among our
achievements the eradication of communicable diseases and nearly 100%
childhood vaccinations. We offer food and social services to the poorest
of the poor, those vulnerable families experiencing particular hardship,
the widows, the elderly and the handicapped.
We construct and repair homes and provide sewerage,
and environmental health services to structures in the 58 refugee camps
(where only one-third of the refugees live) in our areas of operation.
Our microfinance programme offers financial assistance as well as advice
and training to those able to sustain themselves and their families with
small enterprises. And when – as sadly happens all too often - armed
conflict triggers emergency situations in Gaza, the West Bank or
Lebanon, our programmes for temporary employment, cash assistance, food
distribution and shelter provision assist refugees to cope better with
heightened hardships.
My Agency’s humanitarian work is reinforced by our
role as a global advocate for the protection and care of Palestine
refugees. Our extensive field presence, with some 28,000 staff, most of
them refugees themselves, gives us unique, first-hand insights into the
living conditions of refugees and the threats they face from de-facto
sanctions and armed conflict. Drawing on these insights, we call the
attention of regional and international actors to the harsh realities
faced by Palestine refugees, including conditions that compromise their
human dignity and violate their human rights.
UNRWA reminds these actors of the responsibilities
they bear under international law to eschew the use of force and to give
precedence to peaceful methods for resolving disputes; to make choices –
particularly in times of armed conflict – that minimize human suffering,
protect civilian lives, and demonstrate restraint and proportionality.
At every appropriate opportunity, we demand that concerned authorities
and States take steps to safeguard livelihoods, promote humane
socio-economic conditions, and to move with genuine commitment towards a
just and lasting resolution of the plight of refugees.
UNRWA’s years of consistent and committed service
have earned it the trust and confidence of refugees and those who have a
genuine interest in the welfare of Palestinians. The Agency and its work
have come to symbolize the view that the international community cares
about humanitarian needs and wants these to be addressed in spite of the
challenging political and security environment. Our humanitarian
presence mitigates the refugee community’s sense of isolation and thus
serves as a stabilizing influence in the midst of tensions and conflict.
Our special relationship with refugees rests on
several elements. It derives from our extensive field presence and our
sharing living space with the communities we serve for many decades. The
relationship is reinforced by the large number of refugees who are
employed at all levels in the Agency and by a conviction held by many
refugees that they can rely on the Agency to stand by them at all times,
particularly in adverse circumstances. For example, over the last
eighteen months the Agency has maintained its presence and continued to
deliver services in spite of a de facto sanctions regime imposed
on the occupied Palestinian territory by the international community.
Our staff have shown extraordinary courage and commitment throughout the
years and continue to do so in spite of the risks. Throughout the first
half of this year, UNRWA staff remained on the ground during the
fiercest internal armed conflict Gaza had ever seen. We were also
present during the heaviest bombardment in the Lebanon conflict last
summer and were on hand to help displaced refugees from Nahr El Bared
this summer.
Still, we are aware that the best way to retain the
confidence of refugees – and also of our donors - is by continuing to
deliver services of high quality and by keeping our operations cost-
efficient and effective. With this in mind, in 2006 we launched a
three-year, 30 million dollar programme of comprehensive management
reform. Our organizational development or "OD" process, as we call it,
is designed to transform our Agency by making it more agile and more
strategic, and better able to sustain its services at a high standard.
Thus far, some 14.3 million dollars have been pledged to support the
reform process. We appreciate these contributions as signs of the
confidence our donors have in the Agency’s ability to modernize. Yet
much more is needed in terms of financial and institutional support if
UNRWA is not only to reform, but also to raise the quality of its
operations and programmes.
So far, we have taken a brief look at UNRWA’s work,
the challenge of reform and our financial constraints. I will now turn
to the situation that Palestine refugees face in Lebanon and in the
occupied Palestinian territory. These are the locations where refugee
lives and livelihoods are under the greatest stress and have been over
the past several years.
In Lebanon, the armed conflict in Nahr el-Bared was
the latest in a series of national upheavals, displacing 31,000
refugees. Not for the first time, they lost their homes and livelihoods
and were compelled to rely for shelter on the hospitality of other
refugees, themselves already in poor conditions. In concert with the
Lebanese government, we have launched an emergency appeal to assist the
refugees on the road to rebuilding their lives. That road will be a long
one. We are under no illusions that the extensive damage to the Nahr El
Bared camp means that the reconstruction effort and the return of
displaced refugees will take some time. The events in Nahr el Bared
illustrated that there have been no opportunities for durable solutions
to their plight. They retain their status as a distinct, identifiable
people in exile, a status that tends to be accentuated in times of
national tension and crisis, and is often a source of additional
vulnerability.
In Gaza and the West Bank, where Palestine refugees
constitute 45.3 % of the population, refugees and non-refugees alike are
contending with conditions bordering on disaster. Since the second
intifada began in the year 2000, Palestinians have been on a wild
rollercoaster ride, a ride on which the dips and depressions have far
outnumbered the highs and moments of hope. They continue to experience
ruthless military incursions in which civilian lives, livelihoods and
property have been destroyed, and responded with the continuous firing
of Qassam rockets. They had a taste of euphoria with the withdrawal of
Israeli troops and settlers from within and around Gaza and reveled in a
sense of accomplishment with the free and fair elections of January
2006. With the formation of a government of national unity in March
2007, they dared to hope for a promising new beginning, only to endure
the scourge of a major incursion in the summer of 2006 and the worst
ever internal conflict in June of this year.
In sharp contrast to the deadly fratricide of the
first six months of this year, the Gaza of today wears a veneer of
surreal calm. The questions on the lips of every Palestinian are: How
long will the calm hold, and how much longer will the rift between the
West Bank and Gaza last?
The socio-economic situation is so grave that the
question might well be: how much longer can Palestinian fortitude
withstand the effects of deep poverty and widespread unemployment?
Public sector salaries are now being paid and yet the effects of denying
full salaries to 160,000 civil servants for 15 months are still being
felt. 30% of Palestinians and 80% of Gazans live in poverty.
Unemployment is at 44% this year, and prices of essential food and
household commodities are rising fast. In the period between January and
September 2007, the price of wheat flour in Gaza rose by 21.6 %, poultry
by 27 %, and animal feed by some 40%. Not surprisingly, food insecurity
is as high as 77% in northern Gaza, where the destruction of crops and
arable land during Israeli incursions has taken a crushing toll on
livelihoods. 80% of Gazan residents receive some form of assistance from
the United Nations. An increasing number of Palestinians are receiving
food assistance - nearly two million of them, with the number set to
rise if the current crisis persists. There is dual irony in the fact
that the fruit stalls are well-stocked because the export of Gaza
produce is barred by the closure of Karni crossings, while much of the
merchandise brought in by enterprising traders remain out of reach for
Gaza’s teeming poor.
We must keep in mind that Palestine is an occupied
territory. The land borders, airspace and territorial sea have long been
and continue to be under the control of the occupying power. This
control manifests itself in sophisticated, comprehensive and severe
restrictions on the movement of Palestinians and their goods, with a
corresponding regime of permits and complex administrative controls.
The Karni and Rafah crossings - respectively Gaza’s
main access and exit point for commercial goods and movement of people –
have both been completely closed since June this year. Prior to June,
they were open only intermittently and unpredictably. The impact of
these closures is easy to imagine. The flow of commerce is being
stifled. Export earnings are drying up, depriving farmers and other
producers of income to care for their families and lift the economy.
Gaza is being throttled of its capacity to sustain its people, let alone
rescue its economy from chronic regression and dependency on
international aid. The closure of Karni crossing is also affecting
humanitarian operations. Some 213 million dollars worth of
infrastructure and employment projects have been disrupted, of which 93
million dollars are UNRWA’s alone. These would have built schools and
other essential infrastructure, provided employment and helped raise
living standards.
In the West Bank, Palestinians are subject to a
closure regime epitomized by the separation barrier. Despite having been
declared illegal by the International Court of Justice in 2004, this
distressing monument to restricted movement and land expropriation has
attained 408 kilometers in length and continues to grow, devastating
Palestinian lives and livelihoods across the West Bank.
A large proportion of the barrier is built on
Palestinian land, thus intruding upon and effectively expropriating some
640 square kilometres of West Bank territory, including in East
Jerusalem. 5% of the West Bank’s agricultural land has been lost due to
the construction of the barrier. Even now, with the barrier still
uncompleted, more than 60,000 people living in the area between the
barrier and the Green Line – as well as half a million Palestinians
living inside the West Bank but within a kilometre of the barrier – are
experiencing impediments in their access to families, markets, schools
and hospitals. The farmers among them are not able to reach the land and
water they need to maintain their families and livelihoods. The
separation barrier and its construction are also causing displacement as
families and communities under pressure of the closure regime abandon
their homes to seek a less repressed environment.
The closure regime is progressively tightening over
time. Road blocks and checkpoints have increased in number from 396 in
November of 2005 to 563 in September 2007. These increases have taken
place in tandem with a reduction in crossing points through the Barrier
and the introduction of digitized permit and identification procedures
for Palestinians. Those travelling between the West Bank and urban East
Jerusalem have been particularly hard-hit by the new procedures. Over
the past several years, the difficulties of obtaining a permit to enter
Jerusalem have resulted in an up to 50% decrease in the number of
patients visiting the six specialist hospitals in East Jerusalem. UNRWA
staff are affected along with other Palestinians. The closure regime
means that our staff (350 who live in West Bank and work in Jerusalem)
take longer to commute to and from work, and in some cases are denied
access to places where they are needed to deliver essential services to
Palestine refugees.
And there is more. The tightening in the closure
regime is accompanied by the relentless growth of Israeli settlements on
Palestinian land, and the fragmentation of the West Bank. A useful
source of information on this subject is a July 2007 report issued by
the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA)
under the title: The humanitarian impact on Palestinians of Israeli
settlements and other infrastructure in the West Bank.
Settlement activity is contrary to international law
and violates express undertakings made in the context of the
Israeli-Palestinian peace process. The population of Israeli settlers on
Palestinian land has nevertheless continued to grow from 126,000 in 1993
to some 450,000 in 2007. The UN projects that the settler population may
reach half a million by the end of this year. With this growth, more and
more Palestinian land is expropriated for the infrastructure required to
support the settlements, further constricting the living space available
to Palestinians.
The OCHA report I cited earlier collates various
primary sources to show that settlements, outposts, military bases,
restricted military areas, settler roads together take up some 38% of
West Bank. These are locations from which Palestinians are barred or to
which they have only restricted access. In addition to violating
fundamental Palestinian rights and freedoms, settlement activity and the
closure regime have splintered the West Bank to a point where its
territorial integrity is compromised, and its prospects for functioning
as a viable political and economic unit are placed in jeopardy.
Distinguished guests:
The situation I am describing is one in which
violations of human rights and fundamental freedoms are pervasive; where
poverty and material deprivation are threatening to take permanent hold;
where the effects of a occupation, including armed conflict, are
frequently visited upon civilians; and where the absence of a credible
peace is denying ordinary Palestinians the option to hope for positive
change.
To us, the community of States and international
actors who claim allegiance to international law, the United Nations
Charter and its matrix of human rights treaties, the dire condition of
Palestine conveys many messages.
One clear message is that the humanitarian efforts of
UNRWA and its partners can go only so far. The substantial flows of
assistance that have poured into Gaza and the West Bank have helped - in
many cases significantly - to alleviate some of the hardships that
Palestinians endure on a daily basis. In truth, however, the benefits
have been principally to stave off disaster. Humanitarian aid has not
been converted into sustainable change in living conditions for the
simple reason that no attention is being given to the economic and
political fundamentals.
This speaks to the distinction I referred to earlier
between humanitarian and political roles. Although these roles are
assigned to different entities, they are mutually reinforcing components
of what should be cohesive international action. In the Palestinian
case, there is a severe disjunction in pace and effectiveness of
political and humanitarian roles. While the humanitarian sphere teems
with energy and drive, there has been a paucity of concrete results in
the political arena. And yet neither can achieve much without the other.
Both humanitarian and political interventions should be pursued
concurrently if real benefits are to accrue to Palestinians in whose
name the interventions are made.
Quite apart from the need to complement humanitarian
action, there is an independent imperative to show progress on the
political front. One of the most alarming but least acknowledged aspects
of the present situation is the loss of Palestinian faith in the
international community’s ability to act in their best interests.
Palestinians have long appreciated the role of the donor community not
merely as a source of benevolence and financial support, but also as a
sponsor of their quest for self-government and a mediator in their
search for peace. There were many positive dimensions of this mutual
confidence, not the least of which was the strengthening of those
segments of Palestinian society that were progressive, democratic and
outward-looking in orientation. The greater the credibility of the donor
community on the streets of Gaza, the more constrained were the forces
of conservatism.
It is unfortunate to see how steeply the credibility
of international community has waned in the occupied Palestinian
territory, particularly over the past two years. Palestinians are
bewildered by what they see as willful inaction, disinterest and mixed
messages from the once-trusted international community. Over the past
several years, Palestinian civilians have borne the brunt of the armed
conflict with Israel. They cannot understand why the stipulations of
international law, including human rights law and international
humanitarian law, appear to be ignored in the occupied Palestinian
territory. They fail to see how their freedom of movement and other
freedoms can be trampled upon with such impunity, or why fundamental
legal injunctions pertaining to proportionality and restraint in the use
of force can be so blatantly ignored. They also marvel that alongside
preparations for a peace conference and an emerging momentum for peace,
the occupying power regularly caries out ruthless military operations,
complete with house demolitions, arbitrary arrests and population
displacement.
Palestinians are puzzled by the adversarial policies
that the international community has initiated, supported or acquiesced
in, fully aware of their severe implications for the ordinary people of
Gaza and the West Bank. They did not expect that their participation in
democratic elections in 2006, acclaimed as free and fair, would provoke
fifteen months of harsh sanctions that included the prohibition of
remittances from abroad and the non payment of salaries of civil
servants. And Palestinians did not imagine that the declaration of Gaza
as "hostile territory" – opening the way for the suspension of fuel,
electricity, water and banking services, would be welcomed in some
quarters and greeted with a deafening silence in others.
It is difficult to calculate the cumulative impact of
years of disappointment and frustrated expectations. From our vantage
point on the ground, we do know that the implications are far-reaching.
We sense the impact in loss of hope, in anger and frustration. We see it
also in worrying signs that reactionary elements are on the ascendant,
emboldened by what they interpret as clear evidence that the
international community has turned its back on Palestinians.
It is hard to identify a period in recent history
when the integrity of the Palestinian body politic has been at greater
risk than it is now. I have lived and worked in Gaza for more than seven
years, and I cannot recall a moment when the condition of Palestine
refugees was more desperate or the Palestinians more pessimistic about
their future.
Yet I believe that there is still time for us to
revive the international community’s role. It is still possible to
reverse the grave decline in the situation of Palestinians and to
restore the prospects for a secure and economically sound future for
Palestinians, Israelis and the Middle-East as a whole. Allow me to
suggest a few considerations for the way forward.
A vital step in the right direction would be to bring
an inclusive orientation to peace-making. Access to the negotiating
table could be based on objective criteria: a party’s ability to
represent the interests of all Palestinian as distinct from factional
political interests; its readiness, on past evidence, to contemplate
compromise and to engage in negotiations in good faith; and the party’s
capacity, again based on past evidence, to fulfill its undertakings.
There is abundant international evidence pointing to the fact that the
process of making peace can be advanced only by embracing interlocutors
across the political spectrum.
Inclusiveness is particularly critical as a stratagem
to ensure that the unity of the occupied Palestinian territory is
restored. Without this unity, any future agreement will be built on a
fractured foundation. It is incumbent on the international community to
use its influence to serve the goal of Palestinian reconciliation, and
to encourage the placing of the interests of ordinary Palestinians over
and above factional interests. On their part, Palestinian leaders must
demonstrate the maturity and political courage that is needed for
principled compromises. Their focus must remain on tackling isolation,
poverty, and economic collapse, and on the only victory that really
matters, namely, the end of occupation and the establishment of a viable
Palestinian State.
A balanced and even-handed orientation is also
required; one that treats all sides equally and maintains a focus on the
ultimate goal of achieving a just and lasting settlement. A consistently
unbiased posture is the essence of the international mediator’s role. It
is also the basis for the credibility of the negotiation process.
Furthermore, a balanced approach translates into leverage in the
negotiation process. The more impartial and credible a negotiator is
perceived to be, the greater the influence that can be brought to bear
on both sides.
The conflict in the occupied Palestinian territory is
an aberration in a world in which there is universal agreement on
promoting human rights, justice and economic opportunity for all.
Palestinians have been in travail for far too long. Their preoccupations
are ours too because the safety and security of our world will remain
compromised as long as human suffering continues on the scale it has
attained in Gaza and the West Bank. Our responsibility to protect and
care for Palestine refugees and the people of Palestine is not a
vicarious one. It is a direct responsibility; one that we neglect at our
peril.
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