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When one hurts or kills a women
one hurts or kills hummanity and is an antrocitie.
Gino d'Artali
and: My mother (1931-1997) always said to me <Mi
figlio, non esistono notizie <vecchie> perche puoi imparare qualcosa da
qualsiasi notizia.> Translated: <My son, there is no such thing as so
called 'old' news because you can learn something from any news.>
Gianna d'Artali.
Al Jazeera - Feb 5 2025 - By Naama Blatman and Neve Gordon
<<Opinions
Trump must not be allowed to torpedo the Palestinian right to remain
US president’s latest comments confirm Israel’s wholesale destruction of
Gaza is aimed at permanently removing its Palestinian population.
Before Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s visit to the White
House, United States President Donald Trump said Palestinians have “no
alternative” but to leave Gaza. When the two leaders met in the Oval
Office, Trump declared that after Palestinians from the Gaza Strip are
moved elsewhere, the US will “take over”. The president also expressed
his desire to transform the Israeli-occupied territory into the “Riviera
of the Middle East”. These surrealistic statements were uttered on
Tuesday as Palestinians across the Gaza Strip are facing unprecedented
destruction left behind by the Israeli army. Many of those who have been
displaced and have managed to go back to their homes in the past two
weeks have found only ruins. According to the United Nations, the
Israeli army has bombed 90 percent of all housing units in the Gaza
Strip, leaving 160,000 units destroyed and 276,000 severely or partially
damaged. As the dust settles and images of the extent of the devastation
circulate on mainstream media, it has become clear that the genocidal
violence Israel unleashed in Gaza was not only used to kill, displace
and destroy but also to undercut the Palestinian population’s right to
remain. And it is precisely the possibility of securing this right that
the Trump-Netanyahu duo is now bent on preventing.
Remaining as a right
The right to remain is not formally recognised within the human rights
canon and is usually associated with refugees who have fled their
country and are permitted to stay in a host country while seeking
asylum. It has also been invoked in the context of so-called urban
renewal projects in which largely marginalised and insecurely housed
urban residents demand their right to stay in their homes and among
their community when faced with pressure from powerful actors pushing
for redevelopment and gentrification. The right to remain is
particularly urgent in settler-colonial situations where colonisers
actively displace the Indigenous population and try to replace them with
settlers. From First Nations in North America to Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islander people in Australia, settlers have used genocidal
violence to deny Indigenous people this right. The right to remain,
however, is not merely the right to “stay put”. Rather, to enjoy this
right, people must be able to remain within their community and have
access to both material and social “infrastructures of existence”,
including water and food, hospitals, schools, places of worship and the
means to a livelihood. Without these infrastructures, the right to
remain becomes impossible. Beyond mere physical presence, the right to
remain also encompasses the right to maintain the historical and
contemporary stories and webs of relations that hold people and
communities together in place and time. This is a crucial aspect of this
right because the settler-colonial project not only aims for the
physical removal and replacement of Indigenous people but also seeks to
erase Indigenous cultures, histories and identities as well as any
attachments to land. Finally, it cannot be enough to be allowed to
remain as an occupied inhabitant within a besieged territory. The right
to remain includes the ability of a people to determine their own
destiny.
A history of permanent displacement
During the 1948 war, Palestinian cities were depopulated and about 500
Palestinian villages were destroyed as most of their inhabitants became
refugees in neighbouring countries. In total, about 750,000 Palestinians
out of a population of 900,000 were displaced from their homes and
ancestral lands and were never allowed to return. Since then,
displacement or the threat of displacement has been part of the everyday
Palestinian experience. Indeed, throughout the occupied West Bank and
even within Israel in places like Umm al Hiran, Palestinian communities
continue to be forcibly uprooted and removed from their lands and
prevented from returning. The US-backed Israeli denial of the right to
remain in the Gaza Strip is far worse – not only because many
communities are made up of refugees and this is their second, third or
fourth displacement – but also because displacement has now become a
tool of genocide. As early as October 13, 2023, Israel issued a
collective evacuation order to 1.1 million Palestinians living north of
Wadi Gaza, and in the following months, similar orders were issued time
and again, ultimately displacing 90 percent of the Strip’s population.
To be sure, international humanitarian law obligates warring parties to
protect civilian populations, which includes allowing them to move from
warzones to safe areas. Yet these provisions are informed by the
assumption that populations have a right to remain in their homes and,
therefore, stipulate that evacuees must be allowed to return when the
fighting ends, rendering any form of permanent displacement illegal.
Population transfer must be temporary and can only be used for
protection and humanitarian relief and not, as Israel has used and
Trump’s recent comments reinforce, a “humanitarian camouflage” to cover
up the wholesale destruction and undoing of Palestinian spaces.
The right to remain and self-determination
Now that a ceasefire has been declared, displaced Palestinians are able
to go back to where they used to live. Yet this movement back in no way
satisfies their right to remain. This is no coincidence: The ability to
remain is precisely what Israel has been aiming to eradicate in 15
months of war.
The razing of hospitals, schools, universities, mosques, shops and
street markets, cemeteries and libraries alongside the destruction of
roads, wells, electricity grids, greenhouses and fishing vessels was not
only carried out in the service of mass killings and the temporary
cleansing of areas of their inhabitants but also to create a new reality
on the ground, particularly in northern Gaza. Thus it is not just that
Palestinian homes have been destroyed but that the very existence of the
population will also now be compromised for years to come. This is not a
new thing. We have seen throughout history how settlers act to
permanently displace and eliminate Indigenous populations from their
territories. Learning from these stories we know that financial
investment in rebuilding houses and infrastructure will not – in itself
– ensure the population’s right to remain. Remaining requires
self-determination. To enact their right to remain, Palestinians must
finally gain their freedom as a self-determining people. Israel has
denied Palestinians their right to remain for more than 75 years. It is
high time to set things straight. Any discussion about the future of
Gaza must be guided by the claims and aspirations of the Palestinian
people. Promises of reconstruction and economic prosperity by foreign
countries are irrelevant unless explicitly tied to Palestinian
self-determination. The right to remain can be guaranteed only through
decolonisation and Palestinian liberation.
The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not
necessarily reflect Al Jazeera’s editorial stance.>>
Source:
https://www.aljazeera.com/opinions/2025/2/5/trump-must-not-be-allowed-to-torpedo-the-palestinian-right-to
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Gino d'Artali |
Women's
Liberation Front 2019/cryfreedom.net 2025