WW interviews PFLP leaders
‘Right of return ’ still key demand after 61 years in Lebanon
By
Joyce Chediac
Published Oct 16, 2009 11:24 PM
When cameras are running, Washington officials sometimes express
“concern” for the plight of the Palestinian people. But even this
phony caring doesn’t extend to the 4.5 million Palestinians who for 61
years have remained stateless, without official nationality, stranded in Arab
countries.
The right to return has never been raised in the so-called Palestinian-Israeli
peace talks that Washington brokers. The U.S. government sidesteps the right of
Palestinians to return to their original towns and villages because it opposes
this right.
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Palestinians in Lebanon are allowed to live only in overcrowded refugee camps,
with no rights to social services. Here, children of the Bourj al Barejneh camp
in Beirut have only sewage-lined streets in which to play.
WW photo: Joyce Chediac
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Workers World recently visited five Palestinian camps in Lebanon as a guest of
the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, a Marxist organization with
a long history in the Palestinian struggle. The situation of the Palestinian
refugees in Lebanon underscores why the right of return is so important, and
why all progressives concerned with the Palestinian question must actively
support it and never let it be dropped.
Slow war against Palestinians in Lebanon
For the 400,000 Palestinian refugees in Lebanon, the civil war did not end in
1990. Right-wing forces in and outside of the Lebanese government are still
waging a slow war against them.
In Lebanon today, Palestinians are not allowed to live outside the refugee
camps. They cannot own property. They cannot be citizens and can’t vote.
They are not entitled to any social services. They cannot work in most
jobs.
They are scapegoated by Lebanon’s right wing for many of the social and
political ills, and must worry constantly about their safety from attacks by
paramilitary militias and from the Lebanese Army.
From 1970 to 1982 the Palestine Liberation Organization and its fighters were
based in Lebanon. During the Civil War of 1975-90, poor and disenfranchised
Lebanese united with the Palestinian resistance to wage a struggle for the
liberation of all. Though the struggle was defeated by Arab reaction and by
Israel, backed and armed by the U.S., Lebanon’s reactionary rulers will
never forget or forgive the role that the Palestinian struggle played. This is
why Lebanon’s rulers are slowly squeezing the Palestinians from every
direction. Until they can return to Palestine, however, the Palestinians in
Lebanon, have nowhere to go.
“In Lebanon Palestinians have the right of free speech, but not economic
or social rights,” Abu Ali Hassan, a national PFLP leader in Lebanon
explained. “In other Arab countries Palestinians have a higher standard
of living, but cannot speak out. Palestinians in Lebanon are the worst off
economically.
“Most Palestinians in Lebanon want the right to return” to
Palestine, he continued, “but to do this they need support in the form of
social rights, the right to work, the right to buy a flat [apartment], and the
right to live outside the camps.”
‘Living situation worse than Gaza’
Abu Jabad is the PFLP leader responsible for political activities in Lebanon.
His home is in Nahar al Bared camp, which was destroyed by the Lebanese Army
two years ago. He said: “The living situation for Palestinians in Lebanon
is worse than in Gaza and the occupied land. Palestinians in Gaza and West Bank
have a university. Palestinians in Lebanon don’t. In fact, because
Palestinians are considered foreigners, education here is more
costly.”
Lebanese government decrees passed in 1964 and 1995 bar Palestinian refugees
from working in more than 70 professions.
“Palestinians work as farm workers and as construction laborers. This is
seasonal work. There are no benefits,” said Hassan. “Palestinians
must work outside Lebanon. Many go to Europe illegally or as refugees, assisted
by [the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the
Near East].”
Fuad, a PFLP leader in the Bourj al Barejneh camp, said, “All families
here have people who work in the Gulf and in Europe.” He added,
“There is just one UNRWA high school for the Palestinians in all of
Beirut. There are 600-700 students there.”
Raafat El Najjar is the medical director of a clinic in Bidawi camp in Tripoli.
He said Palestinian doctors “are not allowed to work outside the camps. A
Lebanese [doctor] gets $40 per patient. I get $3 per patient. Sanitation
workers, people who repair cars outside make more money than the professionals
in the camp.”
Cannot own property
Meanwhile, a 2002 amendment to Lebanon’s national property law forbids
“non-Lebanese persons, who do not possess citizenship issued by a state
recognized by Lebanon, to inherit or buy property.” This prohibits
Palestinians from owning land or even an apartment outside the refugee camps.
If they already own property, they cannot pass it to their children.
Dependant on U.N. for basic services
Because they cannot work in Lebanon and have no access to social services,
Palestinians in Lebanon must rely on the very limited resources of UNRWA as the
main provider of basic services—education, health, relief and social
services.
This relationship has a dual character, Hassan pointed out: “The United
Nations accepts the state of Israel. However, it also passed Resolution Number
194, which supports the Palestinian right to return, and to get financial
compensation for what they have gone through.”
There are 422,188 Palestinian refugees registered with UNRWA, making up 10
percent of Lebanon’s population. According to UNRWA, “The Lebanon
Field has the highest percentage of Palestine refugees who are living in abject
poverty and who are registered with the Agency’s ‘special
hardship’ program.”
Fear daily for their safety
Hassan explained that two of the 13 camps in Lebanon were destroyed outright
and never replaced. Israel destroyed Nabatiyah camp, near the Israeli border.
Lebanese fascists destroyed Tel Al Zaatar in Beirut, and massacred the
population. In 1982, the Israelis and Lebanese fascists massacred the
inhabitants of the Sabra and Shatila camps. In 2007, the Lebanese Army bombed
and destroyed Nahr al Bared. Its residents are still displaced.
Abu Jabad, the PFLP leader responsible for political activities in Lebanon,
explained that the Palestinians living in these camps were killed, deported or
made to flee to other camps, increasing the already severe overcrowding.
“The situation is very dangerous. Palestinian lives are
threatened,” he added. “It’s not over, as can be seen by
destruction of Nahar al Bared two years ago.”
“There is no certain future, and always fear of war,” Dr. El Najjar
said. “Some Palestinians in Badawi camp who lost proper ID cards
can’t go outside the camp. Others are afraid to leave the
camps.”
‘Where is justice?’
Imad Audeh, the PFLP leader responsible for north Lebanon, added: “People
are not living the way they are supposed to live. Where is justice? There is a
U.N. resolution to return, but we are still waiting for 61 years to return.
“The Lebanese government says, ‘You are going back? Why should we
give you citizenship?’ This is an excuse. While they are living here, at
least give the Palestinians some rights, like the Lebanese.” The
government “doesn’t want to nationalize Palestinians because it
would upset the balance.”
Audeh referred to Lebanon’s archaic, religion-based political system,
which awards great authority to ruling cliques in the Maronite Christian and
Sunni Muslim communities, based on an obsolete census conducted more than 75
years ago. “Palestinians don’t have religious
discrimination,” he said. “Palestinians will be with anyone who
supports them.”
What do Palestinians in Lebanon want?
“We want the human rights we need to go on living here, and the
implementation of U.N. decision 194,” Abu Jabad said. “We have the
right to return to our homeland. The U.S. government must play a role in this
and not against Palestinian rights.”
Despite the difficult conditions, the spark of struggle lives. Imad Audeh spoke
for all the Palestinians interviewed on this visit when he said, “We are
sure that we will take back Palestine.”
Articles copyright 1995-2012 Workers World.
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