Emma Watson is right
Hopefully,
her declaration about the Palestinians will stimulate a serious conversation
about the cruel occupation that the international community has been ignoring.
“Free
Palestine!” says actress Emma Watson.
She’s right.
The
territories where the Palestinian Arabs live are indeed enslaved. They deserve
to be freed from the tyrannical rule of their oppressors—Hamas and the
Palestinian Authority.
|
Emma Watson Wikimedia Commons |
The actress,
best known for her role as Hermione Granger in the “Harry Potter” films, set
off a firestorm in the world of social media with her Instagram post showing
“Free Palestine!” banners and expressing “solidarity” with them. Hopefully, her
declaration will stimulate a serious conversation about the cruel occupation that
the international community has been ignoring.
The details
concerning Hamas and the P.A., which I cite here, are all quoted from the
latest reports by two strongly pro-Palestinian groups: Amnesty International
and Human Rights Watch. These are not “Israeli allegations.” They are what the
Palestinian Arabs’ most vocal supporters are saying about the two Arab regimes
that rule over 98 percent of the Palestinian Arabs.
During the
past year, “the Palestinian authorities in the West Bank and the Hamas de facto
administration in the Gaza Strip continued to crack down on dissent, including
by stifling freedoms of expression and assembly, attacking journalists and
detaining opponents,” reports Amnesty.
Human Rights
Watch notes that the P.A. recently jailed journalist Sami al-Sai for the crime
of “administering a Facebook page that had posted information about PA
corruption.” Twenty protesters in Ramallah who dared to cry out against P.A.
corruption were likewise jailed. Hamas recently arrested seven citizens for
“participating in a video chat where they answered questions from Israeli
civilians about life in Gaza.” And other Gazans were jailed for “weakening the
revolutionary spirit.
Hamas also
frequently executes citizens after “trials” that are “marred with due process
violations,” reports Human Rights Watch.
How do the
P.A. and Hamas regimes treat those whom it arrests? “Palestinian security
forces in the West Bank and Gaza routinely used torture and other ill-treatment
with impunity. … Security forces in both areas used unnecessary and/or
excessive force during law enforcement activities.”
What about
women’s rights in Occupied Palestine? Amnesty: “Women and girls faced
discrimination in law and practice and were inadequately protected against
sexual and other gender-based violence, including so-called honour killings.”
Last year alone, “nineteen women died in the West Bank and 18 in Gaza as a
result of gender-based violence.”
Human Rights
Watch points out that the P.A. “has no comprehensive domestic violence law.”
Keep in mind that the P.A. has been ruling for 27 years. Nearly three decades
in power and still no comprehensive domestic violence law.
With regard
to gay rights, Amnesty reports: “Lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and
intersex people continued to face discrimination and lacked protection” at the
hands of Hamas and the P.A. In Gaza, section 152 of the penal code
“criminalizes consensual same-sex sexual activity and makes it punishable by up
to 10 years’ imprisonment.”
Citing local
Palestinian Arab human-rights activists, Amnesty says that in the past year,
there were numerous “violations of freedom of expression, freedom of assembly
and freedom of the press,” as well as “158 cases in the West Bank and 118 in
Gaza of the arbitrary arrests of opponents and critics.”
Amnesty says
that last year, the Palestinian Centre for Development and Media Freedoms
“recorded 97 incidents of attacks against journalists, including arbitrary arrests,
ill-treatment during interrogation, confiscation of equipment, physical
assaults and bans on reporting: 36 in the West Bank and 61 in Gaza.”
As for
elections, the P.A. leader Mahmoud Abbas is now in the 17th year of his four
year-term and has repeatedly postponed parliamentary elections. In Gaza, too,
democracy is a dirty word.
I realize
that Emma Watson is an actress, not an expert on Middle East affairs. And in
posting about “Palestine,” she might have just been going along with what she
thinks all the cool young celebrities are doing.
But perhaps
the international uproar that she has provoked will inspire her to take a
closer look at the implications of what she posted on Instagram. Because in
raising the issue of freeing the Palestinian Arabs from their real occupiers,
she’s actually on to something.
Stephen M.
Flatow, an attorney in New Jersey, is the father of Alisa Flatow, who was
murdered in an Iranian-sponsored Palestinian terrorist attack in 1995. He is
the author of “A Father’s Story: My Fight for Justice Against Iranian
Terrorism.”
No comments:
Post a Comment