Who’s Mistreating the Palestinians Again? (COMMENTARY MAGAZINE) Jonathan S. Tobin 04/17/12)
Source: http://www.commentarymagazine.com/2012/04/17/mistreating-palestinians-again-jordan-syria-refugees/
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The standard cliché of Middle East reporting is the notion of Israeli
mistreatment of the Palestinians. But as anyone with even a minimal
grasp of the history of the region knows, the real victimizers of the
Palestinians have always been the Arab nations who refused to absorb
or resettle them after 1948 but instead preferred to keep them
homeless as props to use in the war to destroy Israel. That this is
an ongoing story rather than merely a chapter of history is
demonstrated anew on the border between Jordan and Syria where
Palestinians fleeing the chaos and violence of the revolt against
Bashar al-Assad have been left stranded. But as has been the case
with the exploitation of the Palestinians in the past, the world
isn’t paying much attention.
As the always insightful Khaled Abu Toameh writes for the Gatestone
Institute’s Website, more than 1,000 Palestinians attempted to enter
Jordan from Syria, but the government of King Abdullah has kept them
in a makeshift tent refugee camp with poor sanitary conditions while
refusing them entry. The king’s priority remains repressing any
possible signs of unrest among the approximately 80 percent of his
subjects who are Palestinian and wants nothing to do with them or
their plight. So while international “human rights” activists
remained focused on aiding Palestinians seeking to destroy Israel,
they ignore the real abuses of refugees going on right next door to
the Jewish state.
Abdullah understands all too well that a Fatah-Hamas unity coalition
of Palestinian groups that is incapable of signing a peace with
Israel that would give them an independent state may eventually
decide to try and establish one on the territory of his kingdom.
Given the fact that Jordan makes up two-thirds of the original land
considered part of Palestine before it was first partitioned in 1922,
Abdullah knows, as his father Hussein did, that they constitute a
potentially mortal threat to the Bedouin minority that forms the
ruling class there. As Abu Toahmeh writes, the king is having his
government concoct new legislation that will exclude Palestinians
from government institutions.
Abdullah’s concerns are real and shared by both the United States and
Israel. But that doesn’t excuse the press and the so-called human
rights crowd from ignoring any ill usage of the Palestinians that
can’t be blamed on Israel. The suffering of ordinary Palestinians is
real, but a solution to their problems requires both a sea change in
their own political culture and a willingness on the part of the Arab
world to stop abusing them. Unfortunately, neither seems even a
remote possibility. In the meantime, don’t expect an army of
activists to descend on Jordan to help the Palestinians there or
anyplace else in the Arab world where they are being mistreated.
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