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Remembering toddler Ali Dawabsha
Published in Al-Ahram Weekly on 04 - 08 - 2015

One-and-a-half-year-old Ali Saad Dawabsha became on 31 July the latest victim of Israeli violence. He was burnt to death. Other members of his family were also severely burnt when Jewish settlers attacked their home in the village of Duma, near Nablus, in the West Bank.
A spokesman for Rabbis for Human Rights told Al-Jazeera Arabic that this is the tenth attack on Nablus by settlers in July. A statement issued by the Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO) provided an even more alarming statistic, putting the number of Jewish settlers' attacks, some of them lethal, at an estimated 11,000 since the end of 2014.
Ali Dawabsha is not the first Palestinian child to be burnt to death, although the story of Mohamed Abu Khdeir, who was tortured and burnt alive by a group of Jewish extremists in July 2014, now serves as a hideous benchmark for Israeli settler violence, which is often conducted under the watchful eye of or as part of a larger violent campaign led by the Israeli army.
Despite Israeli political theatre and statements of condemnations following Abu Khdeir's grisly murder, Israeli violence against Palestinians is part and parcel of Israel's occupation policy, draped in numerous crimes gone unpunished.
Little Ali is no different from the 490 Palestinians killed in Israel's last summer war on Gaza, which killed nearly 2,200 Palestinians, mostly civilians. The Dawabsha family home, which was completely burnt (while Ali's mother, father and brother, Ahmed, all sustained serious burns), was no different from the 20,000 Gaza homes that, according to the UN, were destroyed during the Israeli carnage in the Strip.
The West Bank and Gaza, despite physical separation and Palestinian factionalism, are united by a rapport of suffering and a trail of blood that proves stronger than the Hamas-Fatah dispute. They are also united in the perception of Israel, which sees Ali and all Palestinian toddlers as a demographic threat to the “Jewish identity” of the state.
In its statement, the PLO held Israel “fully responsible” for Ali's murder and the burning of his family and their home. The “brutal assassination” of Ali is “a direct consequence of decades of impunity given by the Israeli government to settler terrorism,” said PLO official Saeb Erekat.
Of course, the statement is accurate, and if these words were uttered by anyone other than the chief negotiator of the Palestinian Authority (PA), one could have taken them seriously. Alas, such statements only highlight the duplicity and contradiction of the official Palestinian position. In fact, one cannot help but feel that the PA is partly responsible for Ali's death. The reasons are as follows.
Israel's impunity is encouraged by many factors, including US-Western backing and the lack of international will to hold Israel government, army and settlers accountable for their crimes. But that impunity is also encouraged by the Palestinian leadership itself, which lives in a massive political and economic bubble in Ramallah, in the West Bank.
Erekat is a resident in the Ramallah bubble. His job consists of two main aspects: to sustain the charade, using all the right sounding words, that the PA and Israel are locked in some sort of a perpetual conflict (although they are not) while concurrently working closely with Israel to ensure the survival of the PA.
The PA cannot exist without Israeli support, as Israel's military occupation and illegal settlement expansion cannot be sustained without the security arm of the PA, which has suppressed any serious resistance to Israel in the West Bank. Using “security coordination”, the PA apprehends any Palestinian who dares pose a threat, real or imagined, to the Israeli occupation and the settlers.
In other words, the PA ensures the safety of the settlers, like those who killed Ali and many others like him.
Naturally, facing little or no resistance, the settlements are growing. The latest planned expansion was just announced by Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, who plans to construct hundreds of new illegal settlement homes on confiscated Palestinian land, in the Jewish settlements of Pisget Zeev, Ramot, Gilo and Har Homa in Jerusalem.
In his statement, Erekat did not forget to link the murder of Ali: “We cannot separate the barbaric attack that took place in Duma last night from the recent settlement approval by the Israeli government, a government that represents an Israeli national coalition for settlements and apartheid.”
But he, along with his boss, Mahmoud Abbas, intends to do nothing about it. On the contrary, despite his and other PA officials' fiery statements, the constant message the PA, in actuality, sends to Israel is that Palestinians are okay with the status quo, and business will carry on as usual, burnt babies or not.
Consider this as an example: the PA Central Council voted in March to halt negotiations and security coordination with Israel. The decision, meant for public consumption mostly, hardly mattered, as top PA officials, including Erekat himself, held recent “secret” talks with Israeli government officials in Amman, Jordan.
According to Tayseer Khalid of the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine, speaking to Maan news agency, “Sadly the PLO Executive Committee and Palestinian leaders know about such meetings only from the Israeli media.”
Sadly, indeed, especially since the Amman meeting was designated as a “trust-building” measure (a clue that America had a hand in it), and which included Erekat and Israeli Interior Minister Silvan Shalom.
But that is, in fact, the actual PA strategy in all of its deficiencies and contradictions. The cornerstone of that strategy is to sell as many brands, no matter how conflicting, to different groups of people for the sake of self-preservation. Erekat is, perhaps, often the scapegoat, since he is the most visible face of the PA apparatus, but numerous others, too, are implicated in selling mirages to the Palestinian people, while taking part in preserving the very violent occupation that is destroying Palestinian society, robbing it of land, water, and dignity.
A few hours after Ali's murder, PA officials were scheduled to line up in Ramallah, in front of Abbas, as four new ministers were being sworn in. The revamping of the so-called unity government took place without the approval of Hamas, thus hammering the last nail in the Palestinian unity coffin, which never actualised to begin with.
The four new ministers, who ultimately have no real authority under the rule of the Israeli occupation, will read Al-Fatiha (verses of the Quran) on the soul of Palestine's latest “hero martyr”, little Ali. A real or fake tear by one or more officials might be highlighted in the Ramallah media to accentuate the emotional bond between the Ramallah bubble and all Palestinians.
The charade will carry on for a few more months or years, where the PA will fight against the occupation using every word available, and fight for the occupation using every means available.
This is the sad tale of the Palestinian leadership and its Ramallah bubble, which is yet to burst.
The writer is founder of PalestineChronicle.com.


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