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Syria's Golan Heights: Can International Law Forestall an Intifada?

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  • Syria's Golan Heights: Can International Law Forestall an Intifada?

    Syria's Golan Heights: Can International Law Forestall a Golanian Intifada?


    http://www.almanar.com.lb/NewsSite/New sDetails.aspx?id=108096&language=en
    22/10/2009 Franklin Lamb
    October 21, 2009


    Al-Manar.com.lb is not responsible for the content of this article or
    for any external internet sites. The views expressed are the author's
    alone.

    Qunaitra, Liberated Capital of the Syrian Golan Heights

    Pressure increasing on Syria's government to retake the Heights by force

    Nationals from nearly one-third of the 192 member states of the United
    Nations met in Damascus last week to discuss the Return/Liberation of
    the Golan Heights. An estimated 5000 researchers, Lawyers,
    politicians, activists, victims of Israel's 42 years of occupation,
    students and members of the public, attended the opening event in
    Qunaitra, the Golan capital city, which in a frenzy of frustration at
    being forced to return the city it had occupied since 1967 (Comment:
    think Gaza 2005), the Israeli ordered bulldozed, shelled, and booby
    trapped by its retreating forces as Qunaitra was surrendered to Syria.

    The Conference heard the likes of former US Attorney General Ramsey
    Clark argue that the International community and rules of
    International law could not be clearer in requiring the full return of
    the 1,860 sq. meters of the Syrian territory, despite Israeli claims
    over the years of `border irregularities'

    As the International Court of Justice declared in the Burkina Faso and
    Malie cases, two former French colonies, the frontier existing at the
    moment of independence, which Syria achieved in April 1946, is frozen
    like a snapshot taken at the exact moment of Independence.

    Some attendees at the large Damascus conclave, often huddling on the
    sidelines, discussed, analyzed and even advocated a Golan Intifada.
    They argued that the whole international community, except Israel, and
    the full corpus of international law, supported the immediate and
    complete return of the Syrian Golan Height's to the nearly 350,000
    displaced Golan inhabitants, being those who make up 90% of the
    Golan's pre-1967 population from the 130 villages and 112 agricultural
    areas Israel destroyed as it occupied the Golan. These delegates
    explained to observers that Resistance in all its forms may be the
    most realistic path for the return of the Golan. They point to the
    success of the Hezbollah led National Lebanese Resistance in regaining
    most of Lebanon's Zionist occupied territory.

    One Golani who studies in Damascus told this observer, `We don't
    expect help from Hezbollah. They have made clear to us they do not
    `do branches' in other countries despite requests for help around the
    region, but we have learned much from their experience and we will
    apply their logic and tactics.'

    `Syria is rising' another joined in, `we are strong psychologically,
    militarily and as a result of more democracy the past several years
    our people are united and we are motivated to seek the immediate
    return of our land, whatever it takes.'

    They argued that what Hezbollah did in Lebanon, and what Hamas is
    doing in Gaza, Syrian patriots can do in the Golan. They believe they
    would be joined by thousands of Palestinians and Lebanese that might
    well lead to an unprecedented violent eruption of the Middle East.

    One Conference student volunteer interpreter from Damascus University
    wearing a Hijab, quoted Lebanon's Senior Shiite cleric Ayatollah
    Mohammad Hussein Fadlallah, who heads social services agencies here in
    Syria and he does in Lebanon. Ayatollah Fadlallah frequently argues
    from the grand Mosque in Dahiyeh that all Arab Muslim and non-Muslims
    must join to fight against Israel, `because when the enemy launched a
    war against Palestine and the Arab world, including the Golan Heights,
    it was legal and obligatory to declare war in response to regain
    stolen land.'

    There appears to be building pressure on the Bashar Assad government
    to act or allow a popular Intifada, despite analysts here arguing that
    it is unlikely that his government would agree near term. Many here
    are encouraged by Bishop Desmond Tutu's fact finding report of
    September 2008 to the Human Rights Council on the Israeli shelling of
    Beit Hanoun in the Gaza Strip in 2006, which led to the death of
    nineteen civilians as well as the growing international reaction to
    last month's Goldstone Report on Gaza.

    International law and the Golan Heights

    The law on the subject and the demolition of Israel's arguments for
    retaining the Golan could barely be more complete. In addition to
    many UN resolutions condemning Israel's Golan takeover as violations
    of customary international law and Article 2 (4) of the UN Charter
    which outlaws the acquisition of territory by force and requiring the
    immediate withdrawal of Israeli armed forces from the Golan Heights
    virtually all legal analysts agree on the imperative of full return.

    One of the Israel lobby's iconic and repeatedly amplified myths has
    been that Syria indiscriminate rained artillery shells on peaceful
    Jewish settlements on the plain of Galilee without provocation thus
    allowing Israeli to invade as part of its right of self-defense.

    Among the scores who have exposed this canard are Israeli authors
    such as Professor Avi Shlaim, in his volume `The Myth of the Golan
    Heights' in which he writes: `They (the Israelis) began by staking an
    illegal claim to the sovereignty over the (demilitarized) zone and
    then proceeded, as opportunity offered, to encroach on all the
    specific provisions against introducing armed forces and
    fortification. They repeatedly obstructed the operations of the UN
    observers (comment: think Lebanon) , on one occasion even threatening
    to kill them...They expelled, or otherwise forced out, Arab inhabitants
    and razed their villages to the ground.'

    Moreover, Moshe Dayan, Israel's Minister of Defense at the time,
    explained to an Israeli journalist in 1976:

    `I know how at least 80 percent of the clashes there (on the Golan
    front) started. In my opinion, more than 80 percent, but let's talk
    about 80 percent. It went this way: we would send a tractor to plough
    someplace where it wasn't possible to do anything, in the
    demilitarized area and knew in advance that the Syrians would start to
    shoot. If they didn't shoot, we would tell the tractor to advance
    further, until in the end the Syrians would get annoyed and shoot.
    And then we would use artillery and later the air force also, and
    that's how it was...' (The Golan: Ending Occupation, Establishing Peace,
    London, 2007).

    Dayan later added, `There was really no pressing reason to go to war
    with Syria.....the kibbutz residents who pressed the government to take
    the Golan Heights did it less for security than for the farmland.'

    Syrians cite the human rights situation in the Golan as no longer
    tolerable, as noted in various UN reports as `persistent' and
    `significant deterioration'. A 2002 UN Special Committee report
    described the repression of the Syrian inhabitants under Israel
    occupation as `extensive, affecting, all aspect of life and families,
    villages and communities', adding that `there are also widespread
    economic consequences of the occupation.'

    All Syrians interviewed during and following the October 11-12th
    Conference appear bitter over the separation of families who live on
    either side of the valley constituting the demarcation line. Syrian
    students return to their families in the occupied Golan face, several
    hours of questioning and even the presents they bring are confiscated.
    Others are held in arbitrary detention for many days, facing torture
    and humiliation.

    A 1998 Human Rights Watch report of the Golan Heights concludes that
    `Israel seriously misrepresents the degree of its fulfillment of its
    treaty obligations' under the International Covenant on Civil and
    Political Rights it signed in January 1992.

    For the international community, including the United Nations and
    American and European policy makers the choice appears to be implement
    International law or witness another explosion in this volatile
    region.



    Franklin Lamb is Director of the Washington-DC, Beirut Lebanon
    Sabra-Shatila Foundation and can be reached at
    [email protected].
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