Global affairs

US withdrawal from UNESCO: Abandonment of principles

A view of the Old City of al-Khalil in the southern West Bank. PHOTO: AFP

A woman shopkeeper is standing on a plastic chair to avoid knee high swirling rainwater mixed with sewage. "I work with a women's cooperative selling products made by Palestinian women in my shop. The sewage water has gone into the electric wires, so I have no electricity. Everything in the shop is destroyed. The metal door [that was] installed to protect the settlers prevents the water from flowing out into the main drain…This means we suffer every time it rains. They [the settlers] want us to move from here. This is why they make our life hard," she cries.The silent rain accompanies wails of those impacted.

This is the Old City of Hebron—the largest city in the West Bank and the only city in the Occupied Palestinian Territory apart from Jerusalem, with illegal settlements inside the city. As the sewage water in the market rises, Palestinian shopkeepers and residents point out the holes in the gate to allow for water to go through. However, cement blocks and sand placed by the settlers have closed the water drainage.

I am reminded of my time in Hebron, with last week's announcement of US withdrawal from UNESCO, the Paris-based cultural, scientific, and educational organisation of the United Nations, accusing it of "anti-Israel bias." Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu soon followed, tweeting, "I welcome @realDonaldTrump's decision…I have instructed the Foreign Ministry to prepare Israel's withdrawal from Unesco in parallel with the United States."

Under the Obama administration, United States took similar action in 2012 after Palestine was accepted as a member state of UNESCO. A law from the 1990s apparently prohibits US funding for any UN agency that recognises Palestine as a state.

The recent US pull out has to do with UNESCO's designation of Hebron's Old City as Palestinian World Heritage site in danger in July 2017. Condemning the decision, Prime Minister Netanyahu announced an annual USD 1 million cut in membership fees to the United Nations, diverting those funds to a Jewish People's Heritage Museum in the KiryatArba settlement in Hebron.

Israel's UNESCO ambassador, Carmel Shama-Hacohen, response was to disdainfully take out his mobile phone and share with the UN members, "It's my plumber in my apartment in Paris. There is a huge problem in my toilet and it is much more important than the decision you just adopted."

The UNESCO's decision was a verdict against the occupation. Following the 1994 riots that erupted in Hebron after an American Jewish settler killed 29 Palestinians in a massacre at the Ibrahimi Mosque, Palestinians in the Old City have been living a collective punishment—life in a cage.

Today, over 100 physical obstacles, including 18 permanently-staffed checkpoints, 14 partial checkpoints, and various permanent blockades, cut the Old City off from the rest of Hebron. The former lively bustle of Shuhada Street, Hebron's once main commercial strip and home to the wholesale, gold, and vegetable markets, has drowned behind the green shutters of the boarded-up shops, abandoned homes, and empty sidewalks.

In 2015, a third of Palestinian homes in the restricted area (1,105 housing units) were abandoned and an estimated 1,600 businesses closed. Several streets, designated for the exclusive use of settlers, restrict Palestinian traffic and, in some streets, even Palestinian pedestrians are banned.

With innumerable security checkpoints, watchtowers, barricades, soldiers with automatic weapons, revolving gates, deserted streets, and welded shut homes and shops, the Old City of Hebron is a city under siege.

Metal wire mesh and white plastic tarps—littered with garbage and used plastic bottles—form a canopy to prevent Israeli settlers, living in the buildings above, from throwing garbage, dirty dish water, and chemicals down onto Palestinians.

This is everyday life in the Old City of Hebron.

When it comes to Palestine, actions of President Obama and Trump based on a law from over two decades ago, are confusing for the residents of the Old City of Hebron. United States withdraws from the organisation it helped establish after World War II to widen access to education and ensure the free flow of ideas, when UNESCO carries out its mandate.


Anuradha Mittal is the lead author of Palestine: For Land & Life. 

Copyright: Inter Press Service


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US withdrawal from UNESCO: Abandonment of principles

A view of the Old City of al-Khalil in the southern West Bank. PHOTO: AFP

A woman shopkeeper is standing on a plastic chair to avoid knee high swirling rainwater mixed with sewage. "I work with a women's cooperative selling products made by Palestinian women in my shop. The sewage water has gone into the electric wires, so I have no electricity. Everything in the shop is destroyed. The metal door [that was] installed to protect the settlers prevents the water from flowing out into the main drain…This means we suffer every time it rains. They [the settlers] want us to move from here. This is why they make our life hard," she cries.The silent rain accompanies wails of those impacted.

This is the Old City of Hebron—the largest city in the West Bank and the only city in the Occupied Palestinian Territory apart from Jerusalem, with illegal settlements inside the city. As the sewage water in the market rises, Palestinian shopkeepers and residents point out the holes in the gate to allow for water to go through. However, cement blocks and sand placed by the settlers have closed the water drainage.

I am reminded of my time in Hebron, with last week's announcement of US withdrawal from UNESCO, the Paris-based cultural, scientific, and educational organisation of the United Nations, accusing it of "anti-Israel bias." Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu soon followed, tweeting, "I welcome @realDonaldTrump's decision…I have instructed the Foreign Ministry to prepare Israel's withdrawal from Unesco in parallel with the United States."

Under the Obama administration, United States took similar action in 2012 after Palestine was accepted as a member state of UNESCO. A law from the 1990s apparently prohibits US funding for any UN agency that recognises Palestine as a state.

The recent US pull out has to do with UNESCO's designation of Hebron's Old City as Palestinian World Heritage site in danger in July 2017. Condemning the decision, Prime Minister Netanyahu announced an annual USD 1 million cut in membership fees to the United Nations, diverting those funds to a Jewish People's Heritage Museum in the KiryatArba settlement in Hebron.

Israel's UNESCO ambassador, Carmel Shama-Hacohen, response was to disdainfully take out his mobile phone and share with the UN members, "It's my plumber in my apartment in Paris. There is a huge problem in my toilet and it is much more important than the decision you just adopted."

The UNESCO's decision was a verdict against the occupation. Following the 1994 riots that erupted in Hebron after an American Jewish settler killed 29 Palestinians in a massacre at the Ibrahimi Mosque, Palestinians in the Old City have been living a collective punishment—life in a cage.

Today, over 100 physical obstacles, including 18 permanently-staffed checkpoints, 14 partial checkpoints, and various permanent blockades, cut the Old City off from the rest of Hebron. The former lively bustle of Shuhada Street, Hebron's once main commercial strip and home to the wholesale, gold, and vegetable markets, has drowned behind the green shutters of the boarded-up shops, abandoned homes, and empty sidewalks.

In 2015, a third of Palestinian homes in the restricted area (1,105 housing units) were abandoned and an estimated 1,600 businesses closed. Several streets, designated for the exclusive use of settlers, restrict Palestinian traffic and, in some streets, even Palestinian pedestrians are banned.

With innumerable security checkpoints, watchtowers, barricades, soldiers with automatic weapons, revolving gates, deserted streets, and welded shut homes and shops, the Old City of Hebron is a city under siege.

Metal wire mesh and white plastic tarps—littered with garbage and used plastic bottles—form a canopy to prevent Israeli settlers, living in the buildings above, from throwing garbage, dirty dish water, and chemicals down onto Palestinians.

This is everyday life in the Old City of Hebron.

When it comes to Palestine, actions of President Obama and Trump based on a law from over two decades ago, are confusing for the residents of the Old City of Hebron. United States withdraws from the organisation it helped establish after World War II to widen access to education and ensure the free flow of ideas, when UNESCO carries out its mandate.


Anuradha Mittal is the lead author of Palestine: For Land & Life. 

Copyright: Inter Press Service


Follow The Daily Star Opinion on Facebook for the latest opinions, commentaries and analyses by experts and professionals.

To contribute your article or letter to The Daily Star Opinion, see our guidelines for submission.


Comments

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