• Leaked document fuels concern Israel plans to push Palestinians from Gaza into Egypt

    Israel says ‘concept paper’ isn’t policy, but Palestinians fear ethnic cleansing.

    An Israeli government document suggesting the mass relocation of Gaza’s 2.3 million people to Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula is fuelling concerns about the possible ethnic cleansing of Palestinians.

    The leaked document, first reported in Israeli media, was compiled by an Israeli government research agency known as the Intelligence Ministry and was dated Oct. 13 — six days after Hamas led deadly attacks on Israel and the Israeli government declared war against the Palestinian militant group, which controls Gaza.

    Although not a binding policy, it has deepened long-standing Egyptian fears that Israel wants to make Gaza into Egypt’s problem and revived Palestinians’ memories of the displacement of hundreds of thousands of people who fled or were forced from their homes during the fighting surrounding Israel’s creation in 1948, which Palestinians refer to as the Nakba, the Arabic word for catastrophe.

    “What happened in 1948 will not be allowed to happen again,” Nabil Abu Rudeineh, spokesperson for Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, told The Associated Press in reaction to the paper.

    He said a mass displacement of Palestinians would be “tantamount to declaring a new war.”

    A long-term plan

    A Hebrew-English translation of the document, published by the Israeli website +972 Magazine, outlined three options regarding the civilian population of Gaza.

    One would see the civilians remain in Gaza under the rule of the Palestinian Authority — which was ejected from Gaza after a weeklong 2007 war that put Hamas in power — while the second suggested an attempt to establish “a local Arab non-Islamist political leadership” to govern the population.

    Neither of these options were considered feasible strategies to create ideological change and deter future militancy against Israel.

    The third option, the evacuation of civilians in Gaza to Sinai, would “yield positive, long-term strategic outcomes for Israel,” the document stated.

    The proposal does not indicate this would be a temporary relocation.

    “In the first stage, tent cities will be established in the area of Sinai,” it reads. “The next stage includes the establishment of a humanitarian zone to assist the civilian population of Gaza and the construction of cities in a resettled area in northern Sinai.”

    Growing sentiment about Gaza

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office played down the report as a hypothetical exercise, saying it was a “concept paper, the likes of which are prepared at all levels of the government and its security agencies.”

    But the paper does not exist in isolation.

    An Israeli think-tank, the Misgav Institute for National Security and Zionist Strategy, released a paper inferring the situation presented “a unique and rare opportunity to evacuate the whole Gaza Strip in co-ordination with the Egyptian government.”

    “At the moment, these conditions exist, and it is unclear when such an opportunity will arise again, if at all,” reads a Hebrew-English translation published by the website Mondoweiss.

    Israeli officials and other political figures have openly expressed similar sentiments, according to an article from the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

    The question of ethnic cleansing

    Pushing Palestinians out of Gaza into Sinai would be “ethnic cleansing,” said Dr. Mustafa Barghouti, a Palestinian physician and politician.

    He believes there is no chance they would ever be allowed to return and that it would set “a very dangerous precedent” for all Palestinians.

    “The ultimate goal will not only be ethnic cleansing of Gaza, but also of the West Bank,” he told CBC News. “We already see terrorist settlers’ attacks on Palestinian communities in the West Bank.”

    Ethnic cleansing is a term that emerged during the war in the former Yugoslavia in the 1990s.

    The United Nations describes it as “a purposeful policy designed by one ethnic or religious group to remove by violent and terror-inspiring means the civilian population of another ethnic or religious group from certain geographic areas.”

    It is not recognized as an independent crime under international law. Attributes of ethnic cleansing — including murder, extermination, enslavement, deportation, imprisonment, torture and rape, among others — can, however, constitute other crimes under international law, such as crimes against humanity or genocide.

    Israeli-American historian Gil Troy, a history professor at McGill University in Montreal, cautions against the suggestion that Israel plans to “transfer” Palestinians out of Gaza, saying the concept paper is “not even a plan that is being actioned, but simply it’s a thought.”

    But Troy said he thinks a loss of some territory in Gaza isn’t out of the question.

    “I think in the wake of the savagery of Oct. 7, Israel has to create a much bigger buffer zone between the Gazans and the Israelis on the Gaza corridor,” he said.

    “That’s not about ethnic cleansing, that’s about creating territorial defence.”

    The Israeli government says Hamas-led militants killed more than 1,400 civilians and soldiers in the surprise assault on Israeli communities more than three weeks ago, and took 240 people hostage. More than 8,700 Palestinians have been killed, and nearly 2,000 more have been reported missing, since Israel began attacking the Gaza Strip, according to the territory’s Hamas-run Health Ministry.

    Under Article 51 of the United Nations Charter, Israel has the “inherent right” to defend itself against an armed attack, but several human rights groups have alleged that violations of international humanitarian law, and possibly war crimes, have been committed on both sides.

    On Wednesday, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau reiterated that right of self-defence and “unequivocally” condemned Hamas, but he expressed strong concerns.

    “The price of justice cannot be the continued suffering of all Palestinian civilians,” he said.
    Marketing mass displacement

    Whether or not Israel can or will carry out such a plan, the leaked document argued there would be a need to win over international support for a relocation of Palestinians.

    It suggests relying on “large advertising agencies” to promote messaging to Western nations “in a way that does not incite or vilify Israel” but instead focuses on “assisting the Palestinian brothers and rehabilitating them, even at the price of a tone that rebukes or even harms Israel.”

    At the same time, campaigns would be needed to “motivate” Gaza residents to accept the plan by pinning the loss of land on Hamas and “making it clear that there is no hope of returning to the territories Israel will soon occupy, whether or not that is true.”

    As for Egypt and other regional countries that may have to bear the brunt of a mass deportation of Palestinians, the document proposes incentives, including financial assistance for Egypt, specifically, to aid its current economic crisis.

    Egypt’s president, Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, has said a mass influx of refugees from Gaza would eliminate the Palestinian nationalist cause. It would also risk bringing militants into Sinai, where they might launch attacks on Israel, he said.

    Egypt has long feared that Israel wants to force a permanent expulsion of Palestinians into its territory, as happened during the war surrounding Israel’s independence. Egypt ruled Gaza between 1948 and 1967, when Israel captured the territory, along with the West Bank and east Jerusalem.

    https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/israel-gaza-palestinians-concept-paper-1.7015576
    #déportation #déportation_de_masse #Gaza #Israël #nettoyage_ethnique #Sinaï #Egypte #évacuation #transfert

    • Et petite mise en perspective de cette nécessité de vider Gaza...

      Article sorti le 5 mai 2023 :
      Israël et l’Autorité palestinienne négocient l’exploitation d’un #champ_gazier au large de Gaza

      L’État hébreu et l’Autorité palestinienne ont repris leurs discussions sur l’exploitation du camp #Gaza_Marine, situé au large des côtés de l’enclave palestinienne, dont les Palestiniens pourraient profiter. L’Égypte pourrait jouer un rôle pivot.

      Israël et l’Autorité palestinienne (AP) mènent des “discussions secrètes” autour de l’exploitation du champ gazier baptisé Gaza Marine, situé à 30 kilomètres de la côte de l’enclave palestinienne de la bande de Gaza, a révélé, jeudi 4 mai, le site Internet de la chaîne de télévision israélienne Channel 13.

      Ce sujet s’intègre dans les pourparlers, plus larges, politiques et sécuritaires entre les deux parties. Ces dernières ont repris langue ces dernières semaines, sous la pression des États-Unis, lors de récents sommets en février à Aqaba, en Jordanie, et en mars à Charm El-Cheikh, en Égypte.

      Découvert en 1999 dans les eaux territoriales palestiniennes, le gisement de Gaza Marine contiendrait plus de 30 milliards de m3 de gaz naturel. Pour l’Autorité palestinienne, il pourrait représenter “un revenu annuel compris entre 700 et 800 millions de dollars”, écrit le site Middle East Eye, qui rapporte l’information.

      Les choses pourraient donc changer.
      L’Égypte en médiatrice ?

      En réalité, les “discussions secrètes” révélées par Channel 13 autour du champ gazier au large de Gaza ne sont pas nouvelles. L’année dernière, Israël, l’Autorité palestinienne et l’Égypte, habituel médiateur entre les deux parties, avaient échoué à se mettre d’accord. Parmi les questions en suspens, celle du positionnement du Hamas palestinien, rival d’Israël et du Fatah, qui contrôle l’AP, explique la chaîne israélienne.

      Comme Israël considère que l’AP n’a pas les moyens d’exploiter ce champ, il était question qu’une société égyptienne chapeaute le projet en distribuant 55 % des bénéfices à l’Autorité palestinienne et 45 % à la compagnie égyptienne. C’est sans doute autour d’une solution similaire que les discussions ont repris.

      Ces dernières années, d’importants #gisements_de_gaz et de #pétrole ont été repérés dans les eaux territoriales des pays bordant la Méditerranée orientale, de la Turquie à Israël, en passant par le Liban et Chypre, qui espèrent pouvoir exploiter pleinement cette ressource. La Palestine aimerait bien rejoindre ce club.

      https://www.courrierinternational.com/article/energie-israel-et-l-autorite-palestinienne-negocient-l-exploi
      #gaz #énergie

    • Israël entend accélérer l’exploitation du gisement de gaz de Gaza

      Le champ Gaza Marine sera développé en coopération avec l’Egypte et l’Autorité palestinienne, affirme le gouvernement israélien

      Le Premier ministre israélien Benjamin Netanyahu a déclaré, dimanche, que son gouvernement allait accélérer l’exploitation d’un gisement de gaz naturel au large de la Bande de Gaza.

      « Dans le cadre des accords existants entre Israël, l’Egypte et l’Autorité palestinienne (AP), le gouvernement [israélien] va accélérer le projet de développement du champ gazier de Gaza Marine, au large de la Bande de Gaza », a déclaré le bureau de Netanyahu, dans un communiqué.

      Le Premier ministre israélien a déclaré qu’un comité ministériel, chapeauté par le Conseil de sécurité nationale, devait être formé pour préserver la sécurité et les intérêts politiques d’Israël dans ce dossier.

      Cette décision est « soumise à la coordination entre les services de sécurité [israéliens] et au dialogue direct avec l’Égypte, en coordination avec l’Autorité palestinienne », précise le communiqué.

      L’Autorité palestinienne, basée à Ramallah, et le Hamas, qui gouverne la Bande de Gaza, n’ont pas encore commenté l’initiative israélienne.

      Dans un communiqué publié le mois dernier, le Hamas avait déclaré qu’il ne permettrait pas à l’occupant israélien d’utiliser la question du champ gazier de Gaza comme instrument pour conclure des accords politiques et de sécurité avec d’autres parties.

      L’Égypte n’a pas encore commenté les déclarations de Netanyahu.

      En octobre 2022, le Fonds d’investissement palestinien a déclaré qu’il était sur le point de conclure un accord technique avec l’Egyptian Natural Gas Holding Company (EGAS) en vue de l’extraction du gaz du champ de Gaza Marine au large de la Bande de Gaza.

      Le champ Marine 1, premier champ gazier de Gaza, a été découvert dans les années 1990 dans les eaux territoriales de l’enclave. Il est situé à 36 kilomètres à l’ouest de la Bande de Gaza, dans les eaux méditerranéennes, et a été exploité en 2000 par la société British Gas.

      Le champ Marine 2 est situé dans la zone frontalière entre Gaza et Israël. Les Palestiniens ne peuvent cependant pas exploiter les deux champs gaziers en raison de l’opposition d’Israël.

      La Bande de Gaza, qui compte 2,3 millions d’habitants, est soumise depuis 2007 à un blocus israélien permanent qui pèse lourdement sur les conditions de vie de la population du territoire.

      https://www.aa.com.tr/fr/monde/isra%C3%ABl-entend-acc%C3%A9l%C3%A9rer-lexploitation-du-gisement-de-gaz-de-gaza/2925378

  • A note on terminology : U.S. current immigration law enforcement regime is one of “mass deportation.”

    My forthcoming book is tentatively titled “Mass Deportation and Global Capitalism.” People sometimes ask if “mass deportation” is an appropriate way to describe the current moment. I think it is. Here’s why.

    The term “mass incarceration” has been deployed to explain how and why the United States locks up a higher percentage of its citizens than any other country as well as much more than in the past. The term “mass deportation” draws from the conceptual logic of “mass incarceration.”


    http://stopdeportationsnow.blogspot.nl/2014/08/a-note-on-terminology-us-current.html

    #terminologie #déportation #migration #déportation_de_masse #renvoi #expulsion #USA #Etats-Unis #visualisation #vocabulaire