United Nations meeting in support of Middle East peace concludes with adoption of action plan by civil society to end occupation
From the www.monabaker.com archive (legacy material)
Received from UN Information Officer | Relief Web | 13 July 2005
Plan is ‘Navigator’ for Civil Society Actors Committed to Middle East Peace; It Pinpoints Areas for Urgent Action by International Community, Says Chairman
GA/PAL/989
(Received from a UN Information Officer.)
PARIS, 13 July — Civil society organizations committed to ending the Israeli occupation of Palestinian Territories and to achieving the Palestinians’ still unrealized rights, including the right of self-determination, today identified the coming year to inaugurate a global campaign of boycotts, divestment and sanctions to pressure Israel to end the occupation and comply with international law and all relevant United Nations resolutions, as the United Nations International Conference in Support of Middle East Peace concluded this evening in Paris.
Through the adoption by acclamation of an Action Plan, civil society participants committed themselves to internationalism and the belief that the United Nations remained central to ending the occupation. As this week marked the first anniversary of the landmark advisory opinion of the International Court of Justice on the illegality of Israel’s “annexationist apartheid wall”, the settlements and occupation, and the consequences of that illegality, participants joined with their colleagues around the world to rededicate themselves to “bringing down the wall”.
But events on the ground in the Occupied PalestinianTerritories continued to deteriorate, with land confiscation, house demolitions, escalating violence at checkpoints and on roads, closures, curfews, a renewed Israeli policy of assassination, and plans for new settlement projects, their text said. Participants were especially concerned about the consequences of Israel’s planned “disengagement” from Gaza, which would alter the form but not the essence of occupation and control. Clearly, the “disengagement” from Gaza was not designed to end the occupation, but was a ploy to legitimize Israel’s annexation of wide swathes of territory in the West Bank, it stated.
After participating in the reading aloud of the draft Action Plan, Na’eem Jeenah, Spokesman, Palestine Solidarity Committee of South Africa and President of the Johannesburg-based Muslim Youth Movement,said that, finally, Palestinian groups and the Palestinians, themselves, were calling collectively for boycotts, divestment and sanctions against Israel. Today’s Action Plan — like the statement released by 200 Palestinian organizations in the West Bank and Gaza on 9 July to commemorate the advisory opinion of the International Court of Justice on the illegality of the separation wall — had been inspired by South Africa’s struggle against apartheid, and resistance to injustice and oppression.
Within the South African context, in which the 9 July call had occurred, the struggle against apartheid had been based on four pillars. Two concerned internal resistance to apartheid and the international isolation of the apartheidState. It was those pillars, which were crucial to bringing about an end to the apartheidState. It had taken 30 years for that call to take root. Palestine and the Palestinian people did not have 30 years. From the Conference onward, it was time to intensify efforts, with the Action Plan the main focus for the coming year. He urged those Palestinian groups that had issued the call this week to lead the campaign at the global level.
Ravan A.G. Farhadi (Afghanistan), Head of the delegation of the Committee on the Exercise of the Inalienable Rights of the Palestinian People, under whose auspices the Meeting was held, thanked participants for their insightful opinions and creative ideas, which had brought the two days of deliberations to a successful conclusion. The Action Plan pinpointed issues requiring urgent international attention. It also enlisted detailed plans that should guide civil society organizations, like a “navigator”, in their strategy planning.
More important than the discussions and the Action Plan — as a piece of paper did not feed Palestinian children or halt the wall’s construction — was the implementation phase, he said. Participants should keep alive the energy of the past two days and create a series of influential global movements, by bringing together those working on the same subject and transforming them into one “global force” in support of the Palestinian people. He was convinced that the International Coordinating Network for Palestine could play a major role in that regard.
Closing remarks were also made by Somaia S. Barghouti, on behalf of the Permanent Observer Mission of Palestine to the United Nations; Phyllis Bennis, Political Analyst, Fellow, Institute for Policy Studies, and Co-Chair, International Coordinating Network for Palestine, based in Washington, D.C.; and Hind Khoury, Minister of State of the Palestinian Authority.
Earlier today, the Meeting convened a second plenary on “Strengthening civil society initiatives”, at which the following participants spoke: Pierre Galand, Senator, Belgian Parliament, and Chairman of the Brussels-based European Coordinating Committee for NGOs on the Question of Palestine; Na’eem Jeenah, Spokesperson, Palestine Solidarity Committee of South Africa and President of the Johannesburg-based Muslim Youth Movement; Raji Sourani, General Director, Palestinian Centre for Human Rights, Gaza; and Phyllis Bennis, Political Analyst, Fellow, Institute for Policy Studies, and Co-Chair, International Coordinating Network for Palestine, based in Washington, D.C. The Meeting also heard reports of the six workshops.
Plenary II
When the second plenary opened, participants of the two-day Conference heard reports of workshops held throughout the Meeting on: yesterday, strategies to consolidate and broaden constituencies; strategies to mobilize public opinion; and strategies to engage governments; and today, European civil society in support of Middle East peace; cooperation with the United Nations; and campaigns in support of Middle East peace.
Reporting on the workshop on strategies to mobilize public opinion, a participant said that clear agreement had been achieved that now was the moment for campaigns in the form of boycotts, divestment and sanctions against individuals and societies, and governments — particularly against Israel — until it fully complied with international law. The advisory opinion of the International Court of Justice on the wall was seen as a main instrument in that campaign.
On the workshop on campaigns in support of Middle East peace, another speaker said it had been agreed that Israel should be pressed to change its policy because it would not do so by itself. Sanctions were deemed appropriate, and refugee returns were also discussed, as was the advisory opinion and Israeli discrimination against Palestinian citizens. The thinking was to try to build momentum, starting with individual action, and step-by-step, moving towards sustainability of action. It had also been agreed that Israelis should take part in the call against occupation; that call that was neither anti-Semitic nor anti-Israel.
The workshop on engaging governments had as its goal making governments comply with their own legal obligations, leading to lasting peace between Israelis and Palestinians and a viable, sovereign ad independent Palestinian State, its speaker said. The group reached four recommendations towards achieving that goal: raising governments’ awareness of their obligations under the Geneva Conventions, and of the advisory opinion and subsequent endorsement by the United Nations General Assembly; devise strategies to engage governments through public opinion and the media; work collectively to ask governments to take political and economic means, including sanctions and the cessation of military trade with Israel, to urge it to comply with international law; and increase efforts to counter the prevailing view among governments that the Gaza disengagement plan was a window of opportunity.
Towards expanding and consolidating constituencies, that workshop’s representative said the group had elaborated broad thematic approaches to consolidate the opposition to the occupation of the West Bank and Gaza with anti-war activists. The group also underscored the importance of combating against racism and the demonization of Islam, and promoting linkages between civil society groups in the West and inside the OccupiedPalestinianTerritories. It also discussed the situation of Palestinian prisoners, especially children. At the national level, in France, for example, suggestions had been made that the medical community could focus on the health consequences of occupation and promote the purchase of Palestinian olive oil in France.
Other suggestions had included academic exchanges between European and Palestinian universities, she said. Some speakers saw the upcoming World Summit on Communications in Tunisia as an opportunity to advance the issues. There was general agreement on, among other things, the need to push for a United Nations resolution to end all defence dealings with Israel.
In the workshop on European civil society in support of Middle East peace, its speaker said there had been agreement that European civil society had a vital role to play in the rights of the Palestinian people. There were always obstacles in its work, but the change in the title of the Conference had been an indication of the Semitic shift even in United Nations quarters. Thus, European civil society must be vigilant about how propaganda was used to make its work difficult. Formerly, Israel had been seen as the biggest threat to peace; now that was Islam. One concrete recommendation had been the creation of an international tribunal on the quest of the Palestinian people in the Middle East. European civil society actors must work with their Israeli counterparts and peace groups to ensure that the struggle was not dismissed as anti-Semitic.
The speaker for the workshop on non-governmental organizations’ cooperation with the United Nations said it should be ensured that humanitarian and development cooperation did not perpetuate occupation. The growing weakness of the world body was discussed, and several recommendations had emerged. The first was to strengthen the United Nations by reminding governments of their commitments made at the world body, especially the ruling of the International Court of Justice. The NGOs should highlight United Nations’ recommendations on violations by the Israeli occupation. On the normalization of the status of Israel at the United Nations, attention was drawn to the fact that Israel was now part of the Group of Western States, in order to be able to stand for candidature on bodies’ bureaus and hold a seat on the Security Council. NGOs should draw attention to that very serious issue of the IsraeliState normalizing its status at the United Nations, when it did not respect that Organization’s decisions or resolutions.
Summary of Plenary II Statements
PIERRE GALAND, Senator, Belgian Parliament, offering a European view of the Palestinian question, said it was regrettable that he had not had sufficient time to better coordinate European participation at the Conference.
He said that Israel had unilaterally decided to disengage from Gaza. If that was really a withdrawal from Palestinian land as part of the Quartet’s Road Map, then that could only be welcomed. But if the Road Map was being cast aside, as indicated by Prime Minister Sharon, and there was no second phase of disengagement planned, then that was entirely unacceptable. In addition, one year after the ruling of the International Court of Justice and the General Assembly’s endorsement of it on 22 July 2004, the wall had been extended and no measures had been taken by either the United Nations or any government in Europe or the United States to prevent the continuation of the wall’s construction.
There was cause for concern, as what was being presented today as a new stage was only a unilateral step by Israel according to Israel’s own interest and which had very little to do with a genuine peace process, he said. It was imperative, therefore, to call on the political leaders to tell them of that concern, and he was quite concerned.
Turning to the Gaza disengagement plan, RAJI SOURANI, General Director, Palestinian Centre for Human Rights, Gaza, said it was a unilateral, Israeli-designed, Sharon initiative, which threatened to isolate Gaza — its 1.3 million people across 365 square kilometres. Imports and exports would be severely curtailed, as there would be no access to any Israeli port, either by land or sea or air. There would be one checkpoint for only three categories of people: the VIPs, which comprised only up to 600 persons; international organizations like UNRWA and the Red Cross; and diplomats. Practically speaking, the disengagement plan would totally disconnect the people of Gaza from Israel, from their people in Jerusalem and the West Bank. In effect, the people of Gaza would be socially, economically and politically boycotted.
He explained that the only crossing connecting the 1.3 million people of Gaza with the outside world would be the Rafah crossing, which would be under Israeli control. That was not an issue for compromise in the foreseeable future. Gazeans could only use the Cairo airport, if they were allowed to pass the Rafah crossing, and they would only be able to use two ports in the Mediterranean, almost 350 kilometres from Rafah. Israel would retain control of land, sea and air, and occupation would simply continue in its legal and political form. That was essentially a deployment of the Israeli Army in the Gaza Strip; that was the whole concept surrounding the evacuation of some 19 settlements, or 160 more kilometres.
Gaza also suffered 65 per cent unemployment, and 81 per cent of its inhabitants lived under the poverty line, he went on. If it was disconnected from Israel, it would become part of the Egyptian economy and inherit those economic disasters. Without free access to the outside world, and remaining 100 per cent under Israeli control, would suffocate the people of Gaza, which was precisely Sharon’s plan. His intentions were to derail the entire discussion of the real issues, through redeployment in the Gaza Strip. Nobody was talking about the ethnic cleansing taking place in Jerusalem, or the building of the wall there. Once completed in a few months, the wall would mean that 55 per cent of the West Bank had been annexed to Israel.
At the same time, he said, settlements expanding vertically and horizontally. Nobody was talking any more about the illegality of the settlements, which were flourishing. No one was talking anymore about ending Israeli occupation. Sharon’s strategy for the Gaza disengagement plan was to derail the entire discussion about Jerusalem, the settlements, the wall and about occupation, per se, as well as international humanitarian law and the Fourth Geneva Convention. The latter were not Palestinian inventions; they were the “crème de la crème” of international law, aimed at protecting civilians in times of war. And, Palestinians needed protection under those laws. The strongest court on Earth had issued the advisory opinion in the most eloquent of ways. At the end of the day, it was important to secure the benefits from that.
Adoption of Action Plan
Next, the Meeting turned to the draft 2005 Plan of Action entitled, “Peace in the Middle East: Mobilizing to End the Israeli Occupation” of the International Coordinating Network on Palestine. It was read out by members of the panel.
Action Plan Summary
Civil society organizations committed to ending the Israeli occupation of Palestinian territories and to achieving the still unrealized rights, including the right of self-determination, of the Palestinian people, agree to anchor their work in human rights, international law, and the United Nations Charter and resolutions. They commit to internationalism and the belief that the United Nations remains central to ending the occupation. These tools provide the only road map for the basis for a comprehensive, just and lasting peace.
As this week marks the first anniversary of the landmark advisory opinion of the International Court of Justice on the illegality of Israel’s annexationist apartheid wall, the settlements and occupation, and the consequences of that illegality, participants join with colleagues around the world to commemorate the significance of that ruling and to rededicate themselves to the work of enforcing it and bringing down the wall.
But events on the ground in the OccupiedPalestinianTerritories continue to deteriorate, the document states. Despite the clarity of the Court’s opinion and the overwhelming support for the General Assembly resolutions affirming that opinion, expansion of the wall continues. The wall has become the symbol of the continuing crisis of Israeli settlements — all of which is in violation of international law and specific United Nations resolutions — being built, expanded and transformed into armed centres of anti-Palestinian violence.
It further states that occupation on the ground means land confiscation, house demolitions, escalating violence at checkpoints and on roads, closures, curfews, a renewed Israeli policy of assassination, and other violations of the Fourth Geneva Convention. Plans for new settlement projects in the Jordan Valley, and especially in Jerusalem, show the duplicity of Israel’s claimed commitments to a two-State solution, as Israel’s settlement-based seizure of land continues and a viable Palestinian State as part of a two-State solution grows less and less attainable. There was a danger that the current “de facto apartheid conditions” on the ground could be transformed into a normalized reality.
Participants are especially concerned about the consequences of Israel’s planned “disengagement” from Gaza, which will alter the form but not the essence of occupation and control, the text says. Certainly, as the occupying Power, Israel bears a unilateral obligation to completely end its occupation of all the PalestinianTerritories. It is clear, however, that the “disengagement” from Gaza is not designed to end the occupation, but is a ploy to legitimize Israel’s annexation of wide swathes of territory in the West Bank as a quid-pro-quo backed by the United States in the letter from President George W. Bush to Prime Minister Ariel Sharon in April 2004. It will have the effect of establishing even greater Israeli domination over Gaza’s economy and society.
Civil society participants further agree that the urgency of implementing international humanitarian law — that prohibits settlements, house demolitions, and violence against an occupied population, and requires the creation of an independent, viable, contiguous and sovereign PalestinianState with Jerusalem as its capital — remains their vital concern. The need to pressure their governments to enforce the Court’s decision regarding the illegality of the wall remains. The need for developing new strategies to provide international protection for Palestinians living under the brutality of Israel’s military occupation has never been greater.
Their work of building an international challenge to Israel’s occupation is strengthened and empowered by our support from, and our participation in the broad global movement against occupation and for justice throughout the Middle East, their text states.
Participants agree that their work to end the occupation of Palestine remains their solemn commitment. They will work with solidarity campaigns, with civil society organizations, with parliaments, with governments and with the United Nations itself, especially the General Assembly’s Committee on the Exercise of the Inalienable Rights of the Palestinian People and the Division for Palestinian Rights, to build a movement strong enough to end the Israeli occupation.
Further to the text, they support the work of their constituent organizations on a wide range of issues including implementation of the advisory opinion on the illegality of the apartheid wall and settlements, campaigning for international protection for Palestinians living under occupation, mobilizing support for the right of Palestinian refugees to return to their homes, strengthening the United Nations’ capacity to defend Palestinian rights, and commemorating the annual International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People, on 29 November.
In a “Call to Action”, participants recognize that, as an international network, their strength lies in their ability to work collectively in unified campaigns and actions. To that end, they urge international, national and regional social movements, organizations and coalitions to support the unified call of Palestinian civil society for a global campaign of boycotts, divestment and sanctions [BDS] to pressure Israel to end the occupation and fully comply with international law and all relevant United Nations resolutions. They have identified the coming year to mobilize for and inaugurate that campaign. They call on partner organizations to intensify their activities, focusing on the BDS campaign, so that together, they will end the Occupation.
Discussion of Action Plan
NA’EEM JEENAH, Spokesman, Palestine Solidarity Committee of South Africa and President of the Johannesburg-based Muslim Youth Movement, who had participated in reading the draft, said the plan had focused on activities to be engaged in as a unified collective. It had taken too long to reach unanimous agreement on the issue of boycotts, divestment and sanctions. Just three or four years ago, a meeting such as this would not have achieved that level of agreement. It had taken too long for Palestinian groups and the Palestinians, themselves, to call, in a unified way, for boycotts, divestment and sanctions, as they had now done. He quoted from a statement released on 9 July on the anniversary of the advisory opinion by nearly 200 Palestinian organizations in the West Bank and Gaza and within and outside Israel and Palestine calling for boycotts, divestment and sanctions against Israel until it complied with international law and international human rights principles.
He said that the statement’s signatories had been inspired by South Africa’s struggle against apartheid and resistance to injustice and oppression. Similarly, the representatives of Palestinian civil society had called on international civil society organizations and people worldwide to impose boycotts and implement divestments against Israel, much like those applied against South Africa during the apartheid era. They had also invited conscientious Israelis to support that call for the sake of justice and genuine peace. Those campaigns should continue until Israel fully complied with its obligations, including dismantling the wall, and respecting, protecting and promoting the rights of Palestinian refugees to return to their homes and properties. That call was one which solidarity activists could not ignore.
Within the South African context, in which the 9 July call had occurred, the struggle against apartheid had been based on four pillars. Two concerned internal resistance to apartheid and the international isolation of the apartheidState. It was those pillars which were crucial to bringing about an end to the apartheidState, and particularly relevant had been South Africa’s international isolation.
It had taken some 30 years for that call to take root. Palestine and the Palestinian people did not have 30 years. But, there had already been a response to that call, including by the media.
The Action Plan should be the main focus for the coming year. It was the year to campaign at all levels across the world against Israeli products, academic institutions, and so forth. It was the year to divest from Israel and from companies that supported it. It was the year to pressure governments to implement a sanctions regime against the Israeli state until it fully abided by international law and relevant United Nations institutions. From this Conference onward, it was time to intensify those issues in a more coordinated way. He called on those Palestinian groups that had issued the call this week to lead the campaign at the global level.
PHYLLIS BENNIS, Political Analyst, Fellow, Institute for Policy studies, Co-Chair, International Coordinating Network for Palestine, Washington, D.C., said that the Network gained its strength from representing groups around the world working together on unified campaigns. It represented those components of the Palestinian rights movement whose work fell within the framework of international law, human rights, United Nations resolutions and the United Nations Charter. Everyone should work now on building a viable, international, non-contiguous movement in support of a viable, contiguous sovereign state of Palestine.
She said that lessons could be learned from the extraordinary global movement against the war in Iraq. Within that movement, which was the broadest, most visible and most powerful since the war in Viet Nam, the issue of Palestine remained very much at the centre. The new occupation — the United States’ occupation of Iraq — matched the Israeli occupation of Palestine. There had even been collaboration between those two occupation forces, militarily speaking. Still, much work remained to be done to keep the issue of Palestine very much at the centre. Activities had to be coordinated, but more importantly, a global movement had to be built which everyone understood.
After the world said no to the war in Iraq on 15 February 2003, for a brief moment, the world’s governments stood with the world’s people and said “no” to war, she said. Because so many governments said “no”, the United Nations was forced to abide by its Charter and say “no” to the scourge of war. True, it had not been possible to stop the war, but there could be no question anywhere in the world, that it had no legitimacy, no credibility, that it had been waged in violation of the United Nations Charter and based on lies.
She said that that was the kind of movement that had to be built around the movement for Palestinian rights — a movement of the people, of governments, and the United Nations. The world body had the potential to play an extraordinary role on the question of Palestine, but it was now under attack, ever more so than before. Those forces trying to undermine the work and legitimacy of the United Nations were focusing, first, on the question of Palestine, seeking to undermine the United Nations’ ability to enforce international law and its Charter, to stand up against occupation and against illegal invasion. The United Nations must not be even-handed between occupied and occupier. There was an obligation to ensure that the United Nations stood on the side of the occupied in the struggle against occupation. “We have an obligation to make the UN part of our movement”, she stressed.
After a brief discussion on the Action Plan, the Meeting adopted it by acclamation.
Closing Meeting
Committee Chairman RAVAN A.G. FARHADI (Afghanistan) assured Senator Galand that the United Nations Division for Palestinian Rights would be informed of his comments concerning the delays in sending out invitations to the Conference. He trusted that, next time, there would be more efficient preparations and invitations would be sent out in a timely manner. He also hoped for more international media coverage next time.
Ms. BENNIS said that, as campaigns were launched, everyone needed to take seriously what happened in the case of success — namely, the need to monitor the end of occupation. She was confident that the campaigns for boycotts, divestment and sanctions would lead to the end of occupation and bring Israel into compliance with international law. And, as it ended occupation, those campaigns would also be ended. Thus, the process of ending occupation must be monitored closely. After thanking everyone, she said that, yesterday, the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) had become the newest honouree of an important sword — the relationship between the struggle against apartheid in South Africa and the struggle against apartheid and discrimination in Palestine — when Nelson Mandela became a Special Ambassador of UNESCO. Given his long-standing support, not only for the anti-apartheid movement, but also for the Palestinian movement, it was fitting that the Meeting had taken place here in his honour at UNESCO, she said.
On behalf of the Permanent Observer Mission of Palestine to the United Nations, SOMAIA S. BARGHOUTI, the Mission’s Chargé d’Affaires, said that the deliberations of the past two days had addressed the very dire situation of the Palestinians under occupation. After listening to the two interventions, including at some of the workshops, she had concluded that the situation in the OccupiedPalestinianTerritories was deteriorating, and that Israel was escalating its racist oppressive measures of killings, building and expanding the illegal settlements, and constructing the separation wall, making the lives of thousands of Palestinian people unbearable.
She said that the description of the situation actually called for more serious action, with a specific programme to be implemented by various actors, according to their specific mandates and fields of operation. She endorsed civil society’s Action Plan and the outcomes of the workshops. Those activities should be taken seriously, including pressure on governments to adopt effective national campaigns of support for boycotts, divestment and sanctions in any areas appropriate to their countries and societies. That should be gradual and sustained.
Turning to the quest to rid the Middle East of nuclear weapons, she said that mission should start with Israel, as likely the only country in the Middle East that possessed such weapons.
It was civil society’s job to apply pressure in that regard, as well as to pressure their governments to require that Israel respected human rights and international legal agreements. On the first anniversary of the General Assembly’s endorsement of the advisory opinion of the International Court of Justice, an emergency special session was being called for 20 and 21 July. Many countries, however, were opposing the convening of such a session, including some European nations. She asked participants to pressure their governments to support the meeting’s holding.
For the Permanent Mission of Palestine, another issue of supreme importance, in light of the reform of the United Nations under way, was the issue of foreign occupation in the context of that reform, she said. To date, that had only been included in the context of terrorism, but the issue of foreign occupation should be addressed in the outcome document of the 2005 World Summit in an appropriate and serious way, and not only as a cause of terrorism. The Mission, with the support of the non-aligned movement of countries, the Organization of the Islamic Conference, and the Arab League, was also fighting those aspects of revitalizing the Assembly, whereby governments would be restricted to tabling only new resolutions, and ignoring those that had not yet been implemented. The Mission would also request the creation of a monitoring mechanism for implementation of General Assembly resolutions. The Assembly’s problem did not lay in the rules of procedures, but in the lack of implementation of its resolutions.
On behalf of the Palestinian leadership, HIND KHOURY, Minister of State of the Palestinian Authority, said that in those bleak days for Palestinians in the Occupied Palestinian Territories, including East Jerusalem, she had been heartened by the energy, determination and creativity of the participants, who so clearly had expressed the will and the responsibility to pursue the struggle for Palestinian rights. She assured them that the Palestinian leadership was ready to support them in any way possible, despite its limited resources.
She wished them the best in implementing the ambitious action plan, adding that it was easier to prepare the text and much harder to do the work. They would face lots of obstacles, as they knew. But, they had to do it for the sake of all humanity, for the achievement of all civilization. Hopefully, the breakthrough would come sooner, rather than later. She expressed the Palestinian leadership’s concern and anxiety regarding the threats to the Palestinian Rights Committee, and hoped that everyone would stand firm behind it to maintain its good work, for the sake of peace, justice and human rights.
Chairman’s Closing
Thanking participants for their insightful opinions and creative ideas, which brought the two days of deliberations to a successful conclusion, Committee Chairman FARHADI said that the Action Plan had highlighted issues of focus requiring the urgent attention of the international community. It also enlisted detailed plans that should guide civil society organizations in their strategy planning.
He said that the Action Plan could be the “navigator” for all civil society actors in the world determined to bring peace to the region, including those who might not have been able to be at the Conference, so he urged everyone to make every effort to disseminate the Plan as widely as possible. Undoubtedly, more important than those discussions and the adoption of the Action Plan was the implementation phase, he said. A piece of paper did not feed the Palestinian children, or halt the construction of the wall. Nor could it urge the parties to implement the Road Map obligations. “We need to keep alive the energy and momentum we acquired during the two days so that all those important goals will be realized”, he urged.
He said that one key was to create a series of influential international movements by bringing together those working on the same subject and ultimately transforming them into one “global force” in support of the Palestinian people. He was convinced that the International Coordinating Network for Palestine could play a major role in that regard. Maintaining contacts and coordination was sometimes difficult, but there were many tools available to link all the organizations and the United Nations together.
First, and foremost, there was cooperation on the ground, he said. Then, there were the numerous international meetings and conferences of the Committee, and, of course, there was the Internet and the e-mail list maintained by the Division for Palestinian Rights, through which information was provided about the latest activities of the International Coordinating Network on Palestine (ICNP) and civil society organizations worldwide working towards the common goal.
Of course, he stressed, the Committee needed civil society’s support and input. He asked that it continue to provide the Committee with information about activities, new initiatives and any thoughts and suggestions through the Division for Palestinian Rights, so that, together, it would be possible to develop the most effective network to help the Israelis and Palestinians to take another step towards the achievement of peace, safety and happiness.