ADC Update: Expanded Talking Points and Strategies
for Media Activism in the Current Crisis
ADC's (The American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee's) talking points on the current crisis have been expanded given
recent developments. US media coverage of the current conflict in Palestine has, for the most part, been outrageously biased against the
Palestinians and in favor of Israel. ADC urges all its members and supporters to monitor their local media carefully and respond to as much
poor or biased coverage as possible. The following are talking points to help formulate letters and opinion pieces on the conflict.
TALKING POINTS:
- INTERNATIONAL PROTECTION FOR THE PALESTINIANS IS URGENTLY NEEDED.
With Israel's latest escalation of the conflict in bombing Palestinian cities such as Ramallah and Gaza, international protection for the
Palestinian civilians living under Israeli occupation is urgently needed. The bombings were revenge attacks for the killing of at least
two Israeli soldiers in Ramallah by a crowd of Palestinians. Palestinian police attempted but were unable to restrain the crowd. Palestinians say
that the men were part of an undercover "death squad," were dressed in civilian clothes and were carrying weapons equipped with silencers for
assassinations. The soldiers were in "Area A," in which according to the Oslo agreements, no Israeli troops should be, and Ramallah is
completely surrounded by Israeli military checkpoints. By resorting to vengeance-driven bombing of an unarmed civilian population, Israel has
seriously increased the scale and brutality of the conflict. ADC has called upon the international community, especially the United States,
and the United Nations, to act now to protect Palestinian from further attacks by the Israeli army. The international community has an
obligation to intervene when a civilian population, including children, living under a recognized military occupation are being gunned down in
the streets. Israel must not be allowed to kill a single further Palestinian child, and must be prevented from assaulting or bombing
Palestinian cities.
- THE UN SECURITY COUNCIL CONDEMNED ISRAEL'S USE OF "EXCESSIVE FORCE" AGAINST PALESTINIAN CIVILIANS.
On October 7, the United Nations Security Council adopted Resolution 1322, which "condemns acts of violence, especially the excessive use of
force against Palestinians, resulting in injury and loss of human life" and "calls upon Israel, the occupying Power, to abide scrupulously by
its legal obligations and its responsibilities under the Fourth Geneva Convention relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War
of 12 August 1949." The United States abstained but did not veto the resolution. This characterization of Israel as being primarily
responsible for the violence and having used extreme and excessive measures against demonstrators is consistent with all the facts, but is
at odds with most US press coverage which has sympathised with Israel's brutal tactics. 1322 is also significant in that it begins by recalling
a number of very important other Security Council resolutions, including 476 (see details below) and reaffirms "that a just and lasting solution
to the Arab and Israeli conflict must be based on its resolutions 242 (1967) of 22 November 1967 and 338 (1973) of 22 October 1973." As
explained further in talking points below, 242 stipulates that Israel must withdraw from the territories occupied in 1967. 1322 and the new
role for UN Secretary General Kofi Annan should signal a return to the centrality of 242 and the urgent need for its implementation. Please
note that the Security Council has reaffirmed that Israel is the "occupying power" in East Jerusalem, the West Bank and Gaza and is bound
by the terms of the 4th Geneva Convention, which bans not only attacks on civilians under occupation, but also settlement activity, land
expropriation, home demolitions and many other key features of Israel's behavior in occupied Palestine.
- THE CHARGE THAT PALESTINIANS NEED TO "STOP THE VIOLENCE"
The violence has been largely one-sided, mainly Israeli shootings of unarmed or lightly-armed Palestinian demonstrators, over 100 of whom
have been killed in the past two weeks. Almost all of the dead in the current conflict have been Palestinians, including numerous Palestinian
citizens of Israel. The UN Security Council has condemned Israel's use of "excessive force" against the Palestinian population, including the
indiscriminate use of automatic weapons, exploding bullets, helicopter gunships, tanks, rockets and now the bombing of cities. It is the use
of such measures, almost unheard of in the suppression of demonstrations, that has led to the high number of casualties and the
fact that almost all of them are Palestinian. Moreover, Israel's 33 year occupation of East Jerusalem, the West Bank and Gaza is the
all-encompassing violent reality that forms the backdrop to the current conflict. Israel has refused to live up to its obligations under UNSCR
242 and withdraw to its 1967 borders, even though its right to live in peace and in secure borders has been recognized by the Palestinians.
Israel has even reintroduced its armed forces into numerous Palestinian population centers in the occupied territories, which is another
principle cause of the current conflict.
- THE CHARGE THAT PALESTINIANS ARE SIMPLY OVER-REACTING TO A VISIT BY AN ISRAELI LEADER TO MOSQUES IN JERUSALEM.
The deadly violence from the Israeli army has been an attempt to brutally suppress major demonstrations and protests by Palestinians.
These were initially sparked by deliberately provocative intrusion into Muslim holy sites in East Jerusalem by Likud leader Ariel Sharon, the
man responsible for many massacres of unarmed Palestinians including in Sabra and Shatila in 1982. Sharon's action was overtly designed to
demonstrate Israel's "sovereignty" over Jerusalem, especially the Haram Ash-Sharif, and was intended to provoke an angry response. However, at
a deeper level, the current protests reflect years of mounting Palestinian frustration, rage and despair over the failure of the "peace
process" to address their basic human and national rights. People have an absolute right to resist occupation, especially by demonstrating on
behalf of their human and national rights.
- THE CHARGE THAT Palestinians rejected "generous" Israeli terms at Camp
David and have chosen war over peace.
For decades the Palestinians were told that, no matter the injustice foisted upon them, they must accept Israel in its 1967 borders, more
than three-quarters of Palestine, and in effect renounce any political claim to most of their country. The plan is articulated in UN Security
Council Resolution 242, which sets up a two part "land for peace" solution. Part one holds that Israel must withdraw from the territories
occupied in 1967 (land). Part two calls for all states in the region to live in peace within secure and recognized boundaries (peace). Every
"peace process" document from the origins of the Madrid Summit to the final Camp David communiqué, reiterates that the aim of the negotiations
is the implementation of 242. The Palestinian obligations under 242 have been fulfilled years ago. The PLO and Palestinian Authority have
recognized the State of Israel in its 1967 borders, and its right to live in peace. The Israeli obligation, withdrawal from the occupied
territories, is utterly unfulfilled. Proposals put forward by Israel and the United States at Camp David fell far short of implementing 242,
would have left Israel in possession of large parts of the West Bank and East Jerusalem, including the old city, and ignored the Right of Return
for Palestinian refugees. Far from being "generous," Barak's proposals avoid most of Israel's most important obligations under international
law and were a non-starter. By refusing to live up to its obligations under 242, withdraw from all the occupied territories or allow the
refugees to finally go home, it is Israel which has prolonged the conflict and blocked the only viable solution.
The "peace process" has not brought peace to the Palestinians, or statehood, or liberation, or even a better standard of living. It has
brought only a succession of broken Israeli promises and a response by the international community, especially the United States, that stands
steadfast behind one plank of "land-for-peace" and shows little interest in the other. The Palestinian people can hardly be expected to simply
accept a status quo based on the ongoing denial of their most basic human and national rights with no end in sight. Americans would not
accept any such situation for themselves and ought not ask this of any other people.
- Israel is bound by international law to withdraw from all the
territories occupied in 1967, including Jerusalem.
Israel simply refuses to end its occupation, especially of Jerusalem, as Sharon's invasion of the Muslim holy sites was intended to show. That
Jerusalem is included in the territories referred to in 242 is specifically articulated in Security Council Resolution 496 which
"reaffirms the overriding necessity to end the prolonged occupation of Arab territories occupied by Israel since 1967, including Jerusalem."
242 is a solemn commitment by the international community to the Palestinian people, who have already fulfilled their part of the
bargain. The international community must stand by its word and ensure that Israel returns to its 1967 borders, including withdrawing from
Jerusalem.
- Israel is responsible for the well-being of Palestinian civilians
nder its occupation.
One can easily imagine the outcry if almost any other government used similar tactics against unarmed civilians. Under the terms of the
Fourth Geneva Convention, Israel as the occupying power is obliged to defend well-being of the civilian population living under its control.
UNSCR 1322 reaffirms that Israel, as an occupying power, is bound by the terms of the Convention. Not only has the massacre of Palestinian
civilians by the Israeli military been a complete violation of its obligations, Israel has also failed to protect Palestinian civilians
from the heavily-armed Jewish settlers it introduced to the occupied territories. Israeli settlers have been heavily involved in attacking
unarmed Palestinians and are working hand-in-glove with the military. And the Israeli government has failed to protect its own citizens in
Palestinian communities in Israel from attacks by enraged Jewish mobs.
- Many of the killed Palestinians were children.
During the past two weeks, at least 21 Palestinian children have be killed by Israeli forces and settlers and over 450 injured, many
seriously. The wanton and deliberate targeting of children is one of the most heinous and notorious aspects of the current Israeli massacre
of Palestinians.
- The absurdity of claims that "the Palestinians are deliberately
provoking Israeli troops to kill their children for purposes of propaganda."
Historically, youth have always been at the forefront of popular uprisings against oppression such as the apartheid-like conditions
facing Palestinians living under Israeli occupation in East Jerusalem, the West Bank and Gaza. Demonstrating and stone-throwing by Palestinian
children does not justify Israel's wholesale massacre of them, any more than the South African government was justified in shooting children at
Sharpville and Soweto or southern governers in turning dogs and fire hoses on children involved in the American civil rights movement. The
heavy involvement of youth in the anti-apartheid, civil rights and Palestinian liberation struggles reflects the natural and irrepressible
response of oppressed peoples the world over.
- 12 year old Mohammed Al-Durah was murdered by Israel soldiers, not
"caught in the crossfire."
Please do not allow any instance of this whitewashing of his killing to go uncorrected.
The following excerpts from a statement given under oath by Mr. Talal Abu Rahma, the photographer for France 2 television who filmed the
murder, made at the Palestinian Centre for Human Rights on October 3, 2000, is a detailed eye witness account of the killing. It provides, as
if any were needed, definitive evidence that young Mohammed was murdered in cold blood, not "caught in the crossfire," as American news
organizations continue to misreport: "Then, it was quite clear for me that shooting was towards the child
Mohammed and his father from the opposite direction to them. Intensive and intermittent shooting was directed at the two and the two outposts
of the Palestinian National Security Forces. The Palestinian outposts were not a source of shooting, as shooting from inside these outposts
had stopped after the first five minutes, and the child and his father were not injured then.
Injuring and killing took place during the following 45 minutes. I can assert that shooting at the child Mohammed and his father Jamal came
from the above - mentioned Israeli military outpost, as it was the only place from which shooting at the child and his father was possible. So,
by logic and nature, my long experience in covering hot incidents and violent clashes, and my ability to distinguish sounds of shooting, I can
confirm that the child was intentionally and in cold blood shot dead and his father injured by the Israeli army."
MEDIA STRATEGIES:
Strategies for successful letter-writing include finding the single greatest weakness in the article or report to which you are responding
and focusing solely on that one point. Keep your letter short, no more than 150-200 words. Look for imbalance in op/ed's carried. If there is
a series of unanswered pro-Israel pieces, you can insist that a pro-Palestinian perspective is needed for balance and fairness in the
interests of the readers of the paper. That should provide the opportunity for submitting an alternative view in the form of a
full-length opinion piece.
As for gaining coverage for a local event such as a protest or rally, try as much as possible to emphasize the LOCAL response to a major
international news story. Include as much information as possible in the release about the local aspects of the event and the nature of the
community and how it feels about developments in Palestine. Also try to link it to other protests around the nation and the world to show that
it is part of a major campaign. Try to anticipate as closely as possible what the local press will be covering or thinking about on the
day of the event and connect your releases to that. Try to stay one step ahead of the media - you probably have a better sense of what is
about to happen than they do. Also, try to present local spokespersons, experts, community members and others to the media as commentators and
news sources. Try putting out a release to your local media listing a few such local news sources from or sympathetic to the community,
together with quotes and contact information to They are likely to keep this on file and use it in coming days.
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