Canada�s Foreign Affairs Minister Maxime Bernier issued a
news release expressing his concern about the escalating violence in the Gaza
Strip [1]. It does nothing to help resolve the situation and only demonstrates
that the Canadian government is only putting out more face-saving rhetoric for
the international community and to placate the home crowd with platitudes about
the non-existent peace process. It is an empty statement, devoid of any real
suggestions to improve the situation in Gaza.
Language is all important within his statement. While he
�deplores� the actions of Hamas, Israeli actions -- which have resulted in far
more misery and deaths -- receive only the approbation that we are �very
concerned about the impact� of Israeli actions. More language continues the
bias. While the Hamas personnel are �terrorists� the Israelis are only
defenders with a �clear right to defend itself.�
The Canadian government does not recognize, and was one of
the first to deny, that Hamas won the Palestinian elections with a clear
majority in elections regarded globally as being one of the fairest ever
presented.
Does not the Hamas government, even though it does not
directly control the militants, have a right to protect its people against the
predations of the Israeli Defence Forces (IDF)? Or more properly, should they
not be given the chance to govern Palestine, as their record is one of
accommodation and flexibility to changes in their situation. I have indicated
before that Ireland and South Africa serve as examples where former
�terrorists� are now involved in shaping government, why not give it a try in
Palestine?
Hamas has consistently called for a �hudna� or cease-fire,
one as equally consistently ignored by Israel as it does not suit their
purposes. Israel has never truly �withdrawn� from Gaza; that was a publicity
show for Western media. Gaza remains essentially a prison camp to 1.5 million
Palestinians, with no control over their borders, no control over their
waterfront or fisheries, no control over their airspace and airports . . . in
sum no control of anything.
Bernier still seems to think that the Annapolis Conference
somehow renewed the totally defunct peace process, a process that only served
Israel's desire to continue building settlements, occupying more and more
Palestinian land, destroying more and more Palestinian farms, villages, and the
very culture and society that supported the Palestinians. Bernier wants leaders
on both sides �to prevent any actions that could undermine the peace process
resumed at the Annapolis Conference last November.�
What peace process, Maxime? The one in which Israel
bulldozes houses, kills women and children with rockets, attacks peaceful
protesters with tear gas and bullets, that has built a wall that confiscates
much Palestinian farmland and alienates much more land and many more villages?
Is that the peace process you wish to support?
The Canadian government has taken no actions that support
peace in the Middle East and continues their biased and ignorant support of
Israel in contrast to other actions they could have taken.
The Canadian government, if it truly believed in democracy,
would recognize the Hamas government as the proper authority in Palestine. It
would also release funds to allow Hamas to rebuild the civic structures that
have been destroyed through IDF occupation and incursions in the West Bank and
Gaza.
While calling on both sides in the conflict �to comply with
their obligations under international law,� Bernier implies that it is an equal
distribution of power. The Canadian government should denounce the Israeli
occupation of Palestine and the continued occupying presence of the IDF and the
atrocities that they commit against the rule of international law and it
obligations of an occupying force.
Canada should condemn the ongoing building of Israeli
settlements and the confiscation of Palestinian land, all theoretically in
contravention of international law. Equally, they could denounce the �wall�
that has been declared illegal in an international court of justice. Perhaps
then Palestine could then fulfill its international obligations and stop
defending itself with scary but militarily ineffective (although politically
useful) missiles.
What is truly deplorable is Canada�s use of fine sounding
rhetoric to camouflage its essentially unfailing support for Israel. By
defining Hamas as terrorists, they have conveniently placed them outside the
law, as the �evil� other, making them apparently incapable of governance and
protection under international law. This follows remarkably well in the
footprints of the American �war on terror� in which those not �with us� are automatically
�against us,� they become the �other,� outlaws, not even human, to be
subjugated to whatever atrocities the Americans -- and by extension Israel --
can deliver.
Canada should call on Israel to accept the Hamas offer of
�hudna� if it truly believes, as it says, that �A cessation of violence and an
improvement of the situation on the ground are key to progress.� Would not a
truce be a good place to start?
Canada should also take an independent stance from the
American line that the Conservative Harper government parrots so well, and try
to look at the world through something else than the American militant zealotry
that permeates their imperial desires. Canada�s position as a perceived neutral
player in the world scene should certainly have been well compromised by now by
anyone giving it any serious consideration. By accepting the duality of �good
and evil� that is the American patriot game, Canada can no longer stand on the
world stage and receive accolades as to its fairness and ability to serve as a
peace broker anywhere in the world.
Double standards of touting democracy and then denying it to
Hamas and of supporting international law and not applying it equally to Israel
solve nothing. Maxime Bernier and the Canadian government have, in sum, done
nothing to support peace in the world nor taken any positive actions that would
help considerably to actually reduce the violence in Gaza and the Middle East.
As a Canadian I find our official position statement empty and hollow of any
real meaning and devoid of any real actions on our part that would truly
support peace in Gaza.
[1] Statement
by Minister Bernier on the situation in the Gaza Strip
and Israel
Jim
Miles is a Canadian educator and a regular contributor/columnist of opinion
pieces and book reviews to The Palestine Chronicle. His interest in this topic
stems originally from an environmental perspective, which encompasses the
militarization and economic subjugation of the global community and its
commodification by corporate governance and by the American government. Miles�
work is also presented globally through other alternative websites and news
publications.