Ramzy Baroud - Jordan Times, 18 April 2007
LONDON - In Trafalgar Square in London, dozens of journalists representing every major news organisation descended on a designated corner in the tourist area in support of Alan Johnston, the BBC correspondent kidnapped in Gaza on March 12, one month after his ordeal began.
Awaiting the arrival of Alan`s family to a press conference, organised by Reporters without Borders, I stood along with a few activists. My nervous smiles, interrupted by brief statements to inquiring journalists, could hardly hide my utter feelings of shame. It`s not often that I feel this way taking part in a solidarity event in support of anyone. This time was different, however, despite all attempts to distance myself from responsibility.
"Alan, they are not from amongst us," read the banners held by hundreds of journalists gathering in Ramallah, in the West Bank, to support Alan on the same day we gathered in London. The unfortunate fact is that while the kidnappers are not exactly elected representatives of the Palestinian people, mostly known for their unparalleled generosity, warmth and kindness to strangers, they are exactly what that banner tried to refute: they are a rational outcome of the state of chaos, corruption and overt militarism that has plagued Palestinian society for years. Indeed, they are from amongst us.
In times like these, reporters care little for details; all they seek are a few sound bites, preceded by an intense introduction and a snappy finish, and, consequently, a TV news report is made.
I had to accommodate. "These kidnappers don`t represent the Palestinian people, and I call on the Palestinian government to do its outmost to free Alan, whose professional reporting and unprecedented objectivity is a rarity in the age of polarised media," I told a Spanish newspaper.
Then Alan`s family arrived; they were the most unthreatening and kind-looking group of people one can ever encounter. Alan`s father, Graham, an older version of his son, dressed in a dark suit and spoke with a proud, yet somehow broken ,voice. "Chin up, my son," he told Alan, hoping that the message would reach him somehow. Then to the kidnappers: "You have family. Please think about what this is doing to my family, including in particular the distress and deep concern Alan`s mother and sister have had to endure for all these long weeks. As I have said before, please let my son go now, today."
A Palestinian leaned and whispered in my ear: "Why must these depraved individuals (referring to the kidnapers) keep placing us in these tough spots? What is even more bizarre about all of this is that everyone in Gaza knows who the kidnappers are."
Everyone in Gaza knows, I was told, including the authorities, and even the BBC received some heads-up. He named names, elaborated on the demands of the kidnappers who, he said, belong to a powerful clan affiliated with some people in Fatah, the once leading Palestinian resistance movement that has slowly evolved into a most impressive network of power-hungry individuals, factions, sub-factions, clans and so forth -- a great source of national fragmentation and political discord.
It turned out that other people at the press event had similar information. The kidnappers are apparently asking for $5 million and loads of ammunition. My friend believes that Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas must agree to the demands, to keep the rogue elements in his party in line; clan wars in Gaza tend to be politically taxing.
As journalists petered out following Alan`s parents` departure, and as Trafalgar Square returned to its cheerful self, there was nothing left but the large poster carrying Alan`s photo that had been unfurled earlier that day, and scores of doves reclaiming their space in centre stage.
How did we end up where we are, I asked myself as I, too, left the square and Alan behind. How could our struggle for freedom, for justice and for rights be so utterly reduced to an active state of civil war, factional clashes and constant cries for aid, and how could our entire narrative be so effortlessly hijacked and now dictated by mere gangsters vying for power and money?
Alan`s ordeal has lasted longer than other journalists` and aid workers` kidnapped in Gaza since chaos ensued in the strip nearly two years ago, but most notably following the Hamas victory in January 2006. Israel ensured that it left formidable allies in the area who acted on a whim to ensure that Israel`s narrative prevails even after its "withdrawal" from the devastatingly poor strip. And so the narrative goes: Palestinians are not capable of governing themselves, thus, in hindsight, four decades of Israeli occupation are justified and Israel`s current illegal military occupation of the West Bank and East Jerusalem is vindicated. Those allies hold true to their purpose, and have since then wreaked havoc.
The advent of Hamas, a well-regarded and anti-corruption group, changed nothing; it, in fact, precipitated the political fragmentation that defined the Palestinian struggle since the Oslo accords in 1993, and even before. Israel`s active military onslaughts since then, killing hundreds, and the U.S. political and economic embargos weakened the Palestinian front like never before. But truth must be told: political cohesion was hardly a quality that Palestinians ever enjoyed. They were too vulnerable, too receptive to pressure, which made their various leaderships, especially the pro-Israel camp -- as galling as this term may sound -- as flexible as clay, shaped by skilled Israeli hands and positioned wherever found fit.
But how can we claim that they are not from amongst us? How can we claim that they don`t represent us if we lack the political will to confront them? And when Alan is freed, as he must be, who will free us, Palestinians, from this destructive path on which we tread?
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* Ramzy Baroud is an author and a journalist. His latest volume, "The Second Palestinian Intifada: A Chronicle of a People`s Struggle" (Pluto Press, London) is available from Amazon and other book venues. This article is distributed by the Common Ground News Service (CGNews)