Fact Sheet
Palestinian Refugees Fact Sheet
·
The Palestinian refugee
problem arose not from a conflict in which, as claimed, the Zionist forces
overcame overwhelming odds against the Arab armies and the Palestinian
population voluntarily left. But from a systematic policy of ethnic cleansing.
The results of which are apparent in the Palestinian refugee camps across the
Arab world and in the Palestinian Diaspora. The policies, to a lesser extent,
continue to this day in Jerusalem and across the Occupied Palestinian
Territories.
·
Zionist Policy sought to
create a Jewish homeland in Palestine, a region already populated with a
history stretching back thousand of years. The characterization of a land
without a people for a people without a land created the myth of an empty
waiting Palestine. Nothing could be further from the truth and this was
evidenced in the atrocities of the 1948 War. Initially, Zionist policy was
directed towards winning the acceptance of the British and other colonial
powers.
·
In November 1917 while
the territory was under British occupation, the British declared they would
support the establishment in Palestine of ‘a national home for the Jewish
people’ providing there were proper safeguards for ‘the existing non-Jewish
communities’. Thereby acceding to Zionist demands. It should be noted that the
historic Jewish population in Palestine did not necessarily support these
demands; one indigenous Jewish leader described Zionism as evil.
·
Terror and
Dispossession: Jewish underground terrorist groups such as Haganah, Irgun and
Stern had the mission to terrorize the Palestinian street, destroy villages and
slaughter entire Palestinian families. 34 massacres were committed within a few
months: Al-Abbasiyya, Beit Daras, Bir Al-Saba', Al-Kabri, Haifa, Qisarya… These
attacks aimed to annihilate the entire Palestinian territory and population
(so-called Plan D), 50% of the Palestinian villages were destroyed in 1948 and
many cities were cleared from its Palestinian population: Aker, Bir Al-Saba',
Bisan, Al-Lod, Al-Majdal, Nazareth, Haifa, Tiberias, Jaffa, West-Jerusalem…
·
Israeli forces killed an
estimated 13,000 Palestinians. They forcibly evicted 737,166 Palestinians from
the homes and land. 418 Palestinian villages were entirely depopulated and
destroyed. The Palestinian populations in Aker, Bir Al-Saba', Haifa, Jaffa, Lydda,
Al-Majdal, Al Ramla, Safad, Tiberias, and West Jerusalem were almost entirely
removed. A conservative total, almost three-quarters of a million Palestinians
were made refugees.
·
1967 War: the tragedy of
the refugees continued in 1967 with the breaking out of the war, which created
a new wave of refugees. That year Israel occupied the rest of the Palestinian
territories and many Palestinians were uprooted for the second time: 15.000
fled from the West Bank, 38.000 fled from the Gaza Strip and 16.000 fled from
the Golan Heights. They found shelter in surrounding countries, such as Jordan,
Syria and Egypt.
·
Prohibition of return:
the Jewish settlers took over all what was left from Palestinian facilities,
such as schools, hospitals, houses and abandoned lands. Settlements were built
on the remains of the destroyed villages and the properties of these villages
were given to the newly arrived Jewish immigrants that settled in the empty
Arab housing.
·
Following the
establishment of Israel, it legislated in two areas, the first denied the
Palestinians the right to return home and the second took away their homes and
land. These laws continue to be in force.
·
Israel has legislated to
deny Palestinians the opportunity to return to their homes. It has refused to
offer adequate compensation or restitution, yet at the same time, Israel has
discriminated in favour of Jews by allowing them to migrate to Israel without
having established any previous connection with the country.
·
The Law of Return is a
keystone of Israeli policy. Jews, regardless of their nationality, are offered
Israeli citizenship under the Law of Return. The Law of Return is also open to
those related by marriage or birth to a Jew, including the grandchildren of a
Jew. In other words, a non-Jew may claim Israeli citizenship. 2,585,000 have
invoked the Law or Return to migrate to Israel.
·
Palestinians, however,
who may still have homes in what is now Israel, have been denied the right to
return. The Law of Return directly discriminates against Palestinians even
though under international law they the right to be repatriated.
·
The denial of the right
of return is a continuing breach of Article 2 and Article 5(d) of Convention on
the Elimination of all Forms of Racial Discrimination. The continuing refusal
by Israel to grant nationality to Palestinians who resided in Palestine prior
to 1948 breaches Article 5(d)(iii). The failure to provide legal means to
pursue compensation and restitution is a violation of Article 5(a) of the same
treaty.
·
It is also a violation
of Article 12 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights,
which states. No one shall be arbitrarily deprived of the right to enter his
own country.
·
Israel has passed a
series of laws in which the property of Palestinians has been expropriated, in
breach of international norms, and transferred to Jewish ownership.
·
Following the Nakba in
1948 Israel passed the Absentees’ Property Law of 1950. This created an office
known as the Custodian for Absentee Property, in which the legal and equitable
title of absentee property was entirely divested from the property’s
Palestinian owners.
·
An absentee is set out
in Section 1 of the statute: It is a national or citizen of Lebanon, Egypt,
Syria, Saudi Arabia, Trans-Jordan, Iraq, or the Yemen, (Section 1(b)(1)(i)), or
was in any part of Palestine or a neighbouring country, (Section 1(b)(1)(ii));
or a Palestinian citizen. (Section 1(b)(1)(iii)), and, who was absent from his
property after 29 November 1947, (Section 1(b)(1)), and if a Palestinian had
left for a neighbouring country (Section 1(b)(1)(iii)(a)) or in an area
controlled by an enemy force of Israel (Section 1(b)(1)(iii)(b)).
·
An absentee could see
the return of his property if he could prove he had left his place of residence
only “for fear that the enemies of Israel might cause him harm”, (Section
27(1)), or, “otherwise than by reason or of fear of military operations”.
(Section 27(2)). The law then excludes the majority of Palestinians and other
nationals of neighbouring countries who had, it is commonly stated, fled in
fear of attack from Israeli forces.
·
It has been estimated
that some 75,000 “Present Absentees” (i.e. they were resident in what is now
Israel but not residing at the temporarily absentee property) had their
property confiscated by the Israeli Government.
·
Moreover, Palestinian
institutions were also affected. Legal persons, including associations and
corporations, were declared absentee and had their lands confiscated by the Custodian.
The land expropriated under this legislation has been estimated at some 3.25
million dunums.
·
The Israeli Government
introduced a second land law that had a similarly devastating impact on
Palestinian landholding. The Land
Acquisition (Validation of Acts and Compensation) Law 1953 permitted the
confiscation of land for military purposes or for Jewish settlement. This
expropriation is placed at 1,255,174 dunums.
·
Although compensation is
supposed to be paid out, a very small proportion of funds have been disbursed
for compensation. By the end of March 1998, 14,364 persons had claimed
compensation. Settlements had been reached on 197,984 dunums of land. Payments
were made of NIS 2,724,137 and 53,710 dunums in compensation.
·
The objective of the law
is simple: to ensure that Palestinians have no entitlement to their former
homes. Although there is no patent right to property in human rights law, the
Absentee Property Law defies international law by confiscating property of
third party nationals without adequate compensation. Moreover, state practice
on the right of return, and the right to a standard of living in the
International Bill of Human Rights would indicate that the Absentees’ Property
Law is contrary to the principles of international human rights law.
Today’s
Facts
Palestinians are the largest single group of refugees in the world.
Their fate is one of the most complex issues still awaiting a solution in the
context of the “final status” negotiations between PLO/PNA and Israel. So far, no progress has been made, which is largely
due to the controversy over how to define a ‘displaced’ Palestinian. The fate
of the 1948 refugees is widely ignored.
The work of UNRWA, the Agency of the United Nations charged with the welfare of the
Palestine refugees has provided the humanitarian services essential to the
welfare of the refugees, particularly in the fields of education, health,
relief, services and employment opportunities.
Today over 3.5 million Palestinian refugees are registered with UNRWA, of these some 33% live inside one of the 59 UNRWA camps and 67% outside. Every year the population amount of refugees increases by almost 3%
The UNRWA definition of a ‘Palestine refugee’ was developed to meet a condition, not to satisfy a theory. It was elaborated for operational purposes to determine which persons were eligible for UNRWA assistance. Displaced persons are people who fled in 1967; they are not regarded as registered refugee by UNWRA, or as refugees by the United Nations’ definition. But the word refugee should include those who left their land in 1948 & 1967 as well as the Palestinian living abroad and who need a special permission to come back and stay in their country
For the Israeli the term refugee, referring to the Arabs who fled, is wrongly applied; they were merely considered to be migrants who should have been absorbed by the neighboring Arab states in the same way that the newly created state of Israel absorbed more than 500,000 Jews from all over the Middle East
General Assembly Resolution 194 adopted in December 1948, although not defining the term ‘Palestinian refugee’, under this resolution the refugees and their descendants have a right to compensation and repatriation to their original homes and land, because they have suffered “loss of or damage to property, which, under principles of international law or in equity should be made good by the government or authorities responsible”
Since June 1967 the Israeli occupation authorities have expropriated at least 5.839.000 dunums (73% of the West Bank & Gaza territory): 5.473.000 in the West Bank (incl. East Jerusalem) and 366.000 dunums in the Gaza Strip. Today, on average 8.630 dunums of land are confiscated every month for the purpose of settlements
Some Figures
Number
& Countries of Palestinian Refugees in 1948-49
|
Place of Shelter |
Number
of Refugees
|
Percentage
|
|
West Bank |
375.200 |
38,23% |
|
Gaza Strip |
244.400 |
26,80% |
|
Jordan |
94.000 |
10,22% |
|
Lebanon |
131.600 |
14,53% |
|
Syria |
94.000 |
10,22% |
|
Iraq |
3.000 |
0,18% |
|
Total |
924.200 |
100% |
The
dispossessed Palestinians
Where do they come from?
|
District |
Depopulated
Towns |
Dispossessed |
Population |
|
Acre |
30 |
47,038 |
288,863 |
|
Ramleh |
64 |
97,405 |
598,171 |
|
Baysan |
31 |
19,602 |
120,375 |
|
Beersheba |
88 |
90,507 |
555,811 |
|
Gaza |
46 |
79,947 |
490,960 |
|
Haifa |
59 |
121,196 |
744,269 |
|
Hebron |
16 |
22,991 |
141,190 |
|
Jaffa |
25 |
123,227 |
756,743 |
|
Jerusalem |
39 |
97,950 |
601,519 |
|
Jenin |
6 |
4,005 |
24,598 |
|
Nazareth |
5 |
8,746 |
53,712 |
|
Safad |
78 |
52,248 |
320,855 |
|
Tiberias |
26 |
28,872 |
177,307 |
|
Tulkarm |
18 |
11,333 |
67,746 |
|
Total |
531 |
805,067 |
4,942,119 |
Dispossessed people = 85% of the people who were living in the land that has now become Israel
Where is their land?
|
|
Sq. km |
|
Pre-1948 Jewish-controlled Land |
1,682 |
|
Remaining Palestinians' Land |
1,465 |
|
Expelled Palestinians' Land |
17,178 |
|
Total Israel |
20,325 |
That is, 92% of the land that became Israel is Palestinian …
Why did they leave?
|
According
to Israeli historians |
Localities |
|
Expulsion by Jewish forces |
122 |
|
Military assault by Jewish troops |
270 |
|
Fear of Jewish attack, or of being caught in the fighting |
38 |
|
Influence of fall of neighboring town |
49 |
|
Psychological warfare |
12 |
|
Abandonment on Arab orders |
6 |
|
Unknown |
34 |
|
Total |
531 |
90% of the people left because Jewish forces attacked them …
After 50 years of dispossession, where are the Palestinian refugees today?
|
Place of Refugees |
(1998) All Population |
Of which Refugees |
|
Israel |
953,497 |
(200,000 internal) |
|
Gaza Strip |
1,004,498 |
766,124 |
|
West Bank |
1,596,554 |
652,855 |
|
Jordan |
2,328,308 |
1,741,796 |
|
Lebanon |
430,183 |
408,008 |
|
Syria |
465,662 |
444,921 |
|
Egypt |
48,784 |
40,468 |
|
Saudi Arabia |
274,762 |
274,762 |
|
Kuwait |
37,696 |
34,370 |
|
Other Gulf |
105,578 |
105,578 |
|
Iraq, Libya |
74,284 |
74,284 |
|
Other Arab Countries |
5,544 |
5,544 |
|
The Americas |
203,588 |
173,050 |
|
Other Countries |
259,248 |
220,361 |
|
Total |
7,788,186 |
4,942,121 |
Two thirds of the Palestinians are refugees not allowed to return home, because they are not Jews
Is there room now for the
Palestinians to return home?
Yes:
Thus, only 154,000 rural Jews control 17,325 sq. km, which is the home and heritage of 4,942,000 refugees …