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Monday 01 June 2015Rajoub can be deterred, but what about the rest of the world?Faisal Husseini, the Palestinians' late leader in East Jerusalem, launched a hunger strike one day in protest of the Israeli construction beyond the Green Line. He pitched a pup tent on a hill of rocks in front of the Har Homa neighborhood. As far as I can remember, only two people could enter the tent, and only lying down. And then deputy Shin Bet chief Israel Hasson arrived. He lay down next to Husseini. We journalists stood outside, around the tent, waiting for news. Several minutes later, Hasson appeared, and walked away without saying a word. Husseini kept quiet too, but the aura of courage around his strike had faded. Shortly afterwards, he folded the tent and went home. I have no idea who convinced Jibril Rajoub to relax his stance during the FIFA conference in Zurich, whether it was the eternal chairman, Sepp Blatter, who was fighting for his seat, whether it was the Qatari representatives, who bought the hosting of the World Cup and was afraid that his investment would go down the drain, or whether it was Deputy Foreign Minister Tzipi Hotovely's brilliant moves or Israeli FA Chairman Ofer Eini's heartbreaking smile. I would bet on a different possibility: Someone reminded Rajoub where he came from and where he is headed. Or he just remembered it on his own. During Operation Defensive Shield in April 2002, Rajoub refused to turn in Hamasniks who received shelter in his compound. It was the order he got from Arafat. After a four-day siege, the IDF destroyed the building by firing from attack helicopters and tanks. The villa in which Rajoub lived, in northern Ramallah, was fired on from the division's camp in Beit El. The division commander was former IDF chief Benny Gantz. So the joy which filled our government ministers is at best premature. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is right when he says that the Palestinians are not only challenging the occupation, but Israel's actual existence. Yet our problem in this issue is not the Palestinians, but a large part of Israel's friends in the West. From one junction to another, from one vote to another, it is becoming increasingly difficult for them – both morally and politically – to defend the Israeli policy in the West Bank. http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-4663524,00.html |