Holocaust 'most heinous crime' of modern history, says
Mahmoud Abbas
Palestinian
president reaches out to Israeli public opinion with US-backed peace deal on
the verge of collapse
The
Guardian, Sunday 27 April 2014 / http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/apr/27/holocaust-crime-palestinian-president-mahmoud-abbas
The
Palestinian president, Mahmoud Abbas, has called the Holocaust the most heinous
crime in modern history , in a rare acknowledgement by an Arab leader of Jewish
suffering during the Nazi genocide as Israel began its annual
commemoration of the event.
In a
statement published in English, Spanish and Arabic on Wafa, Palestine 's official news agency, Abbas
expressed sympathy with the families of the Jewish victims and other victims of
the Nazis.
"The
Holocaust is a reflection of the concept of ethnic discrimination and racism
which the Palestinians strongly reject and act against," said Abbas,
describing Nazi atrocities as "the most heinous crime to have occurred
against humanity in the modern era". He added: "The world must do its
utmost to fight racism and injustice in order to bring justice and equality to
oppressed people wherever they are."
The
comments, which coincided with Holocaust Remembrance Day, appeared to be aimed
at reaching out to Israeli and international public opinion as the latest US attempt to
broker an Israeli-Palestinian peace deal nears collapse. They came just days
after the signing of a landmark reconciliation agreement between Abbas and his
political rival, the Islamist group Hamas. That deal, which could end a
seven-year split between the governments of Gaza
and the West Bank, has led to widespread Israeli criticism due to Hamas's
longstanding refusal to recognise the state of Israel .
Hamas
leaders tend not to acknowledge the Holocaust and, in 2009, there were protests
in the Gaza Strip over textbooks that discussed it. Such views have made the US and some EU
nations wary of continuing to fund a Palestinian government that includes the
militant group. On Saturday, Abbas used an address to the Palestine Liberation
Organisation to argue that a unity government would be based on his own
political platform, not that of Hamas.
Michael
Stephens of the Royal United Services Institute for Defence and Security
Studies in Qatar said: "Clearly Abbas is also trying to strengthen his
position vis-a-vis Hamas and looking to gain as much American backing as
possible by sounding the right notes."
A senior
PLO official dismissed the link between the timing of the announcement and the
recent reconciliation between Fatah and Hamas. He pointed out that Abbas's
comments came after American rabbi Marc Schneier – who heads the Foundation for
Ethnic Understanding – visited his Ramallah headquarters last week.
"It is
just another sincere statement on this issue, and what better day than the
Holocaust Remembrance Day? If it was in June, this statement would have come
June. This is a consistent statement [from President Abbas]," he said.
The Israeli
prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, was dismissive of the Palestinian
president's comments, and reiterated his view that Abbas had to choose between
peace with Hamas and peace with Israel .
"President Abbas can't have it both ways. He can't say the Holocaust is
terrible but at the same time embrace those who deny the Holocaust and seek to
perpetrate another destruction of the Jewish people," Netanyahu said on
CNN.
"I
think what President Abbas is trying to do is to placate western public opinion
that understands that he delivered a terrible blow to the peace process,"
he added.
The
deadline for the peace process sponsored by US secretary of state John Kerry
comes on Tuesday, by which time Israel and the Palestinians are due to agree to
a framework for further talks.
The
stalemate came after Israel
failed make good on its promise to release a batch of Palestinian prisoners,
and in response Abbas signed a series of agreements with the UN that could pave
the way for a renewed bid for Palestinian statehood. But in his statement,
Abbas urged Israel
to use Holocaust Day to commit to peace with the Palestinians.
"The
Palestinian people, who suffer from injustice, oppression and denied freedom
and peace, are the first to demand to lift the injustice and racism that befell
other peoples subjected to such crimes," he said.
"On
the incredibly sad commemoration of Holocaust Day, we call on the Israeli
government to seize the current opportunity to conclude a just and
comprehensive peace in the region, based on the two-state vision, Israel and Palestine
living side by side in peace and security."
Stephens of
RUSI said that recent moves by Abbas put the onus on the Israelis in advance of
deadline. "Abbas appearing conciliatory puts the ball firmly back in Israel 's court,
in effect requiring some gesture in return from the Israelis."
Abbas has
been criticised by senior political figures in Israel in the past for his earlier
views on the Holocaust. His dissertation for his 1983 doctorate was titled: The
Other Side: The Secret Relationship Between Nazism and Zionism.
Although
Abbas has distanced himself from these views on a number of occasions, most
recently in a 2011 interview with Haaretz ,
Israel 's
foreign minister Avigdor Lieberman branded Abbas a Holocaust denier in an
interview last year.
"Abbas's
book in which he denies the Holocaust is on the bookshelf in my office. I do
not recall that any of those who welcomed the peace process reminded Abbas of
his denial of the Holocaust, which he continues to do in media
interviews," said Lieberman.
Hamas has
also aimed to distance itself from Holocaust denial in recent years. Writing in
the Guardian in 2008, Bassem Naeem, a Hamas minister, claimed that neither
Hamas nor the Palestinian government in Gaza
denies the Holocaust.
"The
Holocaust was not only a crime against humanity but one of the most abhorrent
crimes in modern history," he wrote. "We condemn it as we condemn
every abuse of humanity and all forms of discrimination on the basis of
religion, race, gender or nationality."
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