Palestine - Palestinian Territories
"Palestinian territories"
is one of a number of terms used to describe, including from an Arab
point of view, areas captured by Israel in the Six-day War of 1967,
whose political status has been the subject of negotiations between
Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization.
The term includes the West Bank, Gaza Strip and East Jerusalem, but does
not include the Golan Heights or the Sinai Peninsula, which were also
captured by Israel in 1967. Other terms used to describe the area are
the "Occupied Territories," "occupied Palestinian territories,"
"Israeli-occupied territories," "disputed territories," "Judea and
Samaria, and Gaza," "Yesha," "liberated territories," and "1967
Territories." The United Nations presently uses the term "Occupied
Palestinian Territory", but the "Palestinian" label has gained use only
during the 1970's. Previous UN resolutions (such as 242 and 338) use the
term "Territories occupied by Israel", and on earlier occasions, such as
the 1947 UN Partition Plan passed on November 29, 1947, the term
"Samaria and Judea" was used.
The political status of the territories is highly controversial.
Specific issues include the legality of Israeli's policy of encouraging
settlement, whether it is legitimate for Israel to annex portions of the
territories, whether Israel is legally an occupying power according to
the Fourth Geneva Convention, and whether an independent Arab state will
be created in the territories.
The boundaries between the West Bank and the Gaza Strip and the State of
Israel, known as the Green Line, are a result of the 1949 Armistice
Agreements after the 1948 Arab-Israeli War, while their boundaries with
Jordan and Egypt follow the international border between the former
British Mandate of Palestine and those states. The natural geographic
boundaries for the West Bank and the Gaza Strip are the Jordan River and
the Mediterranean Sea, respectively. Between 1949 and 1967, these
territories were occupied by Jordan and Egypt respectively, but the term
"Palestinian territories" or "Occupied Palestinian Territories" gained
wide usage after Israel's victory in the 1967 Six-Day War, about the
same time as the term "Palestinian" first started to be used exclusively
in respect to Arab population of Palestine. Since then, the United
Nations and most foreign governments regard the territories as being
under Israeli military occupation.
Since 1994, the autonomous Palestinian Authority has exercised various
degrees of control in large parts of the territories, pursuant to the
Oslo Accords.
Terminology
Israel, which holds the territories, does not consider them as
"Palestinian territories," but as "disputed territories." (See
Arab-Israeli conflict.) The term "Palestinian territories" is regarded
from the Israeli perspective as connoting a host of propositions that
amount to a political argument about the disposition and status of the
land, namely:
* that the area is under the military control of a nation that does not
have sovereignty over them;
* that the nation in control of the area is thus obliged by
international law to return it to its rightful owners;
* that the area belongs by right to the stateless Arab population of
Palestine; and
* that the said Arab population has indiginous roots in Palestine.
Generally, the term "Palestinian territories" is used by:
* journalists to indicate lands where Palestinian Arabs dwell, outside
the Green Line, or the 1949 Armistice lines;
* advocates to imply that the area ought to belong to the Arabs — or
that it already does, either by right or by international law; in
particular, the Palestine Liberation Organization has declared the West
Bank and Gaza Strip as such territories, following the Oslo Accords;
* some Arab nationalists, who consider the land within Israel's de facto
boundaries to be de jure part of a "Palestinian state." Some advocates
have claimed that maps used in schools under the jurisdiction of the
Palestinian Authority depict this state as consisting of all the
territory between the Mediterranean Sea, Lebanon, Syria, the Jordan
River and Egypt — including Israel, the West Bank and Gaza Strip.
The term is often erroneously used interchangeably with the term
Occupied Territories, although the latter refers to an inclusive set of
both the "Palestinian territories" and the Golan Heights. The Golan is
not settled by "Palestinians" nor claimed by them, but rather by Syria,
except for the tiny Shebaa Farms area, claimed by Lebanon. The confusion
stems from the fact that all these territories were captured by Israel
during the 1967 Six Day War and are regarded by the UN as being under
military occupation.
Historical status
In 1922 after the collapse of the Ottoman Empire that ruled the region
of Palestine for four centuries (1517-1917), the British Mandate of
Palestine was established. The future of Palestine was hotly disputed
between Arabs and the Zionist movement. In 1947, the United Nations
Partition Plan proposed a division of the mandated territory between an
Arab and a Jewish state, with Jerusalem and the surrounding area to be a
corpus separatum under a special international regime. The regions
allotted to the proposed Arab state included what would become the Gaza
Strip and almost all of what would become the West Bank, as well as
other areas. Jewish groups (notably the Jewish Agency) generally
supported the partition plan. Arab groups (all Arab countries in the
U.N. voted against it) generally rejected the partition plan and
subsequently invaded the newly formed State of Israel, starting the
Israely War of Independance. After the war, Israel controlled many of
the areas designated for the Arab state, and the negotiated agreements
established Armistice Demarcation Lines (ADLs), which did not have the
status of recognised international borders. Thus the areas held by
Jordanian and Iraqi forces (with minor adjustments) came under Jordanian
control, and became known as the West Bank (of the Jordan river, by
contrast with the East Bank, or Jordan proper); the area held by
Egyptian forces, along the Mediterranean coast in the vicinity of the
city of Gaza and south to the international border, remained under
Egyptian control and became known as the Gaza Strip.
For nineteen years following the 1949 Armistice Agreements until the
1967 Six Day War, Egypt occupied the Gaza Strip and Jordan occupied the
West Bank and East Jerusalem, and no Arab state was created. In 1950,
Jordan annexed the territories it occupied; this annexation was not
officially recognized by other countries, with the sole exception of the
United Kingdom (but not, as is often said, Pakistan).
The Article 24 of the Palestinian National Charter of 1964 stated: "This
Organization does not exercise any territorial sovereignty over the West
Bank in the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan, on the Gaza Strip or in the
Himmah Area."
Israel captured both territories in the 1967 Six-Day War; since then
they have been under Israeli control. After the war, UN Security Council
Resolution 242 introduced the "Land for Peace" formula for normalizing
relations between Israel and its neighbors.
The Oslo Accords of the early 1990's between the Palestine Liberation
Organization and Israel led to the creation of the Palestinian
Authority. This was an interim organization created to administer a
limited form of Palestinian self-governance in the territories for a
period of five years during which final-status negotiations would take
place. The Palestinian Authority carried civil responsibility in some
rural areas, as well as security responsibility in the major cities of
the West Bank and the Gaza Strip. Although the five-year interim period
expired in 1999, the final status agreement has yet to be concluded
despite attempts such as the 2000 Camp David Summit, the Taba summit,
and the unofficial Geneva Accords.
In 2005 Israeli forces withdrew from the Gaza Strip, ceding full
effective internal control of the territory to the Palestinian
Authority.
Legal status
The final status of the "Palestinian territories" as becoming (wholly or
largely) an independent state for Arabs is supported by the countries
that back the road map. The government of Israel also accepted the road
map but with 14 reservations. Although Israeli settlements were not part
of the Oslo Accords negotiations, the Arab position is that the creation
and the presence of Israeli settlements in those areas is a violation of
international law. This has also been affirmed by a majority of members
of the Geneva convention: "12. The participating High Contracting
Parties call upon the Occupying Power to fully and effectively respect
the Fourth Geneva Convention in the Occupied Palestinian Territory,
including East Jerusalem, and to refrain from perpetrating any violation
of the Convention. They reaffirm the illegality of the settlements in
the said territories and of the extension thereof. They recall the need
to safeguard and guarantee the rights and access of all inhabitants to
the Holy Places."
East Jerusalem, captured in 1967, was unilaterally annexed by Israel.
The UN Security Council Resolution 478 condemned the Jerusalem Law as "a
violation of international law". This annexation has not been recognized
by other nations, although the United States Congress has declared its
intention to recognize the annexation (a proposal that has been
condemned by other states and organizations). Because of the question of
Jerusalem's status, some states refuse to accept Jerusalem as the
capital of Israel, and treat Tel Aviv as the capital, basing their
diplomatic missions there. Israel asserts that these territories are not
currently claimed by any other state, and that Israel has the right to
control them.
Israel's position has not been officially accepted by most countries and
international bodies. The West Bank, and the Gaza Strip have been
referred to as occupied territories (with Israel as the occupying power)
by Palestinian Arabs, the rest of the Arab bloc, the UK, the EU,
(usually) the USA, both the General Assembly and the Security Council of
the United Nations, the International Court of Justice, and the Israeli
Supreme Court (see Israeli West Bank barrier).
The United Nations did not declare any change in the status of the
territories as of the creation of the Palestinian National Authority
between 1993 and 2000. Although a 1999 U.N. document (see the link
above) implied that the chance for a change in that status was slim at
that period, most observers agreed that the Palestinian territories'
classification as occupied was losing substantiality, and would be
withdrawn after the signing of a permanent peace agreement between
Israel and the Palestinians (see also Proposals for a Palestinian
state).
During the period between the 1993 Oslo Accords and the Second Intifada
beginning in 2000, Israeli officials claimed that the term "occupation"
did not accurately reflect the state of affairs in the territories.
During this time, the Palestinian population in large parts of the
territories had a large degree of autonomy and only limited exposure to
the IDF except when seeking to move between different areas. Following
the events of the Second Intifada, and in particular, Operation
Defensive Shield, most territories, including Palestinian cities (Area
A), are back under effective Israeli military control, so the discussion
along those lines is largely moot.
In the summer of 2005, Israel implemented its unilateral disengagement
plan; about 8500 Israeli citizens living in the Gaza Strip were forcibly
removed from the territory; some received alternative homes and a sum of
money. The Israeli Defence Forces are no longer present in the Gaza
Strip.
The Palestinian territories have been assigned a country code of PS in
ISO 3166-1, and accordingly, the Palestinian Authority was granted
control of the corresponding Internet country code top-level domain .ps.
From:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palestinian_territories
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