NGO Monitor Analysis (Vol. 3 No. 1) 15 September 2004
The Political Agenda of Palestinian "Environmental" NGO's
(Corrected September 19, 2004)
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Images of an ecological catastrophe in the Palestinian territories
as a result of Israeli "occupation" and "the enormous environmental
impact of the Apartheid Wall and Segregation Zone plan on the West
Bank and Palestinian agriculture" are frequently
used by NGOs in criticizing Israel. However, the evidence
from events such as the 2002 World Environmental Summit in Johannesburg
indicates that ecological issues are used primarily as a pretext
for political and ideological objectives.
Indeed, in the late 1980s pro-Palestinian groups had begun to link
'ecology' to human rights as part of their political strategy against
Israel. Resolutions in international bodies often made reference
to alleged ecological damage in the "occupied territories" as an
aspect of the abuse of "Palestinian national rights". In 1989, 1990
and 1991, the UN General Assembly adopted
resolutions that "expressed its concern over the impact of the
military rule on the management of the environment and its natural
resources in a way that hinders the pursuit of environmentally sound
management."
During the Oslo period, many Palestinian and pro-Palestinian NGOs began to receive funding that was tenuously linked to environmental concerns.
For example, the Ma-an Center, whose link to environmental issues is through
organic agriculture courses, grew from a $17,000
budget in 1989 to $584,000 in 1996 and to 30 members of staff
in three offices.
The Applied Research Institute - Jerusalem (ARIJ), situated in
Bethlehem, established in 1990 with a budget of about $70,000 grew
steadily to about $620,000 in 2002 and $626,000
in 2003, and from few staff members to 45 researchers and assistants.
Recently an internet network PENGON
(Palestinian Environmental NGOs) listed 21 Palestinian environmental
NGOs. According to Palestinian
sources there are about 110 active NGO's. Such a grouping would make the environmentalists among the strongest subgroups in the Palestinian NGO
network and very influential within Palestinian society.
However an examination
of the evidence shows that only two of the 21 NGOs listed by PENGON
are actually involved with environmental matters. [Wildlife
Palestine Society - WLPS, and The
Roads and Environmental Safety Centre.]
About ten of the 21 mentioned have no website or physical address, office or activity. Their titles, however, with a specific field of activity such as agriculture or public health, appear in various statements about Israel's "crimes against the human environment", in order to accentuate the image of a professional approach, an "expert opinion" given before each such publication.
Some members of this group are not NGOs, but university divisions
or labs, related to public health or maternity, and others are located
within or identical to groups such as the highly politicized Palestinian
Centre for Human Rights (PCHR), Al-Mezan
Center or Baladna cultural center that deals with refugee rights.
The Development
and Environment Association, linked to Baladna, carries out
"tree planting" in its program. However, there is no available data
on forestation projects in the Palestinian areas. But several NGOs
claim
that Israel cut down about 700 thousand trees a year between 2001
and 2003 (figures of 200,000 and 271,000 were reported by the Palestinian
Ministry of Agriculture) which were cut in order "to protect the
settlers".
There are also many unverified and unsupported claims regarding
the number of trees uprooted to build the security barrier (usually
referred to as the "apartheid wall" to
magnify the propaganda impact and erase the anti-terror aspect).
The Palestinian sources fail to provide data related to a specific
section of the barrier, even though it would be the easiest way
of influencing public opinion. (It would also be easier to confirm
or refute, since the Israel Ministry of Defense pays constructors
for each uprooted tree and compensates the owners.)
Calling themselves "ecological," many Palestinian NGOs do not employ experts to monitor water pollution, eco degradation and similar problems. Despite this, many of their press releases consist of popular ecological terms and show basic knowledge of the issue, usually supplied by
the Jerusalem Institute for Applied
Research (ARIJ), which is affiliated with the Palestinian Authority,
and funded by the European Union.
For about ten years, the ARIJ
has specialized in geographical and hydrological surveys tailored
for the Palestinian leadership, which has used its own interpretations
as an aid in official discussions with international bodies. NGOs
have also made demands on Israel based on the same ARIJ
data.
Even the few NGOs that appear authentic go beyond their claimed mandates to
indulge heavily in anti-Israel invective. Only Israel's name does
not appear on a regional map on the site of the Wildlife
Palestine Society, established by the Lutheran and other private
schools with the participation of the Society for the Protection
of Nature in Israel and the Royal Society for the Conservation of
Nature in Jordan.
The Roads and Environmental Safety Centre established
by the Ramallah municipality, highlights the ecological impact of
bypass roads leading to Jewish settlements, while ignoring all other
roads crossing Palestinian territory.
Other NGOs with questionable ecological backgrounds engage further
in a political agenda. In a press release, the Palestine
Agricultural Relief Committees glorifies several young "Shahid"
who, as it became known after their suicide terror acts, were active
members of ecological grassroots groups.
PENGON sites do not produce substantive
information but do contain links to highly politicized Palestinian
websites unrelated to ecological issues.
In summary, this evidence demonstrates how many Palestinian NGOs claiming to be concerned with the environment have adopted the rhetoric of ecology as part of their political agenda. In contrast, there is very little substantive effort to implement policies and cooperative approaches designed to improve the environment for all residents of the region.
Ze'ev Wolfson and Roma Tzvang
References
- http://stopthewall.org/news/activistresources.shtml
"PENGON/Anti-Apartheid Wall Campaign."
- Michael Belling, Reminders of Durban, Jewish World of Greater Los Angeles,
August 30-September 05 2002, http://www.jewishjournal.com/home/searchview.php?id=9150
- UNEP, 8th meeting, 31 May 1991 http://www.unep.org/
- http://www.pengon.org
- http://www.palestinemonitor.org/links/links.html#10
- Alan Philps, Palestinian olive trees sold to rich Israelis,
28 November 2002. (http://www.palestinemonitor.org/Special%20Section/
The%20Olive%20Harvest/palestinian_olive_trees_sold.htm)
Also Jad Isaac and Mohammad Chanyem, Environmental Degradation
and the Israeli Palestinian Conflict, The Applied Research Institute-Jerusalem,2003,
Section 4.0, Deforestation. (http://www.arij.org)
- http://www.arij.org
- WLPS - http://www.wildlife-pal.org
- http://www.resc.s5.com
- http://www.pal-arc.org
- The PENGON website (http://www.pengon.org)
redirects visitors to such sites as:
http://stopthewall.org/news/activistresources.shtml
http://electronicintifada.net
http://www.palestinemonitor.org/links/links.html#10
http://al-awda.org
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