The following article on the Palestinian Right of Return, by ADC
Communications Director Hussein Ibish and Ali Abunimah appears in the
latest issue (volume 8, issue 2, winter, 2001) of Human Rights Brief, a
quarterly publication of Washington College of Law at American University.
The entire issue, including a counterpoint by Joel Singer, former Israeli
negotiator and legal advisor to the Israeli Foreign Ministry, can be
viewed at the Human Rights Brief website:
www.wcl.american.edu/pub/humright/brief/ in PDF at:
www.wcl.american.edu/pub/humright/brief/v8i2/v8i2.pdf.
A much longer essay on the right of return by Ibish and Abunimah is
forthcoming as an issue paper from ADC.
The Palestinians Right of Return by Hussein Ibish and Ali Abunimah
Palestinians are the largest and most long-suffering refugee population in
the world. There are more than 3.7 million Palestinians registered as
refugees by the United Nations Relief and Work Agency (UNRWA), the UN
agency responsible for them. During the 1948 war, these people and their
descendants were expelled or fled from their homes in what is now Israel.
Their future and the status of their right of return has become one of the
most contentious issues in the effort to find a lasting peace between
Palestinians and Israelis.
Right of Return in International Law
The right of refugees to return to their homes is embedded deeply in
customary international law and the most fundamental human rights
instruments. According to prominent legal scholars Mallison and Mallison,
"[h]istorically, the right of return was so universally accepted and
practiced that it was not deemed necessary to prescribe or codify it in a
formal manner."
Perhaps the most basic expression of the right, however, is contained in
the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (Declaration), Article 13, which
states that "[e]veryone has the right to leave any country, including his
own, and to return to his country." It is a generally recognized principle
of international law that when sovereignty or political control over an
area changes hands, there is a concurrent transfer of responsibility for
the population of that territory. Therefore it cannot be argued that
Palestinians, who were expelled or fled from what became Israel during a
period of conflict, no longer had any rights with regard to the country in
which they had lived simply because of a change in the nature of the state
or government in that territory. Moreover, where expulsion or prevention
from return results in denationalization and statelessness, Article 15 of
the Declaration, which stipulates that "[e]veryone has the right to a
nationality," becomes a further relevant protection of the right of
return. And certainly, where a population has been forcibly expelled, as
Lex Takkenberg, the Chief of Field Relief and Social Services for UNRWA,
points out "the right of return derives from the illegality of the
expulsion itself" because "those expelled clearly have the right to
reverse an illegal act, that is to return to their homeland."
The four Geneva Conventions (Conventions) assume the right of return in
numerous articles and provisions. For example, all four Conventions
provide that any formal denunciation of one state by another for violating
provisions of the Conventions "shall not take effect until peace has been
concluded, and until after operations connected with the release and
repatriation," and in the case of Convention IV, Article 158,
re-establishment "of the persons protected by the present Convention have
been terminated." (Convention I, Article 63; Convention II, Article 62;
Convention III, Article 142; Convention IV, Article 158). The underlying
assumption of these provisions, and the numerous prohibitions in
international law against involuntary repatriation under conditions of
danger, can only be that of an absolute and universally accepted right of
return.
In 1948, the UN adopted Resolution 194, which specifically applies the
right of return to the Palestinian refugees. Paragraph 11 states "that the
refugees wishing to return to their homes and live at peace with their
neighbors should be permitted to do so at the earliest practicable date,
and that compensation should be paid for the property of those choosing
not to return and for loss of or damage to property which, under
principles of international law or in equity, should be made good by the
Governments or authorities responsible." The UN has reaffirmed this
resolution practically every year since its adoption with near unanimity.
It is sometimes argued by opponents of the right of return that because
Resolution 194 is a General Assembly resolution, rather than a Security
Council resolution, it is "non-binding." The general principle of when and
if a General Assembly resolution can be "binding" need not be debated to
invalidate this argument. Israel's admittance to the UN as a member state,
through Resolution 273, was conditioned on acceptance and implementation
of Resolution 194. Therefore, Israel is bound, as a condition of
membership in the UN, to implement 194 and to facilitate the return of the
Palestinian refugees.
Despite this commitment, Israel has consistently denied the right of
return. In the late 1940s and early 1950s, Israel passed laws forbidding
the return of refugees and expropriating their property. Israel also
routinely killed in cold blood Palestinians who attempted to cross its
borders in order to return to their homes
Resolution 194 is particularly noteworthy in that it provides for the
return of the refugees not simply to "their country" or homeland, but to
"their homes." The former UN Mediator for Palestine, Count Folke
Bernadotte, recommended in his Progress Report of September 16, 1948,
submitted the day before he was murdered by the Stern Gang, that "the
right of the Arab refugees to return to their homes in Jewish controlled
territory at the earliest possible date should be affirmed by the United
Nations . . . ." His Report was the basis for much of the text of
Resolution 194 and, as Takkenberg points out, "[i]t should be noted that
the UN Mediator recommended that the right to return be affirmed rather
than be established. Although the issue is not explicitly addressed in the
report, Count Bernadotte was apparently of the opinion that the right of
refugees to return already formed part of existing international law."
The Right of Return in Other Conflicts
These assumptionsthat the right of refugees to return is an established
and universally accepted principle of international law and that this
right is linked to homes and property, not just to a country or
homelandformed the basis for much of the discourse of the United States,
NATO, and the UN during the Kosovo conflict in 1999. Indeed, this conflict
appears to have been a massive reaffirmation of the right of return as a
general principle of international law, and even a valid casus belli for
"humanitarian intervention" in the internal affairs of sovereign states,
as well as being inextricably linked to specific homes and property
rights.
During the Kosovo crisis, on April 6, 1999, former U.S. president Clinton
declared that "[w]e cannot say, well, we'll just take all these folks and
forget about their rights to go home. The refugees belong in their own
homes on their own land. Our immediate goal is to provide relief. Our
long-term goal is to give them their right to return." Similar sentiments
were expressed by British Prime Minister Tony Blair on May 19, 1999, who
said, "[t]hese people have been driven from their homes and their homeland
Our mission is very simple and very clear. It is to make sure that they
return and are able to live in peace and security as should be the right
of any civilized human being."
NATO spokesman Jamie Shea told reporters at an April 24, 1999, briefing
that "what is absolutely clear are our key preconditions which we are not
going to negotiate on, which is the right to the return of refugees,
access to humanitarian organizations, withdrawal of Serb forces,
deployment of a very robust international force, and a political process."
On April 5, 1999, Shea told the press that "[t]he most important thing is
that at the end of the day that those people should be able to exercise
their right to return."
United Nations humanitarian officials agreed with NATO political and
military leaders that the right of return was a fundamental aspect of
international human rights law as demonstrated by the crisis in Kosovo. On
April 19, 1999, Dennis McNamara, Director of Protection at the Office of
the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) said of the
Kosovo conflict, "[h]uman rights were at the heart of the exodus the right
to asylum was critical to saving thousands of lives, and the right to
return would have to be honored for any lasting solution to be achieved."
The principle of the right of return was also expressed in the context of
other recent conflicts. With regard to the conflict in and around the
former Soviet republic of Georgia, the UN Security Council, in Resolution
1255 (1999), "reaffirms the unacceptability of the demographic changes
resulting from the conflict and the imprescriptible right of all refugees
and displaced persons affected by the conflict to return to their homes in
secure conditions in accordance with international law and as set out in
the Quadripartite Agreement of April 4, 1994, on the voluntary return of
refugees and displaced persons (S/1994/397, annex II), and calls upon the
parties to address this issue urgently by agreeing and implementing
effective measures to guarantee the security of those who exercise their
unconditional right to return." The discourse and debate in the Security
Council surrounding the impact of this conflict on refugees referred
repeatedly to the precedent set in the international reaction to the
Kosovo crisis, which implicitly constituted a significant precedent
regarding the right of return.
The work of the Clinton Administration's deputy treasury secretary, Stuart
Eizenstat, with regard to the property rights of refugees and other
victims of the Nazi Holocaust in Europe has great significance for the
property rights of Palestinian refugees. Moreover, because the right of
return is so intimately linked to property rights and original homes, the
principles laid out by Eizenstat have profound implications for the right
of return as well as property rights. Eizenstat's testimony before the
Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe (Commission) in March
1999 is of particular relevance. He told the Commission that "the basic
principle that wrongfully expropriated property should be restituted (or
compensation paid) applies to them all [every country in Eastern and
Central Europe], and their implementation of this principle is a measure
of the extent to which they have successfully adopted democratic
institutions, [and] the rule of law with respect to property rights."
Eizenstat presented a "list of principles and best practices we would like
to see adopted." Among these principles were that "[o]wners or their heirs
should be eligible to claim personal property on a non discriminatory
basis, without citizenship or residence requirements," and that
"[r]estitution of property should result in a clear title to the property,
generally including the right of resale, not simply the right to use
property, which could be revoked at a later time." These principles for
the return of, and compensation for, refugee property obviously must be
applicable generally and not confined to the largely Jewish Holocaust
assets claims to which Eizenstat is specifically referring. Obviously, if
the property rights of Jewish Europeans survive after more than 56 years
following expropriation, those of Palestinian refugees must similarly
survive after 53 years or less. Moreover, if such property rights survive
after so many years and pass from one generation to the next, surely the
more fundamental right of return and residence in ones own home and
country cannot more easily expire.
Supporters of Israel often claim that the creation of a Palestinian state
would obviate the need for implementing the right of return of Palestinian
refugees. This was reflected in Clintons peace proposal of December 2000,
which sought to replace the right of return to actual homes and properties
with a Zionist-like attitude that would see "return" as being satisfied by
physical presence in any part of historic Palestine. Instead of return to
their homes, Clinton would "allow them to return to a Palestinian state
that will provide all Palestinians with a place they can safely and
proudly call home." This is the equivalent of asking Kosovo Albanians to
be satisfied with a "return" to Albania and renunciation of the right to
go back to their homes in Kosovo. By this logic, Poland and other European
states could argue that the creation of Israel obviates its duty to
restore Jewish property.
Conclusion
What Palestinians expect is that the right of refugees to return to their
homes should be recognized by Israel, and that the choice be given to
refugees as required by Resolution 194. It is likely that hundreds of
thousands might well choose to return, especially Palestinian refugees in
Lebanon. But some, perhaps many, Palestinians would likely accept
compensation for the simple reason that the homes and villages they may
wish to return to no longer exist. Others might hesitate to decide to live
as Arabs in an Israeli state. Once Israel accepts the right of return,
Palestinians and Israelis will then have to negotiate modalities for the
orderly administration of a return program. This could include limits on
the number of refugees returning each year, although not a cap on the
total who would have the right to return, among many other administrative
options. However, fundamental elements of a just settlement must include
full recognition of the right of return, a real choice for refugees
between return and adequate compensation, and restitution and modalities
to ensure that return occurs at a rate that refugees can be absorbed into
Israel with priority given to those refugees most in need of return.
If we are ever to resolve this conflict, we must reject the notion that
the refugees "are an obstacle to peace" whom, with their stubborn demands
for their rights, are spoilers at everyone elses party. The essence of
peace is minimal justice, and the essence of justice for the Palestinians
is justice for the refugees. Israeli concerns and questions about the
right of return are understandable and must be addressed, but Israels
absolute rejection of the rights of refugees cannot be the final word.
We have to start the discussion from a point that can lead to a settlement
with which both Israelis and Palestinians can live, that meets the
requirements of justice, and respects refugees human rights. If the right
of return is permanently abrogated, it is not just the Palestinian
refugees who would suffer. Humanity in general would be deeply
impoverished if we start renouncing and repudiating rights long since
upheld as inviolable, and our slow and painful quest to build a world that
provides equal protection to all human beings will be dealt a crippling
blow.
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