‘Liberate the people from the occupation’

‘Liberate the people from the occupation’ On Feb. 11, writer Julien Versteegh of the Belgian weekly Solidaire, newspaper of the Workers Party of Belgium, interviewed Ahmed Saadat, secretary general of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, in his prison cell in Jericho. Saadat was detained for four years in a Palestinian Authority prison guarded by 18 U.S. and British soldiers.

On March 14, Israeli troops stormed the Palestinian prison of Jericho, where Saadat and four other PFLP members were being held for their alleged implication in the execution of the racist Israeli tourism minister Rehavam Zeevi in 2001. Israel’s blatant and illegal act of aggression in Jericho has been widely condemned worldwide. Saadat and his comrades are now political prisoners in the hands of Israel. Solidaire was one of the last media outlets to interview Saadat before his capture by Israel. What follows is an introduction by author Versteegh followed by his interview with Saadat.







Palestinians protest capture of Saadat in Ramallah, March 15, 2006.

Photo: Silwadi Osama/Apollo Images/Gamm

Saturday Feb. 11, 7 a.m. I start my journey to the prison in Jericho and that is no mean feat. The trip to Jericho, a city in the eastern part of the West Bank, is the biggest challenge. After Bethlehem, you have to pass at least two checkpoints of the Israeli army. On my way back, I had to pass four of them.

All visitors have to undergo a body search by Palestinian security personnel under supervision of a U.S. soldier in civilian clothes. Cameras and mobile phones are forbidden. I have to go through two doors and a metal detector before I enter the courtyard that is surrounded by the prison cells. They lead me to one of these cells. Inside it is quite comfortable and I am offered tea, coffee and cookies. Ahmed Saadat welcomes me. He looks tired and talks about his four children who are permitted to visit him once in a while. His wife, on the other hand, was recently placed under house arrest by Israel for at least six months. We talk for four hours, frequently interrupted by visiting friends.


For Europeans, it is hard to understand that a prisoner can be elected to the parliament. How did that happen?






Ahmed Saadat, General Secretary of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine.

Photo: Solidaire

My story is not different from those of many other freedom fighters who fight for national liberation. But I have also been detained because I’m the secretary general of the PFLP. The Palestinian Authority has arrested and detained me because of Israel’s pressure on American and European governments. They have issued an international arrest warrant and have pressured the Palestinian Authority to arrest me and other comrades.

It is not surprising that the United States and the European Union have put the PFLP on their lists of terrorist organizations: it serves to brand the whole Palestinian resistance as terrorists. It is part and parcel of the American policy to impose its hegemony on the rest of the world.

The PFLP was able to have three of its candidates elected to the Palestinian Legislative Council. What’s your assessment of this result?

Of course, we are not satisfied with this result and we are doing our best to grow in strength. Definitely, the result does not accurately reflect the PFLP’s real influence on the terrain. The elections have been overshadowed by the contradictions between Fatah and Hamas and the people’s desire to oust Fatah, which has been dominant in the Palestinian Authority. The people thought that possibly Hamas could change the current situation.

What does the PFLP stand for?

The PFLP is a legal Palestinian party that aims to liberate the people from the occupation. Like Hamas, we want to continue the Intifada. We reject the Oslo Agreement (the so-called peace agreement signed in 1993 by Israel and the Palestinian Liberation Organization) and the Roadmap (the so-called peace agreement imposed by the United States, the European Union, Russia and the United Nations in 2003). Just like Hamas, we refuse to recognize Israel as long as our national rights are not recognized.

There is no hope in negotiations with Israel because they refuse to negotiate with the Palestinians. The new Israeli party Kadima (established by Sharon) has built its program around the current state of affairs in order to impose its Zionist territorial program: 60 percent of the West Bank has to be confiscated, evicting its Palestinian population, and a purely Jewish state has to be established. The Roadmap is leading us to the situation before the Intifada and wants to impose a compromise about the UN resolutions that are recognizing our legitimate rights. We don’t need any negotiations about these resolutions. We want to see them implemented.

The United States is applying double standards when it is about international resolutions. On the one hand, they are using their military power to chase Iraq from Kuwait (in 1991), to occupy Iraq, to force Syria out of Lebanon, to demand an end to Iran’s nuclear program. On the other hand, they agree with Israel’s aggression against our people and they refuse to use their power to make Israel apply the UN resolutions on the Palestinian problem (for 58 years). They pretend not to know that Israel has 300 nuclear warheads.

But the conflict between the Israelis and the Palestinians has to end some day, doesn’t it?

The only livable solution for the historic conflict between Israel and the Palestinian people is the establishment of one democratic state in the historic Palestine that existed before 1948. That is currently not realistic and therefore we have to anticipate an intermediate stage with an independent Palestinian state within the borders of 1967: the whole West Bank and the Gaza strip with Jerusalem as its capital. In this intermediate stage the Palestinian refugees’ right to return has to be guaranteed.

The PFLP is using several methods in the liberation struggle. It is a people’s party with several people’s organizations for the workers, the women, the students and the intellectuals. Moreover, we organize social services to help the people in the field of health care, agriculture, education, arts and human rights.

What does your economic and social program look like?

It is based on the strengthening of democracy in all its aspects: the establishment of an independent economy, according to our legitimate right to resistance, our right to create the objective conditions for our people that enable the liberation and national independence.

Our program tries to serve the interests of the whole people and aims to improve the living conditions of the peasants and the poor. It wants to solve the massive unemployment and ensure equal opportunities for everyone to develop professional skills. Therefore, the institutions of the Palestinian Authority will have to be rehabilitated.

In the field of the economy, our program highlights in the current phase the unification of the public and the private sectors in order to create the basis for the national and self-reliant Palestinian economy.

How do you assess the recent victory of Hamas?

It is the logical result of the struggle that has, in the past few years, opposed Hamas to the Palestinian Authority. Hamas is much stronger on the terrain than the other organizations. The people have therefore put their hope in Hamas to change the political system that is ruling the Palestinian Authority nowadays.

Is an alliance with Hamas possible?

We are not afraid of an alliance with Hamas, but we are also open for an alliance with other Palestinian organizations in order to create a national front against the occupation. We need a genuine national government. There is a big chance for an alliance with Hamas if it remains firm on the position that the Oslo Agreement and the Roadmap have to be rejected.

In the meantime, the PFLP tries to build a left Palestinian project with all Palestinian organizations that claim to be left and especially with the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine (DFLP). This project is based on a clear vision and on our Marxist identity, our struggle for independence and class struggle, linked with the national struggle at the regional, Arab level, with the international people’s struggle, and the international revolutionary movements.

Which are points of divergence with Hamas?

There are differences between our political programs but also between our social programs. Hamas wants to establish an Islamic state in Palestine, with institutions according to Islamic law. On the other hand, the PFLP tries to build a democratic state with respect for freedom of opinion and religion and guarantees for the respect for human rights, and with respect for the separation between state and religious structures.
Hamas knows that it cannot implement its program today. We have asked them about their plans, and they answered that the implementation of their Islamic program is impossible as long as the occupation lasts.

Also in the field of the economy we have our differences with Hamas. They try to build a liberal, capitalist economy while we are advocating an integrated economy with unity between public and private sectors as a first step towards a socialist economy and a basis for an independent and strong national economy.

The development of Islamic organizations throughout the world is a direct consequence of the collapse of the Soviet Union. It weakened the organizations of the left that fought against imperialism in the Arab world. The communist forces in the Arab world have applied the viewpoints of the Soviet Union by the book and have never developed their own theoretical and political “flavor.” That would have enabled them to analyze the contradictions in the Arab world. After the collapse of the Soviet Union, most left parties were shocked and confused and started to quarrel. They lost their confidence in Marxist-Leninist theory. Their weakening left a gap that is being filled by the Islamist movements. The victories of the Iranian Islamic revolution and of the anti-Soviet Afghan resistance fighters have encouraged the development of Islamic movements in the Arab world and Palestine, among others.

You said that it is important to wage a national struggle on the basis of class struggle. What do you mean?

Since its foundation, the Palestinian Authority has paved the way for new social divergences among the Palestinian people. In this new context, we are fighting for social reforms within the Palestinian Authority while continuing our struggle for national liberation. We have to build a new society already while continuing the struggle against the occupation.

Currently, there are two big contradictions. The most important contradiction is about the occupation, between our people and the state of Israel. The second contradiction is within the Palestinian people, between the people and the bourgeoisie of the Palestinian Authority and the PLO.

The Palestinian bourgeoisie wants to end the struggle against the occupation and is willing to agree to any compromise with Israel in order to defend its own economic interests. Here in Jericho, for example, the Palestinian Authority has built a casino with financial support from Ariel Sharon’s son Omri!

Solidaire, Workers Party of Belgium

Articles may be reprinted with credit to Socialism and Liberation magazine.

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