New UN document refutes Palestinian claims
I. Time | 15.09.2005 18:26 | Analysis | Education | World
The UN's recently released Human Development Report reveals that Palestinian problems stem from their intolerance, hostility, violence, and corruption, not from Jewish occupation.
On September 7, 2005, the UN Development Programme released its Human Development Report 2005. If carefully reviewed, this report has widespread implications for the Arab-Israeli conflict. While the UN is eager to condemn Israel for violating Palestinian rights, its own data suggests otherwise. The data disputes Palestinian claims that they are suffering as a result of a harsh Israeli military occupation. On the contrary, the Palestinians have actually benefited from their association with the State of Israel and their difficulties are the result of self-inflicted wounds.
Palestinian problems stem from their intolerance, hostility, violence, and corruption, not from Israeli occupation. Those in the world who are concerned about the "plight of the Palestinian refugees" should carefully review this report. They may want to reconsider their support for establishing a Palestinian state.
Two other reports from the UNDP, the Arab Human Development Report 2004, and HDR 2004, also raise serious questions regarding the wisdom of establishing a Palestinian State in lands currently controlled by Israel.
The mammoth 372-page report is titled Human Development Report 2005: International cooperation at a crossroads. The introductory material notes that 2.5 billion people in the world, which is 40% of the world's population, are living on less than US$2 per day. About half of that population, 20% of humanity, is living on less than $1 per day (p.4, 24). The report emphasizes the significance of violent conflict as a barrier to progress: "Conflict undermines nutrition and public health, destroys education systems, devastates livelihoods, and retards prospects for economic growth... Part of the challenge posed by human insecurity and violent conflict can be traced to weak, fragile, and failing states. Compounded failures to protect people against security risks, to provide for basic needs and to develop political institutions perceived as legitimate are standing features of conflict-prone states." (p.12).
The report observes that in 2003 there were 29 ongoing violent conflicts, down from 51 in 1991. In Sudan alone, the conflict has claimed two million lives and displaced 6 million people (p.153). Yet the focus of world sympathy and concern seems to be directed towards 3 million Arabs living in Israeli territories who are receiving the highest amount of aid in the world on a per capita basis.
The HDR 2005 views human progress through a human development index (HDI) which is a composite indicator of three dimensions of human welfare: income, education, and health. The HDI is a barometer for changes in human well-being and for comparing progress in different regions (p.21). The numerous tables include data for 175 UN member countries, along with Hong Kong, China (SAR), and the Occupied Palestinian Territories. Countries and areas are ranked in descending order by their HDI value (p.211.) The report notes that "large gaps between wealth and HDI rankings are usually an indicator of deep structural inequalities that block the transmission from wealth creation to human development. They also point to shortcomings in public policy, with governments failing to put in place strategies for extending opportunities among poor, marginalized, or disadvantaged groups" (p.24).
While the world laments over the treatment of Arabs at Israeli checkpoints, 10 million children die each year before their fifth birthday. More than 850 million people in the world are suffering from malnutrition and its effects (p.24). The risk of dying from pregnancy-related causes ranges from 1 in 18 in Nigeria to 1 in 8,700 in Canada (p.32). Sub-Saharan Africa had almost 100 million more people living on less than $1 per day in 2001 than in 1990. In contrast, the share of people living on less than $1 per day in the Middle East and North Africa decreased from 5.1% in 1981 to 2.4% in 2001. The report observes that "Aid has not always played a positive role in supporting human development, partly because of failures on the side of aid recipients and partly because donor countries have allowed strategic considerations to override development concerns" (p.75).
The HDR chapter that is most relevant to the Arab-Israeli conflict is Chapter 5, dealing with violent conflict. The chapter opens with a quote from UN Secretary General, Kofi Annan, "What begins with the failure to uphold the dignity of one life all too often ends with a calamity for entire nations." The report notes that since 1990 more than 3 million people have died in armed conflict, mostly in developing countries. About 25 million people are currently internally displaced because of conflict or human rights violations (p.151). Yet the most international aid is still directed towards 3 million Arabs in the Occupied Palestinian Territories, and the State of Israel is most often cited by the UN for human rights violations. The data provided by HDR 2005 suggests that the difficulties experienced by the Palestinian Arabs largely results from their own policies, not from oppression by the State of Israel.
The Occupied Palestinian Territories (OPT) are cited as an example of how human development is being reversed (p.158). In the 1990's the OPT registered some improvement in human development but the second intifada beginning in Sept. 2000 resulted "in a sharp deterioration in living standards and life chances." The poverty rate more than doubled from 20% in 1999 to 55% in 2003. The town of Nablus was cited as a prosperous commercial hub prior to September 2000. The intifada resulted in shops closing, workers selling their tools, and farmers selling their land (p.158). HDR observes that "violent conflict is one of the surest and fastest routes to the bottom of the HDI table" (p.154). "Violent conflict creates losses that are transmitted across whole economies, undermining the potential for growth. With fewer assets and less capacity to respond to losses in income and assets, poor people are especially vulnerable to the economic impact of the conflict" (p.155).
Much of the blame for the deterioration in human conditions is placed on government failures: "The collapse of effective authority in some countries has undermined capacity to prevent and resolve conflict. Governments lacking either the means or the will to fulfill their core functions, including territorial control, provision of basic services, management of public resources and protection of the livelihoods of the poorest people, are both a cause and consequence of violent conflict... In security terms, a cohesive and peaceful international system is far more likely to be achieved through the cooperation of effective states... than in an environment of fragile, collapsed, fragmenting or generally chaotic state entities" (p.162).
The most revealing data in HDR 2005 can be found in the tables beginning on page 211. The 177 countries in the HDI are classified into three clusters by achievement in human development: high human development with an HDI of 0.8 or above, medium human development with an HDI of 0.5 to 0.8, and low human development with an HDI of less than 0.5. The data is based on information from the year 2003. In these tables, Israel is listed in the high cluster with a rank of 23 and HDI of 0.915 (p.219). The Occupied Palestinian Territories are in the medium cluster with a rank of 102 and HDI of 0.729 (p.220). That means that there are 75 countries listed below OPT. Overall, the Arab states have an HDI of 0.679 which suggests that the Arabs living in OPT have better human conditions than their counterparts in other Arab-Muslim countries.
Even more revealing are the income and poverty tables (p.228). On the Human Poverty Index, the OPT is ranked seventh on a list of 103 developing countries. It is on par with Cuba, Singapore, and Colombia. The other Arab countries are ranked below the OPT. Wealthy Saudi Arabia is ranked 32. Egypt is ranked 55.
The table on page 281 lists the amount of official development assistance (ODA) received among the 177 HDI areas. OPT received 288.6 US$ per capita in 2003, which is the second highest amount in the entire list. Only Cape Verde received more, with 305.7 US$ per capita. Yet, because of violent conflict, the OPT experienced a decline in HDI. This suggests that all of this aid was not being used to improve human welfare in the OPT. On page 312, there is a table titled, "Gender inequality in economic activity." The OPT has the lowest rate of female economic activity among the 177 countries, with a rate of 9.6%, or 14% of the male rate. This suggests that almost all of the aid money is going to provide employment for males. This may explain how the various militias in OPT are being funded. The implication is that the high amount of aid going to OPT is funding militias and promoting violent conflict instead of improving the lives of the population. Israel, as the occupying power, should be absolved of any blame because the area is controlled by the Palestinian Authority. The Palestinian Arabs are suffering from deep, self-inflicted wounds, not from Israeli occupation. The population would not benefit from the establishment of an independent state that would only continue a policy of intolerance, discrimination, corruption, and violence.
Palestinian problems stem from their intolerance, hostility, violence, and corruption, not from Israeli occupation. Those in the world who are concerned about the "plight of the Palestinian refugees" should carefully review this report. They may want to reconsider their support for establishing a Palestinian state.
Two other reports from the UNDP, the Arab Human Development Report 2004, and HDR 2004, also raise serious questions regarding the wisdom of establishing a Palestinian State in lands currently controlled by Israel.
The mammoth 372-page report is titled Human Development Report 2005: International cooperation at a crossroads. The introductory material notes that 2.5 billion people in the world, which is 40% of the world's population, are living on less than US$2 per day. About half of that population, 20% of humanity, is living on less than $1 per day (p.4, 24). The report emphasizes the significance of violent conflict as a barrier to progress: "Conflict undermines nutrition and public health, destroys education systems, devastates livelihoods, and retards prospects for economic growth... Part of the challenge posed by human insecurity and violent conflict can be traced to weak, fragile, and failing states. Compounded failures to protect people against security risks, to provide for basic needs and to develop political institutions perceived as legitimate are standing features of conflict-prone states." (p.12).
The report observes that in 2003 there were 29 ongoing violent conflicts, down from 51 in 1991. In Sudan alone, the conflict has claimed two million lives and displaced 6 million people (p.153). Yet the focus of world sympathy and concern seems to be directed towards 3 million Arabs living in Israeli territories who are receiving the highest amount of aid in the world on a per capita basis.
The HDR 2005 views human progress through a human development index (HDI) which is a composite indicator of three dimensions of human welfare: income, education, and health. The HDI is a barometer for changes in human well-being and for comparing progress in different regions (p.21). The numerous tables include data for 175 UN member countries, along with Hong Kong, China (SAR), and the Occupied Palestinian Territories. Countries and areas are ranked in descending order by their HDI value (p.211.) The report notes that "large gaps between wealth and HDI rankings are usually an indicator of deep structural inequalities that block the transmission from wealth creation to human development. They also point to shortcomings in public policy, with governments failing to put in place strategies for extending opportunities among poor, marginalized, or disadvantaged groups" (p.24).
While the world laments over the treatment of Arabs at Israeli checkpoints, 10 million children die each year before their fifth birthday. More than 850 million people in the world are suffering from malnutrition and its effects (p.24). The risk of dying from pregnancy-related causes ranges from 1 in 18 in Nigeria to 1 in 8,700 in Canada (p.32). Sub-Saharan Africa had almost 100 million more people living on less than $1 per day in 2001 than in 1990. In contrast, the share of people living on less than $1 per day in the Middle East and North Africa decreased from 5.1% in 1981 to 2.4% in 2001. The report observes that "Aid has not always played a positive role in supporting human development, partly because of failures on the side of aid recipients and partly because donor countries have allowed strategic considerations to override development concerns" (p.75).
The HDR chapter that is most relevant to the Arab-Israeli conflict is Chapter 5, dealing with violent conflict. The chapter opens with a quote from UN Secretary General, Kofi Annan, "What begins with the failure to uphold the dignity of one life all too often ends with a calamity for entire nations." The report notes that since 1990 more than 3 million people have died in armed conflict, mostly in developing countries. About 25 million people are currently internally displaced because of conflict or human rights violations (p.151). Yet the most international aid is still directed towards 3 million Arabs in the Occupied Palestinian Territories, and the State of Israel is most often cited by the UN for human rights violations. The data provided by HDR 2005 suggests that the difficulties experienced by the Palestinian Arabs largely results from their own policies, not from oppression by the State of Israel.
The Occupied Palestinian Territories (OPT) are cited as an example of how human development is being reversed (p.158). In the 1990's the OPT registered some improvement in human development but the second intifada beginning in Sept. 2000 resulted "in a sharp deterioration in living standards and life chances." The poverty rate more than doubled from 20% in 1999 to 55% in 2003. The town of Nablus was cited as a prosperous commercial hub prior to September 2000. The intifada resulted in shops closing, workers selling their tools, and farmers selling their land (p.158). HDR observes that "violent conflict is one of the surest and fastest routes to the bottom of the HDI table" (p.154). "Violent conflict creates losses that are transmitted across whole economies, undermining the potential for growth. With fewer assets and less capacity to respond to losses in income and assets, poor people are especially vulnerable to the economic impact of the conflict" (p.155).
Much of the blame for the deterioration in human conditions is placed on government failures: "The collapse of effective authority in some countries has undermined capacity to prevent and resolve conflict. Governments lacking either the means or the will to fulfill their core functions, including territorial control, provision of basic services, management of public resources and protection of the livelihoods of the poorest people, are both a cause and consequence of violent conflict... In security terms, a cohesive and peaceful international system is far more likely to be achieved through the cooperation of effective states... than in an environment of fragile, collapsed, fragmenting or generally chaotic state entities" (p.162).
The most revealing data in HDR 2005 can be found in the tables beginning on page 211. The 177 countries in the HDI are classified into three clusters by achievement in human development: high human development with an HDI of 0.8 or above, medium human development with an HDI of 0.5 to 0.8, and low human development with an HDI of less than 0.5. The data is based on information from the year 2003. In these tables, Israel is listed in the high cluster with a rank of 23 and HDI of 0.915 (p.219). The Occupied Palestinian Territories are in the medium cluster with a rank of 102 and HDI of 0.729 (p.220). That means that there are 75 countries listed below OPT. Overall, the Arab states have an HDI of 0.679 which suggests that the Arabs living in OPT have better human conditions than their counterparts in other Arab-Muslim countries.
Even more revealing are the income and poverty tables (p.228). On the Human Poverty Index, the OPT is ranked seventh on a list of 103 developing countries. It is on par with Cuba, Singapore, and Colombia. The other Arab countries are ranked below the OPT. Wealthy Saudi Arabia is ranked 32. Egypt is ranked 55.
The table on page 281 lists the amount of official development assistance (ODA) received among the 177 HDI areas. OPT received 288.6 US$ per capita in 2003, which is the second highest amount in the entire list. Only Cape Verde received more, with 305.7 US$ per capita. Yet, because of violent conflict, the OPT experienced a decline in HDI. This suggests that all of this aid was not being used to improve human welfare in the OPT. On page 312, there is a table titled, "Gender inequality in economic activity." The OPT has the lowest rate of female economic activity among the 177 countries, with a rate of 9.6%, or 14% of the male rate. This suggests that almost all of the aid money is going to provide employment for males. This may explain how the various militias in OPT are being funded. The implication is that the high amount of aid going to OPT is funding militias and promoting violent conflict instead of improving the lives of the population. Israel, as the occupying power, should be absolved of any blame because the area is controlled by the Palestinian Authority. The Palestinian Arabs are suffering from deep, self-inflicted wounds, not from Israeli occupation. The population would not benefit from the establishment of an independent state that would only continue a policy of intolerance, discrimination, corruption, and violence.
I. Time
Comments
Hide the following 11 comments
Israel First traitors sink to new depths
15.09.2005 20:02
"The Palestinians have actually benefited from their association with the State of Israel".
particularly as the report he quotes from makes no such conclusion. Still, what do you expect from people who call a wall bigger than the one Berlin had, a "fence".
Boycott Israel Goods
Israel Zwick article from Israel Insider
15.09.2005 20:30
can also be found at http://www.theraphi.com/zwick/nundrpc.html
The raphi.com declares itself unambiguously as being for "pro-Israel Zionism"
The title is a lie as revealed by this sentence:
"While the UN is eager to condemn Israel for violating Palestinian rights, its own data suggests otherwise."
so perhaps it should read "pro-Israel zionist thinks New UN document refutes Palestinian claims.
The suggestion that Palestinians benefit from being occupied by a hostile invader is abhorrent, and the fact of the matter is that an occupied people are entitled to struggle for liberation - which usually incurs sanctions from the occupier.
Its a shit article from a shit source.
Why the fuck is it being spammed onto a "global justice" site?
Sourcerer
some things never change
15.09.2005 20:47
To the poster, and author of this article I say "do you have no shame". Rhetorical question, really, since I already know the answer. So the poster can stick his/her racism where the sun never shines, and we can watch the inevitable fall of a state created entirely by a crime against humanity, just as we watched the ancestors of those that terroristically created Israel lose their attempts to maintain the world's most evil trade, and REAL holocaust, human slavery.
twilight
twilight
15.09.2005 21:34
The mind boggles at the level of denial of these people!
Shalom
Twilight's post needs to be hidden, moderators.
15.09.2005 22:21
But i'm not surprised. I've noticed before you are little short of a Nazi.
You just can't bear the thought that even as illustriously anti-Zionist (read: anti-Semitic) an organisation as the UN has ITSELF declared through one of its own committees, staffed and run by Arab participants, that the Arabs' problems stem from themselves and not from Israel.
I would advise you to get over it.
Ex-Brit, thank G-d
UNITED MASONS
15.09.2005 22:25
NIMROD
Gob Bless New York City,God Bless America, and God Bless Israel
15.09.2005 22:27
There is a disturbing amount of anti-semitism and anti-islamism in British Society and shame on the left wing in your country for not denouncing the anti-semitism and anti-islamism on this website.
God Bless New York City, God Bless America, and God Bless Israel
American Anarchist
so stoooopid!
15.09.2005 22:28
Khwaga
Ex Brit said:
15.09.2005 22:51
so - that'd be exactly what the Israel Zwick did in the original article, would it not?
Ex-Brit went on to say:
"You just can't bear the thought that even as illustriously anti-Zionist (read: anti-Semitic) an organisation as the UN has ITSELF declared through one of its own committees, staffed and run by Arab participants, that the Arabs' problems stem from themselves and not from Israel."
which is not what happened at all - Israel Zwick said that the Palestinians problems stem from themselves and not Israel - The UN ACTUALLY said:
"The Occupied Palestinian Territories registered some improvements
in human development through the 1990s. But the second
intifada (uprising) since September 2000, and the associated military
incursions in the West Bank and Gaza, have resulted in a sharp
deterioration in living standards and life chances.
One effect of the conflict has been a major downturn in the
Palestinian economy. Border closures have cut workers off from labour
markets in Israel. Meanwhile, small enterprises have suffered
disruptions to supplies of inputs and exclusion from markets. The
effect has been to drive down wages and drive up unemployment.
Unemployment rates rose from 10% before September 2000 to
30% in 2003. In 2004 the figure climbed to 40%.
An educated and, until 2000, increasingly affluent work force
has experienced a dramatic increase in poverty. The poverty
rate more than doubled from 20% in 1999 to 55% in 2003 (see
table).
Conflict has disrupted all economic activities. Consider
the relatively prosperous West Bank district of Nablus. Prior to
September 2000 the town was a commercial hub. As a result of the
conflict there has been a growing military presence, long curfews
(a 24-hour curfew during much of the second half of 2002), more
checkpoints and blocked access roads. The result: shops closing,
workers selling their tools and farmers selling their land.
Restrictions on movement have affected healthcare and education
as well. Nearly half the Palestinian population is unable to access
health services. Maternal care fell sharply by 2002, and chronic
malnutrition in children increased by 50% in both the West Bank
and Gaza. In the past four years 282 schools have been damaged,
and another 275 are considered in the direct line of confrontation.
Increased insecurity is affecting work opportunities and the
provision of basic services, with negative consequences and reversals
of human development for the Palestinian population."
The Zionists take that to mean that if the Palestinians hadn't resisted the occupation of their land then the situation wouldn't have deteriorated BUT it was Israel that imposed closure and curfews and set out to systematically wreck the Palestinian infrastructure and economy - which amounts to illegal collective punishment/ war crimes.
The zionist narrative relies on the myth that Arafat was promised 95% of what the Palestinians asked for - when in fact he was offered perpetual servitude for the Palestinian people.
There are still people who claim that Britain's role in the current occupation of Iraq is benign when it patently isn't. There are many zionists who make the same claim about their land/resource grabbing occupation of Palestine.
Reading what the UN actually wrote leaves you a choice - is it justified to resist occupation or not? Zionists say no - history says yes.
So, why is this rabid zionist distortion besmirching the bandwidth of Indymedia? Anyone with half a brain can see that it is patent bullshit.
doublethink
"Twilight's post needs to be hidden, moderators."
15.09.2005 23:03
"Palestinian problems stem from their intolerance, hostility, violence, and corruption, not from Israeli occupation."
certainly if someone wrote:
"Israeli problems stem from their intolerance, hostility, vioilence and corruption, not from Palestinian resistance"
he would be quick to scream anti-semitism. He equates anti-zionist with anti-semitic and yet fails to notice the crude racist stereotyping when it is applied to Palestinians.
THE WHOLE FUCKING THING NEEDS TO BE HIDDEN
seeing the wood for the trees
seeing the wood for the trees
18.09.2005 21:32
I second that. These guys are just trolling here. There are plenty of other venues on the web for their ideology.
Not a racist butt...