|
The
Road to Nahr al-Barid: Lebanese
Political Discourse and Palestinian Civil Rights
Muhammad Ali
Khalidi and Diane Riskedahl
How
long will the state erect military checkpoints in residential
areas, treating them as though they were camps sheltering
wanted people and gunmen, while all the Palestinian camps,
which shelter criminals and wanted people, enjoy freedom
of movement, politically, militarily and in terms of security,
as though they were security islands independent of Lebanon
politically, militarily and in terms of security?
—Jibran
Tuwayni, al-Nahar (July 18, 2002)

Smoke
rises from Nahr al-Barid, July 12, 2007. (Paul Taggart) |
The view expressed
by assassinated Lebanese Member of Parliament and editorialist
Jibran Tuwayni has become depressingly familiar among Lebanese
politicians since the end of the Lebanese civil war. Though Tuwayni
was a firebrand of what is now the loyalist camp in Lebanese
politics, his perspective is also shared by elements of the current
opposition, particularly members of the parliamentary bloc loyal
to former Gen. Michel Aoun. There may be more than a grain of
truth in the saying that the only thing that unites the Lebanese
political factions today is antipathy for the Palestinians living
in their midst.
The 12 Palestinian
refugee camps in Lebanon, home to some 400,000 people according
to official UN figures,[1] have
been perceived in the past decade and a half as zones of lawlessness
within sovereign Lebanese territory. They are regularly described
by politicians and pundits as “security islands,” the implication
being that they are regions of insecurity in a sea of peace.
Anyone who has been following events since the civil war formally
ended in 1989, of course, will know that Lebanon has not been
fully secure during this time. Moreover, the camps are not the
only parts of the country that have witnessed the occasional
violent flareup. Yet the impression persists that they are safe
havens for criminals and outlaws.
It is against
this backdrop that the summer 2007 events in the northernmost
Palestinian refugee camp of Nahr al-Barid must be seen. When
fighting broke out in and around the camp in late May, some commentators
blamed it on the fact that the camps were hotbeds of extremism
that defied all efforts by Lebanese security forces to bring
them under control. Indeed, many reports stated that the Lebanese
army and security forces were prevented from entering the camps
due to a secret agreement struck between the Lebanese army and
the Palestine Liberation Organization in Cairo in 1969. Widely
known as the Cairo Agreement, the document authorized Palestinian
Armed Struggle, a security arm of the PLO, to “undertake the
task of regulating and determining the presence of arms in the
camps within the framework of Lebanese security and the interests
of the Palestinian revolution,” according to an unofficial text
that was later leaked to the press.[2] What these press reports missed, however, was
that the agreement was officially rescinded by the Lebanese parliament
on May 21, 1987, exactly 20 years before clashes erupted in Nahr
al-Barid. There is therefore no legal barrier to the entry of
Lebanese troops into the Palestinian refugee camps. In fact,
Lebanese army checkpoints are positioned at the entrances of
most Palestinian refugee camps and Lebanese police regularly
enter the camps to arrest suspects and carry out other functions.[3]
If they are
not really the islands of insecurity that they are claimed to
be, why are the refugee camps represented as such? One answer
is surely that Palestinians have long served as a convenient
scapegoat upon which to blame the civil war and Lebanon’s ills
since that war came to an end with the Ta’if Agreement in 1989.
But this answer leads to another question: If there is a serious
interest in eliminating “security islands” on the part of the
state, why has the Lebanese army not entered the Palestinian
refugee camps? The answer to that question is somewhat more complex.
Arguably, in the fragmented quasi-state that is post-war Lebanon,
it suits the interests of various groups to maintain pockets
of the country that can be blamed for outbreaks of instability.
Different factions can use them to foment unrest, while maintaining
“plausible deniability” that they are the instigators of the
disturbances. The losers in this dangerous political game are
primarily the refugees themselves.
Fatah al-Islam

Women
from Nahr al-Barid beg soldiers to allow them back into
the camp to find their husbands. (Tariq Saleh) |
Fighting broke
out in Nahr al-Barid on May 20 after a group designating itself
Fatah al-Islam launched a dramatic nighttime raid against the
Lebanese army, resulting in the deaths of 27 Lebanese soldiers,
some of them killed in their beds. At least some of these militants
then allegedly withdrew to locations within Nahr al-Barid, prompting
the army to unleash an artillery barrage upon the refugee camp,
which is also home to some 35,000 (mainly) Palestinian civilians.
The camp is a densely packed neighborhood of ramshackle concrete
buildings, some three or four stories high. It is bordered to
the east by a swath of agricultural land and is located on the
outskirts of Lebanon’s second largest city, Tripoli.
Reports differ
widely as to the provenance and motivation of the Fatah al-Islam
group. Most accounts agree that it is composed of a few hundred
fighters of various Arab and Muslim nationalities (including
Lebanese, Syrians, Saudi Arabians and others).[4] The
Lebanese opposition claims that they were largely the creation
of the loyalist Future Movement led by MP Saad al-Hariri, while
the government accuses them of being a Syrian implant that infiltrated
the country through the porous Syrian border. Though the subsequent
fighting has arguably not been in the interest of either the
government or the opposition, each side may have had some motivation
for encouraging Fatah al-Islam in the first place and for allowing
it to set up shop in Nahr al-Barid. For pro-government forces
such as the Sunni-dominated Future Movement, there would have
been a point to arming a Sunni militia to serve as a counterweight
to the Shi‘i Hizballah. The aim might not have been to take on
the powerful Hizballah militarily, but instead to strike a bargain
to disarm the Sunni militia in return for the disarmament of
Hizballah. For the opposition groups and especially their Syrian
patrons, fomenting unrest may have been desirable in order to
topple the government or put pressure upon it not to pursue its
anti-Syrian and pro-Western policies. Whatever its origin, Fatah
al-Islam may have outmaneuvered both groups and acted independently
in attacking the army and engaging it in a protracted firefight
in the camp that, at press time, was well into its third month.
Eyewitnesses
inside the camp have said that civilian casualties were heavy
in the first few days of fighting. A physician who was attending
to the wounded for the first four weeks of the conflict told
us that there were 17 civilians injured just in the first three
days, and an unknown number of dead who were not brought to clinics.
Throughout the clashes, it has been difficult to obtain precise
civilian casualty figures and it has been widely feared that
many civilians were buried in the ruins of the camp.[5] Human
rights activists have warned that if independent observers were
not given access to the camp as soon as clashes ended, the bodies
of the dead might be bulldozed under the rubble. Since fighting
erupted without warning, many camp residents were unable to flee
and were caught in the crossfire. The first mass evacuation took
place on May 23, when 2,000 civilians were allowed to leave.
Subsequent days and weeks witnessed a steady stream of evacuees,
until Lebanese papers reported that all civilians had left the
camp in one final convoy on July 12, apart from the militants’
families and some “wanted” individuals.[6]
When we asked
Milad Salama, a nurse in his twenties, why civilians stayed in
Nahr al-Barid after the first outbreak of hostilities, he said:
“I would turn that question around: How could we leave?” He said
no one provided residents with the wherewithal to evacuate the
camp, adding that “evacuation was spontaneous” and took place
under shelling. He had left on June 17, after four weeks of fighting.
He said that he and an accompanying physician, Tawfiq Salih As‘ad,
were the last health professionals to evacuate the camp. Together
they told a tale of harrowing conditions inside the besieged
camp. Salama personally carried stretchers to houses that had
been shelled in order to evacuate the wounded. The alleyway outside
their clinic was so narrow that two people could scarcely pass
each other, yet artillery shells fell into it on more than one
occasion. Garbage accumulated at every corner, vermin were rife,
mosquitoes swarmed everywhere, and cases of vomiting and diarrhea
were common. They gathered fuel from parked cars to supply their
single generator to keep essential electrical equipment running
and to charge mobile phones for communication with the outside
world, they ate moldy bread and drank non-potable water, and
performed their medical duties as best they could. When they
could no longer do so, they managed to get themselves out.
All men evacuated
from the camp were detained by the Lebanese army for interrogation.
Salama described a three-day ordeal during which he was held
in detention at a military base at al-Qubba near Tripoli. He
said that 420 men and boys, some of them as young as 13, were
held in three rooms with a common bathroom. They slept on the
floor, taking turns to lie down due to overcrowding. Though he
was not physically abused or tortured, he said that some of those
with him were, merely for being bearded or wearing a kaffiyya.
But all were subject to verbal abuse, particularly “crude expressions
about the Palestinian people.” Numerous others corroborate Salama’s
account. Young men in Beirut have even been arrested and physically
abused merely for carrying Palestinian identity papers.
Model Camp?

Palestinian
refugees, displaced from Nahr al-Barid, in Baddawi camp.
(Philippe Brault/Oeil Public) |
Lebanese Defense
Minister Elias Murr declared victory in Nahr al-Barid on June
21, after a month of continuous bombardment. The fighting showed
no sign of abating, however, and wags have subsequently compared
the bold proclamation to President George W. Bush’s ill-fated
“Mission Accomplished” statement. Murr’s intent seems to have
been to declare victory, then designate all subsequent fighting
as “mopping-up operations.” But live images from the camp showed
no sign that the fighting had changed pace: Hulking artillery
pieces continued to pound the camp from the overlooking hills
as helicopter gunships strafed it from the air. The victory declaration
seemed to have been designed to appeal to a largely supportive
Lebanese public, which was hungry for a positive result after
a month of fighting, as well as to the troops themselves, whose
morale could not have been high given the relatively large number
of casualties (more than 100 soldiers dead in the first two months)
sustained against an outnumbered and besieged adversary.[7]
Even though
the Lebanese government may not have been raring for a fight
with Fatah al-Islam, very soon after the conflict began, it began
to make plans to rebuild the camp and transform it into a “model”
for the other Palestinian refugee camps in Lebanon. In the neo-liberal
discourse of the state, the most charitable interpretation of
this notion would involve converting the camp into a Potemkin
village, housing cheap Palestinian labor to replace the Syrian
manual labor upon which the Lebanese agricultural, industrial,
service and construction sectors are still heavily dependent.
If the other camps were to follow suit, they would no longer
be an eyesore for the foreign investors and tourists that the
Lebanese government is so eager to attract, and the country’s
dependence on Syrian labor would be reduced. In the more sinister
reading, the government’s plans would require transforming Nahr
al-Barid and other camps into ghettos that are constantly under
the watchful eye, or more likely the iron fist, of the intelligence
services—a situation reminiscent in some respects of the 1950s
and 1960s, when Lebanese military intelligence’s notorious Deuxième
Bureau reigned supreme in the camps.[8]
Within a couple
of weeks of the beginning of the violence, local television stations
showed Prime Minister Fuad Siniora poring over maps of the camp
with engineers and architects from the engineering consulting
firm Khatib and Alami. A move to rebuild Nahr al-Barid according
to the dictates of the Lebanese government had begun almost as
soon as the conflict began, as though the government knew that
the army would embark on a systematic destruction of the camp.
But reconstruction plans do not seem to have had the welfare
of the refugees in mind and there has been no real attempt to
involve the residents of Nahr al-Barid themselves in rebuilding
the camp, an attitude that makes them understandably nervous.
At one meeting of local NGOs with representatives from the UN
Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) in late June, tension over this
issue was palpable. Meeting near the entrance of Baddawi camp,
where many of those from Nahr al-Barid have sought refuge, local
aid workers expressed their concerns to the UNRWA officials who
are in close contact with the government. They spoke of rumors
that bulldozers were poised to enter the camps, as soon as the
guns fell silent, to raze what had not been destroyed by military
ordnance. A few weeks later, the Lebanese press reported that
bulldozers equipped with searchlights were indeed being readied
behind the front lines to destroy the remaining structures and
remove the rubble.[9]
When UNRWA
officials told those assembled that a return to the camp could
only take place some three weeks after the fighting had stopped,
one former resident of Nahr al-Barid pointed out that the people
who were displaced during Israel’s summer 2006 bombardment of
Lebanon had returned to their homes in the south within hours
of the ceasefire, and that there was no reason that Palestinian
refugees could not do the same. But another camp resident, who
works for a local NGO that runs child care centers in most of
the Palestinian refugee camps, shook her head despairingly and
muttered under her breath: “They returned because [Hizballah
Secretary-General Hasan] Nasrallah told them to. We don’t have
a marja‘iyya.” In this context, the Arabic term marja‘iyya refers
to a political leadership that can represent people’s views and
respond to their grievances.
Rights
and Return
One common
complaint among Palestinian refugees in Lebanon is lack of political
representation. The gap was thought to have been filled by the
appointment in May 2006 of Abbas Zaki of Fatah as the PLO representative
in Lebanon, a position that had been dormant for several years.
The crisis in Nahr al-Barid, however, has shown Zaki to be very
loath to criticize Lebanese policies or the conduct of the Lebanese
army. His attitude has made it all the more evident that the
Palestinian refugees need grassroots representation that would
give voice to their concerns rather than a diplomatic mission
from the Palestinian Authority to the Lebanese government.
Rather more
pressing than the absence of political leadership is the lack
of basic civil and social rights for Palestinian refugees. Nearly
60 years after the establishment of the state of Israel displaced
and dispossessed them, Palestinians in Lebanon are still without
such basic rights as the right to employment, property ownership,
health care and social security. In a brief moment of cooperation
among the principal Lebanese political actors after the Syrian
military withdrawal in April 2005 and before Israel’s war in
July-August 2006, the government took a few timid steps to change
their circumstances. Palestinians were allowed to work in some
jobs provided they were granted a work permit—whose cost is,
however, prohibitive for most of them. Most professional jobs
remain closed to Palestinians and there is no sign that that
will change. Doctors like Tawfiq As‘ad can only practice medicine
within the refugee camps; although some work clandestinely at
Lebanese clinics, they are always at risk of being fined or arrested
by the authorities.
The justification
traditionally given by Lebanese officialdom for the deplorable
conditions of Palestinian refugees is that withholding civil
rights ensures that their presence in Lebanon is temporary. The
bugbear of resettlement or naturalization (tawtin) is
regularly invoked in Lebanon to justify all manner of abuse against
Palestinians, and prohibitions on tawtin are written into
the Lebanese constitution as well as the Ta’if Agreement. But
while the vast majority of refugees themselves insist on their
right to return to Palestine, most also say that this should
not preclude their ability to enjoy basic human rights in Lebanon.
Indeed, many argue that it is only if their civil rights are
granted that they can be empowered as a community to demand redress
in the context of a regional settlement.
Lasting
Impact
Ironically,
it is not the return to Palestine, but rather the return to their
refugee camp that is now the immediate concern of the inhabitants
of Nahr al-Barid. Though this has been their consistent demand,
it is unlikely that they will be allowed to do so when the conflict
is over. The Lebanese authorities and UNRWA have cited the fact
that the camp has been mined and booby-trapped by the Fatah al-Islam
militants to justify preventing the refugees from returning to
their homes as soon as the fighting stops.[10] It has also become increasingly
evident that there will be few if any habitable buildings left
to return to due to massive artillery bombardment by the Lebanese
military. The director of UNRWA recently confirmed that the refugees
would not be allowed back quickly, saying that temporary accommodations
would have to be found for them elsewhere while the camp was
being rebuilt.[11]
Despite the
fact that most Lebanese politicians have been careful to point
out that Fatah al-Islam is not a Palestinian group and that the
majority of its members hold other nationalities, the legacy
of the battle for Nahr al-Barid is likely to be tough times for
Palestinian refugees in Lebanon. The security clampdown on Palestinians
has already been launched, leading to many cases of physical
abuse. According to Human Rights Watch, both the army and the
Internal Security Forces have engaged in wanton harassment of
innocent Palestinian civilians.[12] During a peaceful demonstration
just outside Baddawi refugee camp on June 29, two protesters
were shot dead and dozens more wounded by the army. Human Rights
Watch accused the Lebanese Army of an “unlawful use of force”
and called on the government to launch an impartial investigation
into the shooting.
The US seems
as devoted to this conflict as the Lebanese government, quickly
coming to the aid of the Lebanese army with supplies. The transfer
of military aid was effected in record time and has continued
throughout the fighting. US military hardware was first delivered
on May 25, when several transport planes flew into the Beirut
airport, carrying ammunition and equipment for the Lebanese army;
the following day more planes arrived from US military bases
as well as from US client states in the region. US military aid
to Lebanon has increased dramatically, from $40 million
in 2006 to a requested $280 million in 2007.[13] Most of this military aid is not of the type that would help
the army defend the country’s borders, such as anti-aircraft
weapons to deter the constant Israeli overflights of Lebanese
territory. Rather, it is the kind of hardware that will enhance
the army’s ability to deal with internal “disturbances,” whose
main victims are usually civilians.
The conflict
in and around the refugee camp could inaugurate a new era for
Lebanon, one of a security-obsessed regime in which all citizens
are potential suspects in an extended “war on terror.” Physical
and verbal abuse by the security forces has broadened beyond
the Palestinians to include any suspicious-looking individual,
preferably young, male, bearded and swarthy, in a Lebanese version
of racial profiling.[14] There are also clear signs of jingoism among
the general populace.[15] Despite the fact that the country is sharply
divided by a political and sectarian schism, most factions are
united in backing the army and demanding a tough clampdown on
Palestinians and other suspect elements. If Lebanon does not
fall apart due to internal strife, it may yet turn into another
Middle Eastern police state.
Endnotes
[1] Some
estimates put the number of Palestinian refugees at closer to
250,000, since their numbers have been depleted by immigration,
and to a lesser extent, by naturalization. See Sherif Elsayed-Ali,
“Palestinian Refugees in Lebanon,” Forced Migration Review 26
(August 2006), pp. 13–14.
[2] An
English translation of the agreement is posted at http://www.dailystar.com.lb/researcharticle.asp?article_id=42.
[3] Jaber
Suleiman, “The Current Political, Organizational and Security
Situation in the Palestinian Refugee Camps of Lebanon,” Journal
of Palestine Studies 29/1 (Autumn 1999).
[4] For
more on events leading up to the fighting and Fatah al-Islam’s
origins, see Jim Quilty, “The Collateral Damage of Lebanese Sovereignty,” Middle
East Report Online, June 18, 2007.
[5] At
press time, the numbers of dead were estimated at 136 soldiers,
at least 100 militants and at least 41 civilians. Reuters, August
13, 2007. In addition, 65 individuals have been detained and
charged with terrorism, which carries the death penalty in Lebanon.
Al-Jazeera English, August 1, 2007.
[6] Al-Safir,
July 13, 2007.
[7] In
late July, army commander Michel Suleiman was quoted as saying
that Nahr al-Barid was “the toughest battle of [the Lebanese
army’s] history.” Al-Safir, July 24, 2007.
[8] The
hegemony of Lebanese military intelligence was so complete during
these decades that it even affected what schoolteachers could
say in the classroom. See Rosemary Sayigh, “Sources of Palestinian
Nationalism: A Study of a Palestinian Camp in Lebanon,” Journal
of Palestine Studies 6/4 (Summer 1977), p. 30.
[9] Al-Safir,
July 13, 2007.
[10] UNRWA
spokeswoman Hoda al-Turk has been quoted as saying: “We don’t
want people who survived the war to die from UXO [unexploded
ordnance] when they go back home.” IRINnews.org, July 4, 2007.
[11] He
also estimated that reconstruction costs “will certainly run
into hundreds of millions of dollars.” Reuters, July 20, 2007.
[12] See
also Sophie McNeill, “Collective Punishment of Palestinian Civilians
in Lebanon,” Electronic Lebanon, June 22, 2007.
[13] Voice
of America, May 25, 2007.
[14] See
Fadi Bardawil, “Lebanese Counter-Terrorism: Mere Side Effects,” al-Akhbar,
June 9, 2007. [Arabic]
[15] See
Khaled Saghiyeh, “Support Our Troops,” al-Akhbar, June
7, 2007 [Arabic]; Sami Hermez, “Cheering to the Beat of the Palestinians’
Misery,” Electronic Lebanon, May 25, 2007.

|