Palestinian National Covenant
The Palestinian National Covenant (or Charter) (in Arabic: al-Mithaq al-Watani al-Filastini) is a historically important document of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO). It was adopted at the time of the establishment of the PLO in 1964, and extensively amended in 1968, in the wake of the Six Day War. The final article of the Covenant provides that the covenant can only be amended by a vote of a 2/3 majority of the entire PLO National Congress at a special session convened for that purpose.As it stands now, the Covenant denies the right of Israel to exist at the expense of a Palestinian state. More specifically, the Covenant calls on the Palestinian nation to serve as the vanguard of Arab and worldwide efforts to liberate Palestine and to destroy Zionism, which the Covenant describes as "a political movement organically associated with international imperialism and antagonistic to all action for liberation and to progressive movements in the world".
The Oslo I peace treaty required the PLO to "submit the [PLO Covenant] to the Palestinian National Council [PNC] for ... the necessary changes", in order to make the support of a two-state solution explicit. This was to be done so that all of the articles of the Covenant which are ambiguous would be deleted or altered. The Oslo II peace treaty required the PLO to make all these changes within two months of the inauguration of the new Palestinian Council, May 7, 1996.
The PNC did convene on April the 24th, and issued a statement about the changes it would introduce. As a result of the Israeli invasion of the Palestinian territories (some say), further work has come to a halt. Some PLO spokespersons officially remain supportive of what they term an equitable two-state solution, and call upon Israel to re-enter negotiations.
The unupdated PNC as it stands now, from the Israel's Ministry of Foreign Affairs site
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2 Palestinian view 3 Events of 1998 |
The PNC was never amended, as far as the Palestinian side is concerned.
On April 24, 1996, the PNC met in Gaza, but they did not revoke or change the covenant. They issued a statement saying that it had become aged, and that an undefined part of it would be rewritten at an undetermined date in the future.
While the English language press release stated that the PLO Covenant was "hereby amended", the Arabic version of Yassir Arafat's letter on this declaration stated:
The PLO's internal document on this matter stated that changing the Covenant would have been "suicide for the PLO" It continued:
In an attempt to end the confusion, the Wye River Memorandum included the following provision:
Israeli criticism
Articles 15, 19, 20, 22, and 23 of the Covenant explicitly deny Israel's right to exist. Articles 1-6, 8, 11-14, 16-18, 21, 24-26, 28 and 29 implicitly deny the State of Israel's right to exist. These articles claim that Palestinian Arabs have the sole right to all of the land. Articles 7, 9 and 10 call all Arabs to support an armed struggle against the State of Israel.
Articles 27 and 30 indirectly call for violence. A total of 30 of the 33 articles in the Covenant effectively deny Israel's right to exist.
Peace Watch, a left-wing Israeli peace group that promotes the creation of a Palestinian state, issued this statement, which represents the way most Israelis feel:
Palestinian view
Some say that the following PLO position paper on the Covenant, from the Research and Thought Department of Fatah, sums up in the best way Palestinian attitude to changing the Covenant.
Faisal Hamdi Husseini, head of the legal committee appointed by the PNC, stated "There has been a decision to change the Covenant. The change has not yet been carried out".Events of 1998
Yasser Arafat wrote letters to President Clinton and Prime Minister Blair in January 1998 which purported to list the articles of the Charter that had been affected by the PNC's 1996 vote.
While this was seen as progress in some quarters, other Palestinian officials contended that the Charter had not yet been amended, and there were also reportedly discrepancies between the two letters.
Observers who had previously been skeptical of Palestinian claims that the Charter had been amended continued to voice doubts.
These commitments were kept, leading President Clinton to declare to the assembled Palestinian officials on December 14, 1998:
Yet despite President Clinton's optimism, the events of 1998 did not resolve the controversy of the Charter. A June 1999 report by the Palestinian Authority's Ministry of Information on the status of the Charter made no mention of the 1998 events, leading Palestinians continue to state that the Charter has not yet been amended, and an official text of the letter referenced in the Wye River Memorandum is very hard to come by. Reportedly, the operative language of Arafat's letter to Clinton reads:
The articles identified by Arafat as nullified call for Palestinian unity in armed struggle, deny the legitimacy of the establishment of Israel, deny the existence of a Jewish people with a historical or religious connection to Palestine, and label Zionism a racist, imperialist, fanatic, fascist, aggressive, colonialist political movement that must be eliminated from the Middle East for the sake of world peace.