Tuesday, 15 December 2009

Mass incarceration, Gaza, Kenya: Why Obama should care

[Paupua+II.jpg] Contributed by Ritalin

Mass incarceration, Gaza, Kenya: Why Obama should care

In the long history of colonialism there is nothing new in the practice of a colonial regime imposing conditions of  very brutal mass incarceration on whole segments of the indigenous population and then manipulating those conditions to try to win compliance or acquiescence from the indigenes. See, for example, the very imperfect* and ideological– but nonetheless revealing– account of two Palestinian brothers now living apart, in the West Bank and Gaza, that won front-page billing in today’s WaPo.

Undertaking the mass incarceration of whole communities and then manipulating its conditions is, basically, what the Israeli government has been doing in the occupied territories for many years now.  It’s been doing it with both the brutal siege it has maintained on the whole population of Gaza, and the system of movement controls it maintains in the West Bank, that’s dominated by gates and checkpoints between Palestinian areas that are opened and closed at the whim only of the quite unaccountable occupying power.

Small wonder that so many people have judged that those areas of the occupied territories that have not already been land-grabbed by the settlers constitute a “series of open-air prisons” for the Palestinians.
Pres. Barack Obama should be well aware of this situation. He should care deeply about it. (And he should, of course, be using all the instruments of U.S. national power to bring Israel’s very lengthy occupation of these territories to a complete end.)

But here’s why Pres. Obama, of all people, should care about this situation: Because his own paternal grandfather was, according to news reports out of London last year, one of the hundreds of thousands of anti-colonial activists in Kenya who in the late 1940s and 1950s were shut up by the British colonial authorities in a series of very brutal mass-incarceration encampments called “The Pipeline.”
Reporters for the London Times wrote about Hussein Onyango Obama’s experiences in the British-ruled Kenya of those years that,
He was arrested in 1949 and jailed for two years in a high-security prison where, according to his family, he was subjected to horrific violence to extract information about the growing insurgency.
“The African warders were instructed by the white soldiers to whip him every morning and evening till he confessed,” said Sarah Onyango, Hussein Onyango’s third wife, the woman Mr [president-elect] Obama refers to as “Granny Sarah”.
Mrs Onyango, 87, described how “white soldiers” visited the prison every two or three days to carry out “disciplinary action” on the inmates suspected of subversive activities.
“He said they would sometimes squeeze his testicles with parallel metallic rods. They also pierced his nails and buttocks with a sharp pin, with his hands and legs tied together with his head facing down,” she said The alleged torture was said to have left Mr Onyango permanently scarred, and bitterly antiBritish. “That was the time we realised that the British were actually not friends but, instead, enemies,” Mrs Onyango said.
As I noted when I wrote about this back in January,
Harvard historian Caroline Elkins has exhaustively documented the mass incarceration and intimidation campaign the British ran against suspected Kenyan independence activists in her recent book Imperial Reckoning. What she documented there tracked very closely with what Sarah Onyango told the Times reporters about her late husband’s treatment (except that according to Elkins’s documentation, around 150,000 of the Kenyan incarcerees may have ended up dead.)
Elkins also noted that life had become particularly difficult for the Kenyan indigenes, and their anti-British fervor had increased, when the British decided to plant many more white settlers into Kenya after the war, displacing hundreds of thousands of indigenous African farmers from their land and resources and confining them to “reserves” that had pitifully few natural resources that rapidly became depleted as the additional displaced Africans were all trucked in.
Sounds familiar?

* I think the WaPo account is imperfect and ideological because the writer, Howard Schneider, tries to make it appear as though all of the West Bank population is secular and anti-Hamas, and is experiencing a degree of comfort and relative prosperity, and all or most of the Gazans are pro-Hamas to some degree and are experiencing horrible socioeconomic conditions. He then tries to essentialize these differences, arguing that, “The notion of a single ‘Palestine’ seems to be receding, for the Barakat brothers and all Palestinians.”
Now, it is possible that the life-situations and outlooks of the two brothers whose lives he describes are as he describes them. (What a pity, though, that while he has quotes from the two men and from their adult sons, he has nothing at all that represents the views of the women of these families. Were they invisible?)
But the move he then makes to “globalize” from the situations and outlooks of these two men is a quite unjustifiable leap!

As I know from my time in Ramallah in recent months, that glitzy, foreign-aid-driven city is not at all representative of the rest of the West Bank.  And I dare say that the life of Tayseer Barakat, a Gaza-born artist and restaurant owner, is not even representative of the lives of most of the residents of Ramallah.
Indeed, recent opinion polls have shown that Hamas has significant popularity in the West Bank– and indeed, it may be more popular there than it is in Gaza.

Another point. Though the text of Schneider’s article made it seem as though Sami Barakat, the brother who stayed in Gaza, had a life marked by great hardships, the photos that accompany the online version of the article, which are not reproduced in the print version, indicate that Sami Barakat’s family lives in a pleasant, well-painted house with carpets, some nice furniture and other nice fixtures.  So probably, the life-situations of neither brother actually “represent” those of all members of the community Schneider judges them to be a part of. But hey, that didn’t stop him from generalizing…

One final, very important point. Though Schneider does indicate that the life-condititions of each group of Palestinians, in the West Bank and in Gaza, are heavily manipulated by Israel for political reasons, nowhere does he spell out that all these restrictions are in gross violation of Israel’s obligations under international law, as the occupying power, which include an obligation to protect the welfare of all civilian residents of the territories occupied.

Pres. Obama, of all people, should be well aware of the importance of international law in such circumstances…

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