Palestinian MP: hold election as act of resistance
Mustafa Barghouti says lack of democracy is unacceptable and Palestinians refuse to be “slaves”
A Palestinian opposition leader has told HARDtalk that he blames both Israel and the Palestinian Authority for the “unacceptable” failure to hold elections in the occupied territories since 2006. Mustafa Barghouti, who finished second in the last vote for the Palestinian presidency, called for new elections to be held as an “act of non-violent resistance”.
Speaking to Stephen Sackur from Ramallah, Mr Barghouti accepted that the Palestinian Authority led by Mahmoud Abbas lacked legitimacy. The parliament to which Barghouti was elected has been dissolved by Abbas, something which he believes was done “illegally”. But he also accused the Israeli government of “doing everything it can to prevent elections from taking place” in the Palestinian territories.
Dr Barghouti, leader of the Palestinian National Initiative, described Israel’s new government as “the most extreme in the history of this region” and accused Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of blocking “any possibility” for peace. He added that “fascist elements” within the Israeli coalition want to “flood the West Bank with settlers”.
There has been a high level of violence in recent months, with Israeli forces often clashing with young Palestinian gunmen in the occupied West Bank. Mr Barghouti said that the “young generation will not accept to be slaves”. He argued that many of them are “turning in that direction” of militancy in order to “defy this system of occupation and apartheid”. Israel has been accused of committing the crime of apartheid by various international human rights groups, but rejects these accusations.