Hundreds of Palestinians across the occupied territories came out on the streets on Tuesday, September 15, to register their disapproval and anger against the announcement of “normalization” of ties with Israel by the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain.
Protesters gathered in large numbers in major cities such as Ramallah, Nablus and Hebron in the occupied West Bank and Gaza, displaying Palestinians flags and banners with slogans saying “no to normalization with occupier.” Some banners termed the agreements signed by Bahrain and the UAE as “the agreements of shame” and “treason”.
In Ramallah, where the central protest was organized, protesters came out in large numbers despite rising cases of COVID-19 in the occupied territories. On September 15, more than 1,118 new infections were recorded in the West Bank and East Jerusalem, taking the total number of infections in these two territories to over 40,000 with over 250 deaths. Undeterred, protesters expressed their resolve to fight against the Israeli occupation and for the rights of the Palestinians.
Palestinians protest in Ramallah, the occupied West Bank, against that Israeli-#Bahraini normalization deal, today. pic.twitter.com/4UWu0OKh1D
— Boycott Campaign – Palestine 🇵🇸 (@BCP_Palestine_E) September 15, 2020
More than 50 organizations had also given a joint call for demonstrations against the deals in US capital Washington D.C., outside the White House, at the same time as the leaders of the UAE, Bahrain, US and Israel were signing the deal.
Here are the real Jews, protesting in front of the #WhiteHouse against the shameful agreement #UAE – #Bahrein with the zionist entity, rejecting the existence of israel in support of #Palestine.#NoToNormalization pic.twitter.com/cY7ep9r6ta
— Days of Palestine (@DaysofPalestine) September 16, 2020
The ‘normalization’ deals, widely seen as an election gimmick by US president Donald Trump, have exposed the divisions among the Arab countries on the issue of Palestine. Egypt and Jordan were the only two Arab countries which recognized Israel before the UAE announced normalization of its relations with Israel in August. Bahrain has become the latest country to sign this US-mediated deal.
Most other Arab countries have expressed their adherence to the Arab Peace Initiative, a doctrine adopted by the Arab League in 2002. According to the Arab Peace Initiative, no member of the league would recognize Israel until the Palestine issue is resolved. The US has attempted to persuade more countries to normalize their relations with Israel, however, so far only Bahrain has announced its decision to do so. Palestinians have termed such deals a betrayal of the Palestinian cause and a violation of the Arab Peace Initiative.