Are you calling the Secretary General of the Arab League a liar?A complete falsehood. How were these orders to leave communicated?
Are you calling the Secretary General of the Arab League a liar?A complete falsehood. How were these orders to leave communicated?
Actually no, that is not what it says.No, universal human rights say that the Palestinian refugees should be able to return to their homes, whether that's in Israel or the occupied lands.
Note this ONLY applies if they are willing to "live in peace with their neighbours". The Palestinians of the day (and many still) wholesale rejected Israel and were adamant that they were not willing to live in peace with Israel, so they lost that right.Resolution 194 said:Resolves that the refugees wishing to return to their homes and live at peace with their neighbours should be permitted to do so at the earliest practicable date
You are wrong.Actually no, that is not what it says.
It says this: "Everyone has the right to leave any country, including his own, and to return to his country."
Their country is Palestine, not Israel.
If they were ethnically cleansed...they would be dead would they not?You are wrong.
If they were ethnically cleansed from what is now Israel, then they have the universal right to return there.
They were not!If they were ethnically cleansed from what is now Israel
They do not!then they have the universal right to return there.
Don't be asinine, Rid. We both know ethnic cleansing doesn't mean killing, it means removing a population based on race or religion.If they were ethnically cleansed...they would be dead would they not?
I really don't think you understand the right of return either. You throw around the term Universal Human rights in a way that shows you don't grasp its meaning as well.
I love how you try and rewrite these things, to support your bullshit little misrepresentations. That is not what the Universal Declaration of Human Rights says. I bolded the part that you wholesale made up all by yourself.The term right of return refers to a principle of international law, codified in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, giving any person the right to return to, and re-enter, his or her country of origin.
I love how you try and rewrite these things, to support your bullshit little misrepresentations. That is not what the Universal Declaration of Human Rights says. I bolded the part that you wholesale made up all by yourself.
People have a right to return to "their country", normally that wouldn't be a big difference, but the Palestinian refugees do not claim to be Israeli, in fact no-one claims that they are Israelis[/i]. They claim to be Palestinian, practically everyone claims that they are Palestinian.
Sure there is--it's just occupied by Israel. Nobody on either side claims that Palestinian refugees have Israeli citizenship.Ah, but there is no country called Palestine right now, and your friends are working very hard to keep it that way.
Not according to the law. It specifically says everyone has a right "to return to his country".The right of return is to the land, not the name of the country.
Thanks for confirming my point.Resolution 194 says "return to their homes" but that only applies to people willing to "live at peace with their neighbours" and it is non-binding in any case.
You are wrong on the first count. The Palestinian's right to return does not vanish in a poof with the name change of their homes.There are two separate laws here, groggy. The universal declaration of human rights, and resolution 194.
The declaration is "to his country" and does not give Palestinians any right to go to Israel, which is not their country.
Then there is resolution 194, which is non binding, and so does not give any rights at all. It urges that those willing to "live in peace with their neighbors" be allowed to return "to their homes". This does not apply because Palestinians decided not to live in peace with Israel, and until recently were very out spoken about being at war with Israel.
Refusing repatriation based on your idea of whether refugees would be peaceful is disingenuous at best, since most of their grievances were with being ethnically cleansed in the first place.Resolves that the refugees wishing to return to their homes and live at peace with their neighbors should be permitted to do so at the earliest practicable date, and that compensation should be paid for the property of those choosing not to return and for loss of or damage to property which, under principles of international law or in equity, should be made good by the Governments or authorities responsible.
Instructs the Conciliation Commission to facilitate the repatriation, resettlement and economic and social rehabilitation of the refugees and the payment of compensation, and to maintain close relations with the Director of the United Nations Relief for Palestine Refugees and, through him, with the appropriate organs and agencies of the United Nations;
So, then I guess you think there was no intention of genocide during the holocaust then because there were Jews living in other countries.I love how some Palestinian Arabs were 'ethnically cleansed' while others were welcome to stay in Israel with full citizenship. Makes a lot of sense.
Nope. You may wish it was, but it's correct.Your interpretation is wrong, Fuji.
Citation needed. You are making up bullshit again, as usual.According to all precedents since 194 and all treaties Israel has signed, the refugees have a right to return.
That's not what happened. The Arabs rejected the existence of Israel and launched a war against it. To this day they still reject Israel.Your claim that you can ethnically cleanse a population then declare their country no longer their homeland is both repulsive and wrong.
Their leaders declared at the time that they would never accept Israel.As for this 'leave in peace' claim, has Israel asked the refugees if they would live in peace, or are you using your Kreskin like powers again?





