Ali Abunimah, a writer and commentator on the Middle East and Arab-American affairs and co-founder of the Web site "Electronic Intifada," laid out his opposition to a two-state solution to the Mideast peace process yesterday.
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| Bill Wade, Post-Gazette Ali Abunimah Click photo for larger image. |
The Middle East peace process is phony, Abunimah said, because what Israel wants to do -- with U.S. complicity -- is to set up independent homelands similar to the apartheid system under white-ruled South Africa.
The Palestinian elections were a farce, he said, because Palestinians living outside of the Gaza and West Bank were not able to participate, and the deck had been stacked in favor of Palestine Liberation Organization leader Mahmoud Abbas.
The apartheid system is so far advanced that a two-state solution to the Israeli/Palestinian conflict is no longer possible, he told about 100 students.
What is needed is a unitary state in which Israelis and Palestinians would have equal rights, Abunimah said.
"People say this would be like Yugoslavia," he said. "But why couldn't it be like Belgium?"
Jewish students aren't upset that Abunimah was invited to speak at Carnegie Mellon, but are angry that the university officially sponsored him -- and is sponsoring another anti-Israel speaker next month -- without sponsoring anyone to present the opposite point of view, said Rachel Svinkelstin, 22, organizer of the protest.
"We feel that our voice is not being heard at all," she said.
