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George
Habash (Arabic: جورج حبش) also known by his laqab
"al-Hakim" (Arabic:الحكيم — the wise one or the doctor) (2 August 1926 – 26 January 2008) was a
Palestinian Christian who founded the Popular Front for the Liberation of
Palestine. Habash served as Secretary-General of the Palestine Front until
2000, when ill-health forced him to resign.
Biography
George
Habash as a doctorate in medicine from the American
University of Beirut , 1951.
Habash was
born in Lydda (today's Lod) to an Eastern Orthodox Palestinian family in 1926.
As a child, he sang in the church choir. Habash, a medical student at the
American University of Beirut, was visiting his family during the 1948
Arab-Israeli war. In July 1948, the Israeli Defence Force captured Lydda from
Jordanian and Arab Liberation Army forces. Habash and his family became
refugees and were not allowed to return home.
In 1951,
after graduating first in his class from medical school, Habash worked in
refugee camps in Jordan , and
ran a clinic with Wadie Haddad in Amman .
He firmly believed that the state of Israel should be ended by all
possible means, including political violence. In an effort to recruit the Arab
world to this cause, Habash founded the Arab Nationalist Movement (ANM) in 1951
and aligned the organization with Gamal Abdel Nasser's Arab nationalist
ideology.
He was
implicated in the 1957 coup attempt in Jordan , which had originated among
Palestinian members of the National Guard. Habash was convicted in absentia,
after having gone underground when King Hussein proclaimed martial law and
banned all political parties. In 1958 he fled to Syria
(then part of the United Arab Republic), but was forced to return to Beirut in 1961 by the
tumultuous break-up of the UAR.
Habash was
a leading member of the Palestine Liberation Organization until 1967 when he
was sidelined by Fatah leader Yasser Arafat. In response, Habash founded the
Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine.
Popular
Front for the Liberation of Palestine
In 1964 he
began reorganizing the ANM, regrouping the Palestinian members of the
organization into a "regional command." After the Six-Day War in
1967, disillusion with Nasser became
widespread. This prompted the foundation, led by Habash, of the Popular Front
for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) as a front of several Palestinian
factions, like the "heroes of return" and "Palestinian
Liberation Front", along with the ANM on 11 December, when he also became
its first Secretary-General. Habash was briefly imprisoned in Syria in 1968,
but escaped. In the same year, he also came into conflict with long-time ally
Wadie Haddad, but both remained in the PFLP.
At a 1969
congress the PFLP re-designated itself a Marxist-Leninist movement, and has
remained a Communist organization ever since. Its pan-Arab leanings have been
diminished since the ANM days, but popular support for a united Arab front has
remained, especially in regard to Israeli and western political pressures. It
holds a firm position regarding Israel ,
demanding its complete eradication as a racist state through military struggle
and promotes a one-state solution (one secular, democratic, non-denominational
state).
The 1969
congress also saw an ultra-leftist faction under Nayef Hawatmeh and Yasser Abd
Rabbo split off as the Popular Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine
(PDFLP), later to become the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine
(DFLP). During Habash's time as Secretary-General, the PFLP became known as one
of the most radical and militant Palestinian factions, and gained world
notoriety after a string of aircraft hijackings and attacks against Israel affiliated companies as well as Israeli
ambassadors in Europe mostly planned by
Haddad. The PFLP's pioneering of modern international terror operations brought
the group, and the Palestinian issue, onto newspaper front pages worldwide, but
it also provoked intense criticism from other parts of the Palestine Liberation
Organization. In 1970, Habash was evicted from Jordan due to the key role of the
Popular Front in the Black September clashes. In 1974, the Palestinian National
Council adopted a resolution recognizing a two-state solution to the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict and Habash,
who opposed this, formed the Rejectionist Front from several other opposition
parties.
Habash
aligned the PFLP with the PLO and the Lebanese National Movement, but stayed
neutral during the Lebanese Civil War in the late 1970s. After a stroke in
1980, when he was living in Damascus, his health declined and other PFLP
members rose to the top.
After the
Oslo Agreements, Habash formed another opposition alliance consisting of
Rejectionist Front members and Islamist organizations such as Hamas and the
Islamic Jihad Movement in Palestine ,
that became prominent during the First Intifada. In 2000, he resigned from his
leadership post of the PFLP due to poor health and was succeeded by Abu Ali
Mustafa. He continued to be an activist for the group until 2008, when he died
of a heart attack in Amman .
Black
September
The PFLP
ignored tensions with the mainstream leadership of Yasser Arafat's Fatah
faction, and instead focused on bringing about revolutionary change in Jordan . Habash
expressed the opinion that what proceeded was not "only military but also
psychological warfare" and one had to "hold the Israelis under
permanent pressure".
In 1970,
Habash masterminded the hijackings of four Western airliners over the United States , Europe, the Far East and the Persian Gulf . The aircraft were blown up, after the
passengers and crews were forced to disembark. Habash was also behind the
hijacking of an Air France airliner to Entebbe , Uganda and an attack on Israel 's Lod
airport in which 27 people were shot to death. Forty-seven people were killed
in the bombing of a Swissair jet in 1970.
The Dawson 's Field hijackings
of 1970 were instrumental in provoking the Black September crackdown, which
came close to destroying the PLO. The hijackings led King Hussein of Jordan to carry
out a major offensive against militant strongholds in his kingdom resulting in
the deaths of thousands of Palestinians. In autumn 1970, Habash visited
Beijing. After Black September, the PLO fedayeen relocated to Lebanon .
In 1972,
Habash experienced failing health, and gradually began to lose influence within
the organization. The Palestinian National Council's (PNC) adoption of a
resolution viewed by the PFLP as a two-state solution in 1974, prompted Habash
to lead his organization out of active participation in the PLO and to join the
Iraqi-backed Rejectionist Front. Only in 1977 would the PFLP opt to rejoin, as
the Palestinian factions rallied their forces in opposition to Anwar Sadat's
overtures towards Israel ,
pro-U.S. policies and fragmentation of the Arab world. During the Lebanese
Civil War that broke out in 1975, PFLP forces were decimated in battle against
Syria Later, the PFLP would draw close to Syria, as Syria's government shifted,
but PFLP involvement in the Lebanese war remained strong until the
U.S.-negotiated evacuation of PLO units from Beirut in 1982, and continued on a
smaller scale after that.
After the
signing of the Oslo Peace Accords in 1993, Habash and the PFLP again broke
completely with Arafat, accusing him of selling out the Palestinian revolution.
The group set up an anti-Arafat and anti-Oslo alliance in Damascus , for the first time joined by such
non-PLO Islamist groups such as, Hamas and the Palestinian Islamic Jihad, which
had grown to prominence during the First Intifada. After finding the position
sterile, with Palestinian political dynamics playing out on the West Bank and
Gaza areas of the Palestinian National Authority (PNA), Habash carefully sought
to repair ties to Arafat, and gain a hold in post-Oslo politics without
compromising PFLP principles. However, there is no indication that he ever
accepted the two-state solution. This balancing act could not save the PFLP
from being eclipsed by the militant Islamist factions on the one hand, and the
resource-rich Fatah with its PNA patronage network on the other. The
significance of the PFLP in Palestinian politics has diminished considerably
since the mid-90s. The PFLP participated in the Palestinian legislative
elections of 2006 as Abu Ali Mustafa won 4.2% of the popular vote.
In the late
1990s, Habash's medical condition worsened. In 2000 he resigned from the post
as Secretary-General, citing health reasons. He was succeeded as head of the
PFLP by Abu Ali Mustafa who was assassinated by Israel during the Second Intifada.
Habash went on to set up a PFLP-affiliated research center, but he remained
active in the PFLP's internal politics. Until his death he was still popular
among many Palestinians, who appreciate his revolutionary ideology, his
determination and principles, the rejection of the Oslo Agreements and his
intellectual style.
Death
Habash died
on 26 January 2008, at the age of 82 of a heart attack in the Jordan Hospital ,
Amman where
Habash was a cancer patient. The President of the Palestinian National
Authority, Mahmoud Abbas called for three days of national mourning. Habash was
buried in a suburban cemetery of Amman with processions by the Eastern Orthodox
Church.[9] Abbas said Habash was a "historic leader" and called for
Palestinian flags to be flown half-mast. Abdel Raheem Mallouh, PFLP deputy
Secretary-General, called Habash a "distinguished leader... who struggled
for more than 60 years without a stop for the rights and the interests of his
people".
Hamas
leader and dismissed Palestinian Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh sent his
condolences, saying Habash "spent his life defending Palestine ".