Peculiar proliferation of Palestine refugees [View all]
Of all the issues that drive the Arab-Israeli conflict, none is more central, malign, primal, enduring, emotional and complex than the status of those people known as Palestine refugees. The origins of this unique case, notes Nitza Nachmias of Tel Aviv University, goes back to Count Folke Bernadotte, the United Nations Security Councils mediator. Referring to those Arabs who fled the British mandate of Palestine, he argued in 1948 that the U.N. had a responsibility for their relief because it was a U.N. decision - the establishment of Israel - that had made them refugees. However inaccurate his view, it still remains alive and potent and helps explain why the U.N. devotes unique attention to Palestine refugees pending their own state.
True to Bernadottes legacy, the U.N. set up a range of special institutions exclusively for Palestine refugees. Of these, the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA), founded in 1949, stands out as the most important. It is both the only refugee organization to deal with a specific people (the United Nations High Commission for Refugees takes care of all non-Palestinian refugees) and the largest U.N. organization in terms of staff.
UNRWA seemingly defines its wards with great specificity: Palestine refugees are people whose normal place of residence was Palestine between June 1946 and May 1948, who lost both their homes and means of livelihood as a result of the 1948 Arab-Israeli conflict. The ranks of these refugees (who initially included some Jews) have, of course, much diminished over the past 64 years. Accepting UNRWAs (exaggerated) number of 750,000 original Palestine refugees, only a fraction of that number, about 150,000, remain alive.
UNRWAs staff has taken three major steps over the years to expand the definition of Palestine refugees. First, and contrary to universal practice, it continued the refugee status of those who became citizens of an Arab state (Jordan in particular). Second, it made a little-noticed decision in 1965 that extended the definition of Palestine refugee to the descendants of those refugees who are male, a shift that permits Palestine refugees uniquely to pass their refugee status on to subsequent generations. The U.S. government, the agencys largest donor, only mildly protested this momentous change. The U.N. General Assembly endorsed it in 1982, so now the definition of a Palestine refugee officially includes descendants of Palestine refugee males, including legally adopted children. Third, UNRWA in 1967 added refugees from the Six-Day War to its rolls; today they constitute about a fifth of the Palestine refugee total.
http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2012/feb/20/peculiar-proliferation-of-palestine-refugees/
The UN as Interlocutor = No Resolution. The best thing that the UN can do to achieve a lasting peace is to pack up its bag and stop meddling.