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Palestinian boys wave Hamas flags and chant anti-Israel and US slogans during rally in Gaza against Wye River accord. AFP
Palestinian boys wave Hamas flags and chant anti-Israel and US slogans during rally in Gaza against Wye River accord. AFP

1987 - Palestine’s First Intifada

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Updated 19 April 2025

1987 - Palestine’s First Intifada

1987 - Palestine’s First Intifada
  • Nonviolent resistance lay at the heart of the movement for self-determination

AMMAN: Intifada, an Arabic word that means “shaking off,” was introduced to the English lexicon by many of us Palestinian journalists working with the foreign media in the Middle East. What was being shaken off was the status quo of living under occupation. 

Before the Intifada began, I was way too young to agree to the job offer that had been made to me. With my Bachelor of Arts degree in business from the US, the American-Palestinian owner of Al-Fajr, Paul Ajlouny, thought I could do a good job of bringing some business sense to the running the Jerusalem-based family newspaper. I did not and I hated the job. 

But while I was busy making ends meet, an English-language sister publication, Al-Fajr English, was being launched by Ajlouny’s relative, Hanna Siniora. At the age of just 25, and still a bachelor, I enjoyed proofreading and was mesmerized seeing Al-Fajr go to press each week. Eventually, I would write my first article and was fascinated to see my byline in print. 

How we wrote it




Arab News’ front page captured the mounting Palestinian death toll of the First Intifada.

The big story at the time was the assassination attempts by Jewish militants targeting nationalist Palestinian mayors. The return of one of them, Mayor Bassam Shakaa, after months of medical treatment in Europe, and the huge public welcome he received in the city of Nablus, adorned our front page. 

Shakaa, Hebron’s Mayor Fahd Qawasmeh and Ramallah’s Karim Khalaf (who was badly injured when he tried to start his booby-trapped car), were supporters of the Palestine Liberation Organization.  

By the time I left the business job to become a full-time journalist, Israel had invaded Lebanon, and the PLO’s heroic 82-day steadfastness in Beirut, followed by its departure to Tunis, was our main story. 

It was in this nationalist atmosphere that my cousin, Mubarak Awad, had also returned from the US and started the Palestinian Center for the Study of Nonviolence. Along with my brother Jonathan, co-founder of the independent Palestinian human rights organization Al-Haq, they educated people in the occupied territories about how nonviolent resistance works. 

While such talk of nonviolence was new to many, it was well-received by some key leaders. I remember joining Awad and Jonathan in meetings with a student leader at Birzeit University named Marwan Barghouti, as well as many meetings with other Palestinian notables such as Faisal Husseini, Sari Nusseibeh and Hanan Ashrawi. 

Key Dates

  • 1

    An Israeli truck crashes into a car in Jabalya refugee camp in the Gaza Strip, killing 4 Palestinians.

  • 2

    The Palestinian Intifada against Israeli occupation begins, triggered by the previous day’s fatal crash.

    Timeline Image Dec. 9, 1987

  • 3

    The Arab League announces it will support the Intifada financially, a pledge it renews in 1989.

    Timeline Image June 1988

  • 4

    Israeli authorities deport Mubarak Awad, a nonviolent activist known as the “Palestinian Gandhi.”

  • 5

    PLO leader Yasser Arafat reads the Palestinian Declaration of Independence at a meeting of the Palestinian National Council in Algiers.

    Timeline Image Nov. 15, 1988

  • 6

    Madrid peace conference takes place.

  • 7

    The PLO and Israel sign a Declaration of Principles — the Oslo Accords — at the White House.

    Timeline Image Sept. 13, 1993

  • 8

    An extremist Jewish settler assassinates Israel’s Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, paving the way for Benjamin Netanyahu’s first term as premier.

    Timeline Image Nov. 4, 1995

  • 9

    Multilateral talks resume but stall soon after.

  • 10

    Israeli opposition leader Ariel Sharon visits Al-Aqsa Mosque, triggering the Second Intifada.

    Timeline Image Sept. 28, 2000

Awad’s message was quickly being absorbed and he was getting calls from people from different parts of Palestine suffering from problems with settlers and the Israeli military. Nonviolent protests were taking place a couple of times a week, often with important results. 

But although Awad’s work had not yet become mainstream, it was not long before the Israelis realized what was happening and started tracking him. They arrested him despite the fact that he had a US passport, and despite the many protests held in Jerusalem on his behalf. 

The man who became known as the “Palestinian Gandhi” lost his case in Israel’s High Court and was deported, even though he was born in Jerusalem, on orders from right-wing Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir. But the literature he distributed, and his ideas about nonviolence and boycotts, lingered. 

Palestinian anger erupted on Dec. 9, 1987, in the Jabaliya refugee camp in the Gaza Strip, the day after an Israeli military truck collided with a civilian car, killing four Palestinians. While many saw in the clashes with Israelis a public expression of anger about this incident, it was really the fact that settlers were continuing to build without any deterrence that led Palestinian youths to fight with the only weapon freely available to them, stones, which are abundant in Palestinian towns and villages. 

While the images of the Intifada were those of young Palestinians, often dressed in black-and-white keffiyehs, pelting settlers and soldiers with stones, it was the nonviolent actions throughout Palestine that fascinated me. 

Perhaps the most visible of these actions was the decision by the people of Beit Sahour to adopt the slogan of American revolutionaries: no taxation without representation. Palestinians living in the town decided to stop paying taxes as long as they had no political power. This drove the Israeli military crazy, and it laid siege to Beit Sahour. 




Palestinian boy looks out between banners calling for armed struggle against Israel in Gaza. AFP

One iconic sign of the nonviolent resistance was the decision not to follow Israel when it changed its clocks in April to mark the start of summertime. I remember covering stories about Israeli soldiers outside Damascus Gate in Jerusalem who would stop young Palestinians and check their watches. If the time had not been changed, the soldiers would use their batons to smash the watches while they were still on the youths’ wrists. 

The Intifada finally ended when US Secretary of State James Baker asked the Palestinians to attend the Madrid peace conference in 1991. The Israelis were represented there by Shamir, who had deported Awad. The Israeli delegation’s spokesperson was Benjamin Netanyahu, now prime minister. The Palestinian delegation’s spokeswoman was Hanan Ashrawi. 

Nothing happened as a result of that conference, but a secret agreement worked out in Oslo led to an initial breakthrough that resulted in the creation of the Palestinian Authority and the return of the PLO to the Occupied Palestinian Territories. 

But that achievement, and the hopes of the peace for which so many had suffered, were wiped out on Nov. 4, 1995, when an extremist Jewish settler assassinated Israel’s prime minister, Yitzhak Rabin, paving the way for Netanyahu’s first term as premier. 

As the tragic events in Gaza and the West Bank since Oct. 7, 2023, have demonstrated, things have gone only backward for Palestinian rights and aspirations ever since. 

  • Daoud Kuttab is a columnist for Arab News, specializing in Middle Eastern, and more specifically, Palestinian affairs. He is the author of the book “State of Palestine NOW: Practical and logical arguments for the best way to bring peace to the Middle East.” 


Ƶ renews call for international community to stand by Syria

Ƶ renews call for international community to stand by Syria
Updated 9 min 7 sec ago

Ƶ renews call for international community to stand by Syria

Ƶ renews call for international community to stand by Syria

DUBAI: The Saudi foreign ministry condemned the Israeli attacks on Syrian territory in a statement on X. 

The ministry expressed its satisfaction with the measures taken by the Syrian government to achieve security and stability over all Syrian territory.

Ƶ called for the international community to stand by Syria and confront these ongoing Israeli attacks and violations against Syria. 

Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan discussed Israeli attacks on Syria with his Turkish counterpart Hakan Fidan on Wednesday. 

The two ministers held the call after Israel launched powerful airstrikes in Damascus on Wednesday, blowing up part of the defense ministry and hitting near the presidential palace.

The attacks marked a significant Israeli escalation against President Ahmed Al-Sharaa’s government and came despite his warming ties with the US and his administration’s evolving security contacts with Israel.

Scores of people have been killed this week in violence in and around the predominantly Druze city of Sweida, pitting fighters from the Druze minority against government security forces and members of Bedouin tribes.


50 dead and injured in Iraq shopping mall fire: governor

Updated 19 min 37 sec ago

50 dead and injured in Iraq shopping mall fire: governor

50 dead and injured in Iraq shopping mall fire: governor
  • Around 50 people were killed and injured in a fire that swept through a shopping mall in the eastern Iraqi city of Kut, state media said Thursday
BAGHDAD: Around 50 people were killed and injured in a fire that swept through a shopping mall in the eastern Iraqi city of Kut, state media said Thursday.
“The number of victims has reached about 50 people, martyrs and injured, in the tragic fire at a major shopping center,” Wasit province governor Mohammed Al-Miyahi told the official INA news agency.
The blaze at the Hyper Mall broke out late Wednesday, but the cause has yet to be identified, said Miyahi.
Ambulances were still transporting casualties as late as 4:00 am, filling beds of a hospital in Kut, about 160 kilometers (100 miles) southeast of Baghdad.
An AFP correspondent said the mall had opened just five days ago. Initial reports suggested the fire started on the first floor.
The correspondent reported seeing charred bodies in hospital.
Miyahi declared three days of mourning in the province and said local authorities would file a lawsuit against the building and mall owner.

US senators approve $9 billion of Elon Musk’s federal cuts

 US senators approve $9 billion of Elon Musk’s federal cuts
Updated 14 min 51 sec ago

US senators approve $9 billion of Elon Musk’s federal cuts

 US senators approve $9 billion of Elon Musk’s federal cuts
  • US Senate approves package of spending cuts proposed by Trump cancelling more than $9 blln in funding for foreign aid programs and public broadcasting

WASHINGTON: The US Senate approved early Thursday a package of spending cuts proposed by President Donald Trump that would cancel more than $9 billion in funding for foreign aid programs and public broadcasting.

The upper chamber of Congress green-lit the measure in what was seen as the first test of how easily lawmakers could usher into law savings sought by Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) — in the aftermath of the tech mogul’s acrimonious exit from the government.
Despite the cutbacks’ unpopularity in some sections of both parties, the Republican-led Senate passed the measure with 51 votes for and 48 against in a session that went more than two hours past midnight.

The version of the text passed in June by the House of Representatives sought to eliminate $400 million in funding allocated to health programs, including the PEPFAR global AIDS relief fund created by then-president George W. Bush.
But defunding PEPFAR — which has saved an estimated 26 million lives — was seen as a nonstarter among a handful of moderate Republican senators, and the proposal was dropped.

South Carolina Senator Lindsey Graham told AFP the bill was consistent with Trump’s promises to cut spending.

“I’ve been a big fan of the foreign aid accounts... I’m a big hawkish guy, but you need foreign aid. You need soft power,” he said.

“But when you start spending money on a bunch of junk, and liberal programs disconnected from the purpose of the aid package, it makes it difficult on a guy like me.”

The bill now goes back to the House for final approval, with lawmakers up against the clock. Congress, which had already allocated the money, has to approve the cuts by Friday or the White House must spend the cash as originally intended.
Legislation to claw back money already approved by Congress — known as a “rescissions package” — is extremely rare, and no such measure has passed in decades.

Around a dozen Republicans had voiced concerns about allowing the White House to dictate spending cuts, placing them in the crosshairs of Trump, who last week threatened to withhold his endorsements from any rebels.
The vote was the first in what Republicans have touted as a potential series of packages codifying the spending cuts made by DOGE.

Musk was tapped by Trump to lead the task force after the tech billionaire spent $290 million helping him get elected. The SpaceX and Tesla boss boasted that he would be able to save $2 trillion in federal spending — but left the White House under a cloud in late May as he feuded with Trump over deficits and spending.
DOGE acknowledges that it has saved taxpayers just $190 billion — and fact checkers even see that claim as dubious, given previous inaccuracies in its accounting.

The rescissions package slashes around $8 billion in foreign aid, with much of that approved for humanitarian organization USAID, one of DOGE’s first targets. 

Around $1 billion is to be taken back from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, which helps fund National Public Radio (NPR) and the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS), as well as more than 1,500 local radio and television stations.

Conservatives often accuse PBS and NPR of bias, and Trump signed an executive order in May to cease federal funding for both networks. Democrats say cutting the funding will not meaningfully reduce the deficit, but instead dismantle a trusted source of information for millions of Americans.

“It is yet another example of the spirit and ideals of our Constitution being undermined in a terrible way. We are a nation that believes that (Congress) has a real role,” New Jersey Senator Cory Booker told AFP.

“And this is a bunch of my colleagues in thrall of the president, surrendering the powers of us, and the urgency for us to work together and do it in a bipartisan way to improve budgets.”


Oil Updates — prices up as demand expectations, economic data lift sentiment

Oil Updates — prices up as demand expectations, economic data lift sentiment
Updated 36 min 25 sec ago

Oil Updates — prices up as demand expectations, economic data lift sentiment

Oil Updates — prices up as demand expectations, economic data lift sentiment

SINGAPORE: Oil prices rose on Thursday, reversing declines in the previous three sessions, buoyed by stronger-than-expected economic data from the world’s top oil consumers and signs of easing trade tensions.

Brent crude futures rose 8 cents, or 0.1 percent, to $68.60 a barrel at 8:30 a.m. Saudi time. US West Texas Intermediate crude futures were up 16 cents, or 0.2 percent, at $66.54. Both benchmarks fell more than 0.2 percent in the previous session.

US President Donald Trump has said letters notifying smaller countries of their US tariff rates would go out soon, and said on Wednesday that he would probably put a blanket 10 percent or 15 percent tariff on smaller countries.

New agreements with Indonesia and Vietnam were announced this week.

Trump also offered renewed optimism about prospects of a deal with Beijing on illicit drugs and hinted that a trade deal with India was very close, while an agreement could possibly be reached with Europe as well.

“Trump softened tones on China and proposed lower tariff rates on smaller countries, which are seen as positive developments in the global trade outlooks,” said independent analyst Tina Teng.

“China’s better-than-expected economic data and the US’s larger-than-expected oil inventory draw have both been bullish factors for oil prices.”

US crude inventories fell by 3.9 million barrels to 422.2 million barrels last week, the Energy Information Administration said on Wednesday, a steeper decline than forecast for a 552,000-barrel draw, suggesting stronger refinery activity, tighter supply, and increased demand.

However, larger-than-expected builds in gasoline and diesel inventories capped price gains. This raised concerns of weakening demand from summer travel, ANZ analysts said in a note on Thursday.

The latest snapshot of the US economy by the central bank, released on Wednesday, showed activity picked up in recent weeks. However, the outlook was “neutral to slightly pessimistic” as businesses reported that higher import tariffs were putting upward pressure on prices.

Meanwhile, China data showed growth slowed in the second quarter, but not by as much as previously feared, in part because of front-loading to beat US tariffs, easing fears over the state of the world’s largest crude importer’s economy.

Data also showed that China’s June crude oil throughput was up 8.5 percent from a year ago, implying stronger fuel demand.

“Support has come from the positive news pertaining to some easing of trade tensions between China and the US with President Trump lifting the ban on the sale of AI chips to China along with the announcement of a trade deal with Indonesia,” said John Paisie, president of Stratas Advisers. 


Pakistan calls Gaza aid system ‘a death trap,’ urges restoration of UN-led relief channels

Pakistan calls Gaza aid system ‘a death trap,’ urges restoration of UN-led relief channels
Updated 7 min 2 sec ago

Pakistan calls Gaza aid system ‘a death trap,’ urges restoration of UN-led relief channels

Pakistan calls Gaza aid system ‘a death trap,’ urges restoration of UN-led relief channels
  • Israel dismantled UN-run aid sites, set up a system where hundreds of Palestinians have been killed
  • Pakistan urges global action as Gaza is ‘starved and shattered’ amid failing aid delivery mechanisms

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s envoy to the United Nations on Wednesday criticized the current humanitarian aid delivery mechanism in Gaza, saying it had “morphed into a death trap” for civilians, as hundreds of people have been killed while trying to access basic supplies like food and medicine.

Speaking at a UN Security Council briefing on the humanitarian situation in the Palestinian enclave, Pakistan’s Permanent Representative to the UN, Ambassador Asim Iftikhar Ahmed, raised alarm over the dismantling of the earlier UN-coordinated aid system and its replacement by a restricted structure under the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), which he said lacked both scale and neutrality.

“The current aid mechanism is clearly failing those it claims to serve,” Ahmed said. “According to the UN Human Rights Office, 798 aid-related killings have occurred since late May, 615 of them at or near distribution sites.

The prior UN-coordinated system of more than 400 well-networked distribution points has been dismantled. In its place, a heavily restricted system under the GHF now operates with just a handful of designated aid sites.”

The Pakistani diplomat noted the situation was forcing desperate civilians to traverse active combat zones in search of basic necessities.

“While some aid has trickled into Gaza, the volume is vastly inadequate,” he added. “Its implementation is flawed, and it falls far short of the standards demanded by international humanitarian law. Most gravely, the system has morphed into a death trap.”

The remarks came amid growing international concern over the humanitarian conditions in Gaza, where more than 58,000 people have been killed and tens of thousands wounded since the start of Israeli military operations in October 2023.

Aid groups and UN agencies have warned that fuel, food and medical supplies are nearing critical shortages, while bureaucratic hurdles and border closures continue to delay relief deliveries.

Ahmed urged the Security Council to back the restoration of “full, unhindered and impartial humanitarian access” through UN-led channels, including the UN Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) and to push for an immediate and unconditional ceasefire.

“The world cannot stand by as Gaza is starved and shattered,” he said. “Let us not grow numb to the daily toll: it is not just another headline, another ticker, another statistic. Behind each number is a life: a person with a story, a dream extinguished a family torn apart.”