DOBBIN: What to Do About Rogue State Israel? Boycott it
[ http://thetyee.ca/Opinion/2015/05/15/Ro ... te-Israel/ ]
Posted: 15 May 2015 03:17 PM PDT
The CBC’s recent revelation that Conservative Public Safety Minister Steven Blaney has called for “zero tolerance” of criticism of Israel and that Canadian hate laws could be applied to those campaigning for BDS — Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions — against Israel is repugnant enough.
But the truly disturbing irony in this outrageous declaration is that the more fascistic and racist the Israeli government becomes, the more illegal settlements it builds, the more explicit its open contempt for world opinion and the more outrageous Netanyahu’s statements, the stronger is the support from the Harper government.
It raises the question: is there any action, including the actual expulsion of Palestinians from Israel and the Occupied Territories that Harper would not support?
The government now denies ever considering charging BDS activists with hate crimes. But there is no denying what Blaney said at the United Nations General Assembly in January, declaring that Canada is taking a “… zero-tolerance approach to anti-Semitism and all forms of discrimination including in rhetoric towards Israel, and attempts to delegitimize Israel such as the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement.”
Then-foreign affairs minister John Baird implied the same thing in the same month signing a memorandum of understanding with Israel promising to fight BDS — “the new face of anti-Semitism.”
When governments such as Canada’s and the U.S. provide carte blanche for virtually any action Israel undertakes, including the deliberate slaughter of civilians in Gaza, it simply signals to Netanyahu and his right-wing coalition allies that they have not yet crossed a Western democracies “red line.” This was confirmed this week in Netanyahu’s appointment of Ayelet Shaked, one of the most virulent racists in the Knesset, as justice minister (she has no law degree). It was an appointment that left most commentators open-mouthed — but in reality it was just more steps towards a red line no one is willing to draw. Another member of Shaked’s Jewish Home party was given the education portfolio giving the party enormous clout in running the West Bank.
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How does one determine if a campaign such as BDS is legitimate? The gold standard for such boycotts, because it was successful, was the BDS campaign against South Africa. Ironically, it was a Progressive Conservative prime minister, Brian Mulroney, who played an important role in the freeing of Nelson Mandela and the campaign to isolate the apartheid regime.
If apartheid was worthy of an international BDS campaign, then there can hardly be any argument that Israel, too, is a legitimate target. The similarities between the two regimes are frighteningly similar. Indeed many experts on Israel’s system of hafrada, or separation, claim it is far more brutal and deliberately humiliating than anything devised by the racist regime of Pretoria.
While Harper and his ministers have, in the past, railed against the use of the term apartheid to describe Israel’s treatment of Palestinians, some of Israel’s most revered leaders had no difficulty using the term.
Former prime minister Ehud Barak stated: “If there is only one political entity, named Israel, it will end up being either non-Jewish or non-democratic…. If the Palestinians vote in elections, it is a binational state, and if they don’t, it is an apartheid state.” Shulamit Aloni, who once served as Minister of Education under Yitzhak Rabin, wrote: “The state of Israel practices its own, quite violent form of apartheid with the native Palestinian population.” And in November of 2007, Israel’s then-prime minister Ehud Olmert said: “If the day comes when the two-state solution collapses, and we face a South African style struggle for equal voting rights, then as soon as that happens, the State of Israel is finished.”
No wonder Stephen Harper wants to bury the notion that Israel is an apartheid state — because it is actually far worse. South Africa never established the kind of brutal settlement structure that has existed in Israel for decades. While the races did experience separate “development,” white communities were not connected with special well-paved roads, which blacks could not use. As Shulamit Aloni described: “Wonderful roads, wide roads, well-paved roads, brightly lit at night — all that on stolen land. When a Palestinian drives on such a road, his vehicle is confiscated and he is sent on his way.” International law makes it the responsibility of the occupying power to provide civilian governance to those it occupies. Yet four million Palestinians are governed not by civil law but by Israeli military law, which is enforced by soldiers. Decades of the “peace process” have accomplished absolutely nothing.
Far from being an outrage and an expression of the “new anti-Semitism” the BDS campaign is a non-violent movement, which seeks to put a high financial price on the continued and flagrant violation of international law by a rogue state.
To participate, go to Canadian Boycott Coalition for Justice in Palestine/Israel.
[ http://canadianboycottcoalition.ca/ ]
For a list of products to boycott go here.
[ http://www.ipsc.ie/campaigns/consumer-boycott ]
The last word goes to Desmond Tutu, Nobel Peace prize winner and another prominent observer who has described Israel as an apartheid state: “Realistic Israeli leaders have acknowledged that Israel will either end its occupation through a one- or two-state solution, or live in an apartheid state in perpetuity. The latter option is unsustainable and an offence to justice. We learned in South Africa that the only way to end apartheid peacefully was to force the powerful to the table through economic pressure.”
[ http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/1.599422 ]