October 5, 2009 page 2

Israel minister feared UK arrest: BBC

Israeli minister and former military chief Moshe Yaalon cancelled a UK visit because of fears of arrest for alleged war crimes, his office says. Pro-Palestinian groups in Britain want him to face trial over the 2002 killing of a Gaza militant, in which 14 others died, at least eight of them children. Mr Yaalon took legal advice and wanted “to avoid playing into the hands of anti-Israel propaganda”, an aide said. A similar attempt last week failed to get Israel’s defence minister arrested. Mr Yaalon, who is vice prime minister and strategic affairs minister, had been invited to attend a charity dinner held by the Jewish National Fund’s UK branch. But his spokesman, Alon Ofek-Arnon, confirmed that the foreign ministry’s legal team had advised against it. Israeli media reported that the advisers believed Mr Yaalon would not be accorded diplomatic immunity – in contrast to Defence Minister Ehud Barak who visited the Labour Party Conference in Brighton without interference. “This is a campaign whose goal is to de-legitimise the state,” Mr Yaalon said in remarks quoted by Haaretz newspaper. Allegations against Mr Yaalon date back to July 2002, when an Israel Air force jet dropped a one-tonne bomb in a densely populated area of Gaza to assassinate senior Hamas figure Salah Shehada. The attack was part of Israel’s policy of “targeted killings” of Palestinian militants it blamed for plotting attacks against it. At the time, the army expressed regret about the deaths of the 14 civilians in addition to Mr Shehada and said they had come about as the result of faulty intelligence. Britain has adopted the legal principle of “universal jurisdiction”, under which domestic courts in countries around the world can try war crimes suspects, even if the crime took place outside the country and the suspect is not a citizen. Palestinian campaigners sought Mr Barak’s arrest last week, in connection with Israel’s controversial military operation in Gaza in December 2008 and January 2009, but judges declined to hear the case. A UN report by international prosecutor Richard Goldstone accused both Israel and Hamas of war crimes. Israel rejected its findings.

Answering critics of the boycott movement: The Electronic Intifada

Sami Hermez, 1 October 2009 The boycott call invites Israelis to stand alongside in solidarity with Palestinians. (Wissam Nassar/MaanImages) Over the last three years, the boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS) movement against Israel has been gaining stride. Individuals around the world have been joining this call, from organizing actions in supermarkets in France and Great Britain protesting Israeli products made in settlements, to filmmakers withdrawing movies from film festivals, to prominent Israelis making a public stand with the BDS movement. Only recently, a multi-billion dollar Norwegian wealth fund divested from the Israeli arms company Elbit, while other companies, like Veolia, a French conglomerate involved in building and managing the Jerusalem light-rail, have suffered setbacks due to the bad publicity the boycott movement has generated. The list of successful BDS actions has now become too long to list, yet, there are still many out there who do not believe in this movement and have reservations on a number of grounds, offering two main concerns that are rarely tackled, and when they are it is only cursory. The first is the criticism of why a boycott movement against Israel and not countries like China, Sudan or the US. This claim often gets tagged on with the idea that this is due to an inherent anti-Semitism. The second concerns the argument that boycott is against dialogue, which often comes along with accusations that it promotes censorship and is a form of collective punishment. Boycotting other countries Two recent open statements on boycott over the summer, by Naomi Klein and Neve Gordon, both anticipated the first criticism, but neither went far enough in explaining why it is necessary to boycott Israel and why we don’t boycott other countries. Gordon asked the question only to almost completely ignore it, while Klein has provided two explanations that when combined begin to form a coherent response. In her article published by The Nation on 8 January 2009, in response to the question of why we do not boycott other western countries that are also human rights abusers, Klein wrote that “Boycott is not a dogma; it is a tactic. The reason the BDS strategy should be tried against Israel is practical: in a country so small and trade-dependent, it could actually work.” While this is true it does not fully respond to the critics. There are several other reasons why we do not boycott some of the other countries mentioned above. By far the most important of these, outlined by Klein in an interview with Cecille Surasky for Alternet on 1 September 2009, is that individuals around the world are not boycotting, but rather, they are responding to a call for boycott coming from Palestinian civil society. Klein is not the first to say this; veterans of the South Africa anti-apartheid campaign who led a successful boycott have also stressed the need to stand with indigenous communities. Boycott is a move to heed the voice of an oppressed group and follow its lead. The idea is that there are no movements out of Tibet, in the case of Chinese oppression, or Iraq in the case of the American occupation, that are calling for boycott and for the international community to respond to that call. This is important! The BDS movement comes from within Palestinian society and it is this factor that makes it so powerful and effective. If there were calls for the boycott of places like the US, China or North Korea coming from those the governments oppress, then it would be worthwhile to listen to such calls. Naomi Klein’s original comment that BDS is not dogmatic but tactical is crucial, in that the movement does not claim that BDS can successfully be used in fighting all oppression wherever it is, but that in certain cases of apartheid and colonial oppression, this tool is highly effective. The case of Israel proves very salient here because it receives an almost surreal amount of aid and foreign investment from around the world, most notably the US, with which it enjoys a special status. This makes the daily operations of the Israeli state and its institutions far more accountable to the international community than a place like Sudan, frequently brought up by boycott critics because of the violence in Darfur. It also means, in the case of economic boycott and divestment, that the international community is withdrawing its gifts and support, rather than allowing it to enjoy its special status — hardly a punishment. It is the high level of support that Israel enjoys that makes it susceptible to BDS, whereas in some of the other countries that are often promoted in debates for boycott, as Klein says, “there are [already] very clear state sanctions against these countries.” In the same September article, Yael Lerer, an Israeli publisher interviewed alongside Klein, echoed this position: “these countries don’t have these film festivals and Madonna is not going to have a concert in North Korea. The problem here is that the international community treats Israel like it was a normal, European, Western state. And this is the basis of the boycott call: the special relationship that Israeli universities have with European universities and with universities in the United States, which universities in Zimbabwe don’t have. I do believe that Israel could not continue the occupation for one single day without the support of the United States and the European Union.” Critics of BDS must keep in mind the tactical aspect of the movement. We cannot boycott all countries in the world, but this does not mean that BDS against Israel cannot be applied as a tool to force a restructuring of relations between Palestinians and Israelis. This leads into the next criticism regarding boycott as being anti-dialogue. Boycott is dialogue Since the signing of the Oslo accords in 1994, many have walked down the path of dialogue — I tried it for several years — and found this to be a strategy to stall for time while the Israeli government was building facts on the ground. We saw dialogue become the slogan for former criminals to clean their bloody hands and appear as peaceful while they continued their strategies of oppression; Israeli President Shimon Peres has been the master of such tactics. I found on college campuses in the US where I studied that dialogue was a way to neutralize confrontation and sanitize a dirty conflict. But avoiding confrontation favors the status quo, and the status quo has been, until BDS, in favor of occupation. The boycott movement is, to be sure, against this dialogue, but not dialogue in an absolute sense. In fact, at its very core, BDS is a movement that is premised on dialogue and of re-appropriating the meaning of dialogue to its rightful place — one that sees a communication between two equal partners and not one where the occupier can force demands and dictate terms to the occupied. BDS is supposed to foster dialogue by locating those who are committed to real and consistent struggle against Zionism — and this is most appropriately seen not in economic forms of boycott but in cultural and academic boycott where artists, musicians, filmmakers, academics and other cultural figures are able to come together, converse and build networks in the face of oppressive institutions that are the real target of these boycotts. Where economic boycott creates economic pressure, cultural boycott fosters dialogue and communication precisely because it shames and shuns those that directly collaborate with the Israeli government and its institutions. The power of all these forms of BDS is in their recognition that true justice can only be achieved when Israelis and Palestinians work together for a common cause, when they realize that their struggle is shared, and when Israelis understand that they must sacrifice alongside Palestinians if they want true peace. The power of BDS is that it offers an alternative to the national struggles of Hamas and Fatah, and calls on Israelis to join Palestinians in their struggle, and to move beyond the comfort zone of preaching peace, and into the realm of action that requires a “no business as usual” attitude. Indeed, BDS provides the means to generate a new movement that can respond to the main Palestinian political parties that have made a mockery of a people’s right to resist, despite their achievements of the past. A significant part of this is that BDS enables a discourse that moves beyond “ending the occupation” to place demands for the right of return and equal rights for Palestinians in Israel as top priorities. If Israelis and Palestinians can build a movement together, can struggle together, then this movement will embody the world they wish to create, one that is shared. Thus, BDS is not a tactic for a national movement; as it gains strength it will prove to have foes on both sides of the nationalist divide. Its power as a tactic lies in its ability to foster a movement that challenges nationalist discourse. It can create the conditions to make possible a movement that recognizes that while national self-determination remains a central element in a world ruled by antagonistic nationalisms, it should not be constrained by traditional notions of nationalism based on superiority and ethnic exclusion, or by the force of current political parties. In this way, BDS is not anti-dialogue, on the contrary, it is a call out to Israelis to be partners in struggle. It is a call out to Israelis to take a step forward towards envisioning collectively an alternative relationship in the land of Israel-Palestine. It is time to step out of our comfort zones, to confront, to not be satisfied in talking about tolerance and dialogue for the sake of dialogue. It is time to realize that people already recognize the humanity of the other, but that politics intervene to ensure “we” do not grant “them” this humanity. It is time to realize that it is not the Israeli who is targeted by BDS, but the Israeli government and Israeli institutions that collaborate in the occupation of the Palestinians, and degrade and demonize them. Finally, it is time to realize that BDS is a winnable, nonviolent strategy precisely because it works on slowly changing attitudes and building bridges towards a common vision of justice and equality, and because it creates a real feeling of loss, therefore real pressure, on Israeli governments and institutions, that go beyond the lip service of the “peace process.” Sami Hermez is a doctoral candidate of anthropology at Princeton University working on questions of violence and nonviolence.

Gaza solidarity organizer under house arrest in Israel: The Electronic Intifada

Jonathan Cook, 30 September 2009 Israelis and Palestinian citizens of Israel demonstrate at the Erez crossing against Israel’s ongoing siege of the Gaza Strip. (Oren Ziv/ActiveStills) Nine months after he helped to organize protests against Israel’s attack on Gaza, Samih Jabareen is a prisoner in his home in Jaffa, near Tel Aviv, an electronic bracelet around his ankle to alert the police should he step outside his front door. The 40-year-old actor and theatre director is one of dozens of Palestinian Arab political activists in Israel who have faced long-term detention during and since Israel’s winter assault on Gaza in what human rights groups are calling political intimidation and repression of free speech by the Israeli police and courts. A report published last week by Adalah, an Arab legal rights group in Israel, said 830 Israeli demonstrators, the overwhelming majority of them Arab citizens, were arrested for participating in mostly peaceful demonstrations during the 23 days of the Gaza operation. According to the report, the police broke up protests using physical violence; most protesters were refused bail during legal proceedings, despite the minor charges; the courts treated children no differently from adults, in violation of international law; and Arab leaders were interrogated and threatened by the secret police in a bid to end their political activity. This month’s report by the UN inquiry into Gaza, led by Judge Richard Goldstone, dedicated a chapter to events inside Israel, concluding similarly that there was wide-scale repression of political activists, non-governmental organizations and journalists in Israel.

October 5, 2009 p. 2

Israel minister feared UK arrest: BBC

Israeli minister and former military chief Moshe Yaalon cancelled a UK visit because of fears of arrest for alleged war crimes, his office says. Pro-Palestinian groups in Britain want him to face trial over the 2002 killing of a Gaza militant, in which 14 others died, at least eight of them children. Mr Yaalon took legal advice and wanted “to avoid playing into the hands of anti-Israel propaganda”, an aide said. A similar attempt last week failed to get Israel’s defence minister arrested. Mr Yaalon, who is vice prime minister and strategic affairs minister, had been invited to attend a charity dinner held by the Jewish National Fund’s UK branch. But his spokesman, Alon Ofek-Arnon, confirmed that the foreign ministry’s legal team had advised against it. Israeli media reported that the advisers believed Mr Yaalon would not be accorded diplomatic immunity – in contrast to Defence Minister Ehud Barak who visited the Labour Party Conference in Brighton without interference. “This is a campaign whose goal is to de-legitimise the state,” Mr Yaalon said in remarks quoted by Haaretz newspaper. Allegations against Mr Yaalon date back to July 2002, when an Israel Air force jet dropped a one-tonne bomb in a densely populated area of Gaza to assassinate senior Hamas figure Salah Shehada. The attack was part of Israel’s policy of “targeted killings” of Palestinian militants it blamed for plotting attacks against it. At the time, the army expressed regret about the deaths of the 14 civilians in addition to Mr Shehada and said they had come about as the result of faulty intelligence. Britain has adopted the legal principle of “universal jurisdiction”, under which domestic courts in countries around the world can try war crimes suspects, even if the crime took place outside the country and the suspect is not a citizen. Palestinian campaigners sought Mr Barak’s arrest last week, in connection with Israel’s controversial military operation in Gaza in December 2008 and January 2009, but judges declined to hear the case. A UN report by international prosecutor Richard Goldstone accused both Israel and Hamas of war crimes. Israel rejected its findings.

Answering critics of the boycott movement: The Electronic Intifada

Sami Hermez, 1 October 2009 The boycott call invites Israelis to stand alongside in solidarity with Palestinians. (Wissam Nassar/MaanImages) Over the last three years, the boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS) movement against Israel has been gaining stride. Individuals around the world have been joining this call, from organizing actions in supermarkets in France and Great Britain protesting Israeli products made in settlements, to filmmakers withdrawing movies from film festivals, to prominent Israelis making a public stand with the BDS movement. Only recently, a multi-billion dollar Norwegian wealth fund divested from the Israeli arms company Elbit, while other companies, like Veolia, a French conglomerate involved in building and managing the Jerusalem light-rail, have suffered setbacks due to the bad publicity the boycott movement has generated. The list of successful BDS actions has now become too long to list, yet, there are still many out there who do not believe in this movement and have reservations on a number of grounds, offering two main concerns that are rarely tackled, and when they are it is only cursory. The first is the criticism of why a boycott movement against Israel and not countries like China, Sudan or the US. This claim often gets tagged on with the idea that this is due to an inherent anti-Semitism. The second concerns the argument that boycott is against dialogue, which often comes along with accusations that it promotes censorship and is a form of collective punishment. Boycotting other countries Two recent open statements on boycott over the summer, by Naomi Klein and Neve Gordon, both anticipated the first criticism, but neither went far enough in explaining why it is necessary to boycott Israel and why we don’t boycott other countries. Gordon asked the question only to almost completely ignore it, while Klein has provided two explanations that when combined begin to form a coherent response. In her article published by The Nation on 8 January 2009, in response to the question of why we do not boycott other western countries that are also human rights abusers, Klein wrote that “Boycott is not a dogma; it is a tactic. The reason the BDS strategy should be tried against Israel is practical: in a country so small and trade-dependent, it could actually work.” While this is true it does not fully respond to the critics. There are several other reasons why we do not boycott some of the other countries mentioned above. By far the most important of these, outlined by Klein in an interview with Cecille Surasky for Alternet on 1 September 2009, is that individuals around the world are not boycotting, but rather, they are responding to a call for boycott coming from Palestinian civil society. Klein is not the first to say this; veterans of the South Africa anti-apartheid campaign who led a successful boycott have also stressed the need to stand with indigenous communities. Boycott is a move to heed the voice of an oppressed group and follow its lead. The idea is that there are no movements out of Tibet, in the case of Chinese oppression, or Iraq in the case of the American occupation, that are calling for boycott and for the international community to respond to that call. This is important! The BDS movement comes from within Palestinian society and it is this factor that makes it so powerful and effective. If there were calls for the boycott of places like the US, China or North Korea coming from those the governments oppress, then it would be worthwhile to listen to such calls. Naomi Klein’s original comment that BDS is not dogmatic but tactical is crucial, in that the movement does not claim that BDS can successfully be used in fighting all oppression wherever it is, but that in certain cases of apartheid and colonial oppression, this tool is highly effective. The case of Israel proves very salient here because it receives an almost surreal amount of aid and foreign investment from around the world, most notably the US, with which it enjoys a special status. This makes the daily operations of the Israeli state and its institutions far more accountable to the international community than a place like Sudan, frequently brought up by boycott critics because of the violence in Darfur. It also means, in the case of economic boycott and divestment, that the international community is withdrawing its gifts and support, rather than allowing it to enjoy its special status — hardly a punishment. It is the high level of support that Israel enjoys that makes it susceptible to BDS, whereas in some of the other countries that are often promoted in debates for boycott, as Klein says, “there are [already] very clear state sanctions against these countries.” In the same September article, Yael Lerer, an Israeli publisher interviewed alongside Klein, echoed this position: “these countries don’t have these film festivals and Madonna is not going to have a concert in North Korea. The problem here is that the international community treats Israel like it was a normal, European, Western state. And this is the basis of the boycott call: the special relationship that Israeli universities have with European universities and with universities in the United States, which universities in Zimbabwe don’t have. I do believe that Israel could not continue the occupation for one single day without the support of the United States and the European Union.” Critics of BDS must keep in mind the tactical aspect of the movement. We cannot boycott all countries in the world, but this does not mean that BDS against Israel cannot be applied as a tool to force a restructuring of relations between Palestinians and Israelis. This leads into the next criticism regarding boycott as being anti-dialogue. Boycott is dialogue Since the signing of the Oslo accords in 1994, many have walked down the path of dialogue — I tried it for several years — and found this to be a strategy to stall for time while the Israeli government was building facts on the ground. We saw dialogue become the slogan for former criminals to clean their bloody hands and appear as peaceful while they continued their strategies of oppression; Israeli President Shimon Peres has been the master of such tactics. I found on college campuses in the US where I studied that dialogue was a way to neutralize confrontation and sanitize a dirty conflict. But avoiding confrontation favors the status quo, and the status quo has been, until BDS, in favor of occupation. The boycott movement is, to be sure, against this dialogue, but not dialogue in an absolute sense. In fact, at its very core, BDS is a movement that is premised on dialogue and of re-appropriating the meaning of dialogue to its rightful place — one that sees a communication between two equal partners and not one where the occupier can force demands and dictate terms to the occupied. BDS is supposed to foster dialogue by locating those who are committed to real and consistent struggle against Zionism — and this is most appropriately seen not in economic forms of boycott but in cultural and academic boycott where artists, musicians, filmmakers, academics and other cultural figures are able to come together, converse and build networks in the face of oppressive institutions that are the real target of these boycotts. Where economic boycott creates economic pressure, cultural boycott fosters dialogue and communication precisely because it shames and shuns those that directly collaborate with the Israeli government and its institutions. The power of all these forms of BDS is in their recognition that true justice can only be achieved when Israelis and Palestinians work together for a common cause, when they realize that their struggle is shared, and when Israelis understand that they must sacrifice alongside Palestinians if they want true peace. The power of BDS is that it offers an alternative to the national struggles of Hamas and Fatah, and calls on Israelis to join Palestinians in their struggle, and to move beyond the comfort zone of preaching peace, and into the realm of action that requires a “no business as usual” attitude. Indeed, BDS provides the means to generate a new movement that can respond to the main Palestinian political parties that have made a mockery of a people’s right to resist, despite their achievements of the past. A significant part of this is that BDS enables a discourse that moves beyond “ending the occupation” to place demands for the right of return and equal rights for Palestinians in Israel as top priorities. If Israelis and Palestinians can build a movement together, can struggle together, then this movement will embody the world they wish to create, one that is shared. Thus, BDS is not a tactic for a national movement; as it gains strength it will prove to have foes on both sides of the nationalist divide. Its power as a tactic lies in its ability to foster a movement that challenges nationalist discourse. It can create the conditions to make possible a movement that recognizes that while national self-determination remains a central element in a world ruled by antagonistic nationalisms, it should not be constrained by traditional notions of nationalism based on superiority and ethnic exclusion, or by the force of current political parties. In this way, BDS is not anti-dialogue, on the contrary, it is a call out to Israelis to be partners in struggle. It is a call out to Israelis to take a step forward towards envisioning collectively an alternative relationship in the land of Israel-Palestine. It is time to step out of our comfort zones, to confront, to not be satisfied in talking about tolerance and dialogue for the sake of dialogue. It is time to realize that people already recognize the humanity of the other, but that politics intervene to ensure “we” do not grant “them” this humanity. It is time to realize that it is not the Israeli who is targeted by BDS, but the Israeli government and Israeli institutions that collaborate in the occupation of the Palestinians, and degrade and demonize them. Finally, it is time to realize that BDS is a winnable, nonviolent strategy precisely because it works on slowly changing attitudes and building bridges towards a common vision of justice and equality, and because it creates a real feeling of loss, therefore real pressure, on Israeli governments and institutions, that go beyond the lip service of the “peace process.” Sami Hermez is a doctoral candidate of anthropology at Princeton University working on questions of violence and nonviolence.

Gaza solidarity organizer under house arrest in Israel: The Electronic Intifada

Jonathan Cook, 30 September 2009 Israelis and Palestinian citizens of Israel demonstrate at the Erez crossing against Israel’s ongoing siege of the Gaza Strip. (Oren Ziv/ActiveStills) Nine months after he helped to organize protests against Israel’s attack on Gaza, Samih Jabareen is a prisoner in his home in Jaffa, near Tel Aviv, an electronic bracelet around his ankle to alert the police should he step outside his front door. The 40-year-old actor and theatre director is one of dozens of Palestinian Arab political activists in Israel who have faced long-term detention during and since Israel’s winter assault on Gaza in what human rights groups are calling political intimidation and repression of free speech by the Israeli police and courts. A report published last week by Adalah, an Arab legal rights group in Israel, said 830 Israeli demonstrators, the overwhelming majority of them Arab citizens, were arrested for participating in mostly peaceful demonstrations during the 23 days of the Gaza operation. According to the report, the police broke up protests using physical violence; most protesters were refused bail during legal proceedings, despite the minor charges; the courts treated children no differently from adults, in violation of international law; and Arab leaders were interrogated and threatened by the secret police in a bid to end their political activity. This month’s report by the UN inquiry into Gaza, led by Judge Richard Goldstone, dedicated a chapter to events inside Israel, concluding similarly that there was wide-scale repression of political activists, non-governmental organizations and journalists in Israel.

October 4, 2009


The criminal actions of an occupation regime, are certainly not limited to its military machine, but are spread across its whole civil society. Without the support of wide sectors of civil society, any military occupation would crumble. The Israeli brutal occupation is successful over more than four decades, exactly because it is supported by the elites – academic, financial, artistic and cultural – and is carrying out such policies which they not only support, but actively promote and justify, in the face of world criticism and international law, not to mention morality.

The article below, which appeared today in Ha’aretz – Israel’s liberal daily in the past, now only holding to that title by publishing Gideon Levy and Amira Hass – is an overdue critic of one of the most venal of the academic supporters of the Gaza carnage, Prof. Asa Kasher of Tel Aviv University. Kasher has not only written the ‘ethical’ guidelines for the IOF, but also justified the murder of civilians in Palestine and Lebanon. For those who wonder about the academic boycott, I strongly suggest reading this short but effective piece.

It’s all kosher for Kasher: Ha’aretz

By Gideon Levy

Whoever said that intellectuals are keeping silent? Who claimed that academia is ensconced in an ivory tower? And who dared to think that Israel lacks a moral voice? One day, when historians take the time to examine Israel’s brutal offensive in Gaza, otherwise known as “Cast Lead,” they will settle a score with political leaders and officers who were responsible for committing war crimes. They will delve deep and denounce the enablers of this nation, the whitewashers and apologists, those who let the Israel Defense Forces win at any cost, even if it was the heaviest moral cost possible.
The main target on their list will be Mr. Ethics, Prof. Asa Kasher, the Israel Prize-winning philosopher and author of the IDF’s Code of Conduct. Kasher glossed over every transgression during this war. He’s the one responsible for that toxic “IDF spirit” – which holds that when it comes to protecting soldiers, anything goes for the IDF.
This flimsy fig leaf of a man bears as much moral responsibility as the political leaders who made the decisions and the soldiers who carried out their orders. He’s the philosopher who removed the reins, the intellectual who whitewashed everything. It is thanks to him and those of his ilk that Israelis can feel so self-righteous. When the world said in near unison, “War crimes,” Kasher said, “We are the most moral army in the world, no one is better than us.” If this is how a philosopher of ethics speaks, who needs propagandists?
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He wasn’t always like this. He now says in every possible forum, “If it comes down to a choice between a neighbor and an IDF soldier, the preference is the soldier,” and “The lives of our soldiers is of more interest to me than the dignity and well-being of the Palestinians.” He has also said that there is no justification for endangering the lives of soldiers in order to prevent the killing of civilians living “next to a terrorist.” But he once thought and wrote differently.
As a radical activist at the height of the first Lebanon war, Kasher, who is also one of the founders of the soldiers’ refusal movement Yesh Gvul, courageously appeared at a news conference with Nathan Zach, Dan Miron and Yeshayahu Leibowitz. Kasher, who for some reason sees Leibowitz as his patron and mentor, wrote in a letter to Haaretz: “Against the backdrop of news reports on thousands of noncombatant Lebanese and Palestinians who were harmed during Israel’s military operations, and given the complete justification of these instances given by the prime minister, it is every decent man’s duty to express unreserved opposition to the prime minister’s treatment of innocent civilians who are caught in the middle of a war he initiated.”
What has changed since then? Kasher has changed. Every decent man continues to believe that unnecessary killing of civilians is a criminal act. The war in Gaza was no less cruel than the war in Lebanon. Universal ethics remain today what they were then. Only Kasher’s ethics have radically changed. If only his statements hadn’t been so damaging, we could ignore the bewildering change in his positions. Yet for years he has been co-opted by the defense establishment and the IDF as their rubber stamp, solely because of the profound change he underwent. Now he serves as their flack and rationalizer, the philosopher lackey.
In recent days, the United Nations’ Goldstone report has been denounced as “anti-Semitic propaganda,” and white phosphorus bombs have become “legitimate weapons.” Why? Kasher heard from an IDF colonel that when a phosphorus bomb fell near him, nothing happened to him. And what about the 200 children who were killed? They were of “legal adult age – 15 to 18 years – and they took an active part in the war.” What about the killing of Dr. Ezzeldeen Abu al-Aish’s daughters? He is responsible for their deaths. The bombing of hospitals? This, too, is permitted. Kasher knows that terrorists were hiding in their basements.
The IDF Spokesman’s Office could not have phrased it any better. The Foreign Ministry’s spin doctors could not have deceived any better. This is how Kasher has whitewashed the assassinations and resultant killing of innocent civilians. He also thought that the IDF did not do enough killing in Jenin. The army, Kasher thought, should have warned the civilians beforehand, and “whoever stayed, let the blood be on his head.” This is how generals who try to justify their criminal actions speak. But an intellectual? An expert on ethics?

What is the world coming to? Listen to Kasher and look at us. This is the man who symbolizes our morality and this is how we behave. Why should we complain about Defense Minister Ehud Barak? Why should we excoriate Chief of Staff Gabi Ashkenazi? What is so objectionable about a general who planned and a soldier who carried out the order, when above them hovers this toxic spirit that emanates directly from the halls of humanism, philosophy and ethics, and which through mere words provides cover for this awful abyss?

PA move to thwart Goldstone Gaza report shocks Palestinian public: Ha’aretz

By Amira Hass

Palestinian sources tell Haaretz that Abbas request to halt vote on Gaza war probe was result of U.S. pressure.
The decision by the United Nations Human Rights Council to delay the vote on the findings of its report into the Gaza conflict – in line with a request by Palestinian Authority – has shocked the Palestinian public.
Palestinian sources told Haaretz that Abbas made the decision to delay the vote immediately after meeting with the U.S. Consul General last Thursday, without the knowledge of the PLO leadership or the government of Prime Minister Salam Fayyad, and without any consultation.
The commission which produced the report, headed by South African judge Richard Goldstone, charged both Israel and Hamas with committing war crimes during the three-week operation launched by the Israel Defense Forces in December, in an effort to halt rocket fire from Gaza on its southern communities. Israel has rejected the report and accused Goldstone of having a political agenda. The Palestinian sources said they believed that the consul general had passed on an unequivocal request from Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to ensure that the document remain on the table at the Human Rights Council.
Palestinian officials say that there was “heavy and ongoing pressure” from the U.S., which warned that the adoption of the findings in the commission’s report would stymie progress in the peace process between Israel and the Palestinians.
Abbas on Saturday made his first direct comments about media speculation on the issue, saying that his initial position had been misrepresented and that this was not a case of him withdrawing his support for the Goldstone report.
In the wake of the uproar, Abbas on Sunday ordered an internal investigation into why his own government ruled to delay the vote, the Palestinian news agency Ma’an reported.
After deliberating between President Abbas and members of the Executive Committee of the PLO, Prime Minister Salam Fayyad, President Abbas issued a decree to form a committee to find the reasons behind postponement of the debate on Goldstone’s report at the UN f Human Rights Council,” secretary of the PLO Executive Committee, Abed Rabbo, said in a statement.

And, if you wish to read the normal tenor of Ha’aretz, and see how carefully it has joined the right-wing of Zionism, the article below is one such example:

‘All-star team of Israel-haters’ at Norway school raises concern: Ha’aretz

In a move which Foreign Ministry sources defined as “unusual,” Israel’s embassy in Norway has officially protested the launch of a high profile academic seminar there delivered exclusively by lecturers known for their highly critical views of Israel.
Israel’s Foreign Minister last week described Norway’s attitude toward Israel as “hostile.”
“We were saddened to learn that a biased and one-sided seminar on Israel is taking place at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology in Trondheim,” Deputy Chief of Mission of the Israeli Embassy in Oslo, Aviad Ivri, wrote last month to the institution’s dean. The seminar, whose first session took place last month, includes lectures by Ilan Pappe, who accuses Israel of perpetrating an “ethnic cleansing of Palestine” and by Stephen Walt, the coauthor of a controversial study on the effect of the Israel-lobby on U.S. policy. It has been described by prominent scholars as anti-Semitic.
Other speakers invited by NTNU Dean Torbjorn Digernes include Moshe Zuckermann, who in a January interview for Deutschlandradio – a widely-heard German program – that operation Cast Lead cost hundreds of thousands of Gazan lives.
The members of the seminar’s organizing committee – Morten Levin, Ann Rudinow Saetnan and Rune Skarstein – have all signed a call for an academic boycott of Israel. They also brought a few Norwegian speakers, famous for their critical view of Israel.
“There’s no one on the panel with a neutral view of Israel, let alone anyone to advocate its position,” a source from the Foreign Ministry said. “Usually we do not get involved with academic forums of this sort because it’s a freedom-of-expression issue, but this all-star team of Israel-haters crosses a line,” the diplomat added.
“The overwhelming majority [of Israeli academics] oppose Pappe and Zuckerman and are rarely if ever found in seminars in Norway,” Ivri wrote.
Morten Levin from NTNU ? a state-funded institution ? replied to Haaretz’s query on the allegations by saying the objective of the lectures is to “communicate to a broad audience a deeper research-based understanding” of the situation.
“This requires a critical and careful scrutiny based on standard scientific methods,” he added. “Neither the Israeli state nor the Palestinian authority or Hamas will be defended. None of the lecturers will question the right of the Israeli state to exist.”
Responding to speculations by pro-Israeli scholars that the seminars will be a prelude to a call on NTNU to boycott Israel, Levin said: “The organizing committee of the lecture series has no formal connection whatsoever to the organization working for a boycott of Israeli academic institutions.”
The university’s dean ? who has called the seminar “praiseworthy” – did not reply to Haaretz’s request to interview him.
Tammi Benjamin, an American university lecturer from California, has called on NTNU Dean Digernes “to profoundly apologize to his students for misleading them and for supporting known hate mongers against the Jewish state.” Ronnie Fraser, a veteran U.K. activist against academic boycotts of Israel, has called on Digernes to resign.


September 24, 2009

The Leonard Cohen concert has gone ahead tonight, des[ite the greatr campaign launched over the last few months. While this is one we have not won, neither has Cohen. He had to twist and turn, lie and pretend, and the way he treated the Palestinians was, and is, quite appaling. We should continue a campaign against him wherever he intends to sing.

Leonard Cohen performs in Israel after selling out concert in record time: Ha’aretz

Veteran singer Leonard Cohen took to the stage at Ramat Gan stadium on Thursday night after breaking an Israeli record when all the tickets for his show were sold out in less than 12 hours, despite costing between NIS 1,000 and 1,200.
The Canadian, whose previous performance in Israel took place more than 20 years ago, was expected to play many of his most well-known hits, including “Suzanne,” “Bird on the Wire” and “Dance Me to the End of Love.”
Before the concert, an event was held in the VIP section of the stadium for the Leonard Cohen Fund for Reconciliation, Tolerance and Peace, which gives support to bereaved Israeli and Palestinian families. Grants were given at the event to people who have suffered personally from the Israeli-Palestinian conflict but continue to believe in peace and work toward achieving it.
Cohen also announced around two months ago that the proceeds from his performance in Israel would go toward the fund.
Around 200 bereaved Israeli and Palestinian families were expected to attend the concert, among them the renowned writer David Grossman. Cohen landed in Israel on a private plane on Tuesday, which his production team says he will use to travel around Israel.

Success elsewhere, like in Spain, has been attained by the ardous work of some of the BRICUP mmebers, and especially Abe:

Spain contest bans Israeli team affiliated with West Bank college: Ha’aretz

Spain said Thursday it has disqualified a group of Israeli academics from a solar power design competition because their university is in the West Bank, the latest in a series of low-level European sanctions against Israel over its settlement policy.
Spain expelled the team representing Ariel University Center of Samaria from an international contest called the Solar Decathlon, in which 20 universities are presenting designs for solar-powered homes, a Housing Ministry official said.
Samaria and Judea are the two Biblical names for the land also now known as the West Bank. “Spain acted in line with European Union policy of opposing Israel’s occupation of Palestinian land,” the Spanish official said on condition of anonymity, in line with ministry rules.
The Israeli university said it “rejects with disgust the one-sided announcement we received from the Spanish Housing Ministry and that the anti-academic decisions harms 10,000 students, including 500 Arab students who study there.”
“The decision is an expression of the illegitimate political struggle which contravenes international law and international charters on academic freedom,” it said in a statement sent Thursday to The Associated Press.
The contest is sponsored by the U.S. Energy Department, but Spain is hosting and financing a European version of it in 2010 and 2012 and has ultimate say over such details as who takes part, the ministry official said.
The Israelis were notified of the decision on September 11, and the U.S. Energy Department was also advised. The Spanish Housing Ministry did not hear back from the Americans, the official said.
Late last year, the Israelis’ proposal made the final cut of 20 universities chosen to take part in the contest after a technical evaluation of their project. But at some point this year, the Spanish Housing Ministry realized their university is not in Israel but rather in the West Bank, the official said. He could not explain why this fact was initially overlooked.
The European Union has adopted a more critical attitude toward Israel since the Israel Defense Force’s 22-day offensive in Gaza last January. The refusal of Israel’s new right-wing government to heed demands for a complete settlement freeze has further strained ties.
Britain recently revoked several licenses granted to U.K. companies to sell weapons parts to Israel because of concerns over their use in the assault on Gaza. But the move was largely symbolic, as Britain supplies less than 1 percent of Israel’s military imports.
Norway decided to sell its shares in Elbit Systems Ltd., an Israeli company that provides surveillance equipment for the separation barrier between Israel and the West Bank, leading Israel to lodge a formal diplomatic complaint.

“Spain acted in line with European Union policy of opposing Israel’s occupation of Palestinian land,” the Spanish official said on condition of anonymity, in line with ministry rules.
The Israeli university said it “rejects with disgust the one-sided announcement we received from the Spanish Housing Ministry and that the anti-academic decisions harms 10,000 students, including 500 Arab students who study there.”
“The decision is an expression of the illegitimate political struggle which contravenes international law and international charters on academic freedom,” it said in a statement sent Thursday to The Associated Press.
The contest is sponsored by the U.S. Energy Department, but Spain is hosting and financing a European version of it in 2010 and 2012 and has ultimate say over such details as who takes part, the ministry official said.
The Israelis were notified of the decision on September 11, and the U.S. Energy Department was also advised. The Spanish Housing Ministry did not hear back from the Americans, the official said.
Late last year, the Israelis’ proposal made the final cut of 20 universities chosen to take part in the contest after a technical evaluation of their project. But at some point this year, the Spanish Housing Ministry realized their university is not in Israel but rather in the West Bank, the official said. He could not explain why this fact was initially overlooked.
The European Union has adopted a more critical attitude toward Israel since the Israel Defense Force’s 22-day offensive in Gaza last January. The refusal of Israel’s new right-wing government to heed demands for a complete settlement freeze has further strained ties.
Britain recently revoked several licenses granted to U.K. companies to sell weapons parts to Israel because of concerns over their use in the assault on Gaza. But the move was largely symbolic, as Britain supplies less than 1 percent of Israel’s military imports.
Norway decided to sell its shares in Elbit Systems Ltd., an Israeli company that provides surveillance equipment for the separation barrier between Israel and the West Bank, leading Israel to lodge a formal diplomatic complaint.

More Boycott developments

U.K. labor unions vote to back boycott of Israeli products: Ha’aretz

British labor unions yesterday agreed to support a boycott of some Israeli goods in response to last winter’s offensive in the Gaza Strip. The boycott, proposed by the British Fire Brigades Union, calls for a ban on importing goods produced in some Israeli settlements, an end of arms trading with Israel and divestment from some companies. A motion proposed at the conference of labor union officials also condemns the actions of Hamas. About 1,400 Palestinians, including hundreds of civilians, were killed during Operation Cast Lead, which sought to stop rocket fire by Gaza militants on southern Israeli towns. Thirteen Israelis also died, including four civilians. In May of this year, Norway’s largest labor union urged the Scandinavian country to lead an international boycott of Israel if it did not reach a peace agreement with the Palestinians.
The Norwegian Confederation of Trade Unions, whose members constitute more than one third of the country’s employees, said in a statement that both Israel and the Palestinians deserve to live in peace and security, but as long as this was not achieved, the Israeli government was to be held accountable. The organization urged Israel to put an end to the “illegal occupation,” respect the 1967 borders, halt the expansion of West Bank settlements and take down the separation fence.
In February, Irish trade unionists announced that they were planing to launch a boycott of Israeli goods in 2009. Meanwhile, the University of Manchester Students’ Union adopted a resolution supporting a boycott of Israel.
In moving ahead with plans to boycott Israel, the Irish Congress of Trade Unions says it is relying on “evidence” left in the aftermath of the Israeli invasion into Gaza during Cast Lead. It also said it is drawing from a “fact-finding mission” conducted by a dozen of its senior members in Gaza more than a year ago. Leaders within the Irish Congress of Trade Unions are to hold a conference this year to act as “a springboard” for their campaign.

U.S. pension fund giant confirms divestment from Israel firm: Ha’aretz

The U.S. pension fund giant, TIAA-CREF, confirmed in statements to the media on Friday that it divested from Africa Israel Investments, owned by Israeli billionaire Lev Leviev, earlier this year.
The statements came in response to a letter initiated by a pro-Palestinian group, Adalah-NY, and signed by TIAA-CREF clients. The fund’s investment in Africa Israel amounted to only $257,000, so the financial effect of the divestment is minimal. The news of the divestment came as the Israeli firm was suffering a deep financial crisis, having recently announced that is unable to meet its liabilities to its bondholders. Adalah NY noted in its press release that “Despite the recent divestment from Africa-Israel, the new June 30th TIAA-CREF report indicates that the fund continues to invest clients’ money in a number of companies supporting Israeli settlement activity including Israel Discount Bank, Cellcom Israel, Bezeq Israeli Telecommunications Corp, Bank Leumi, and Motorola, among others.”
Earlier this month the Norwegian government announced it was pulling all of its investments from Elbit Systems, which manufactures the monitoring system installed on several parts of the West Bank separation fence.
Norwegian Finance Minister Kristin Halvorsen said that the decision was based on the recommendation of her ministry’s council. “We do not wish to fund companies that so directly contribute to violations of international
humanitarian law,” Halvorsen was quoted as saying, explaining that the separation barrier impinged on the freedom of movement of West Bank residents.

Oslo pressured to dump Africa Israel as well: Ha’aretz

A day after Norway announced its divestment from holdings in electronics defense company Elbit Systems for ideological reasons, human rights organizations are calling on Oslo to dump its holdings in Africa Israel Investments as well.
Norway’s problem with Elbit Systems is its provision of equipment to monitor the separation fence between Israel and the Palestinian territories. The human rights organizations’ problem with Africa Israel is the role of subsidiary Danya Cebus in building homes in West Bank settlements, reports the Adnkronos International Web site. The human rights organization Adalah argues that the Africa Israel group, led by Lev Leviev, is violating international law through its construction activity in the territories.
The Norwegian government owns $1.1 million worth of Africa Israel stock, according to figures from Norway’s central bank, Norges Bank. Leviev was also recently put under pressure after announcing major liquidity problems with the Africa Israel group. The British charity Oxfam and United Nations’ fund UNICEF have rejected donations from Leviev. In March, the British embassy in Israel decided against leasing a floor in a building owned by Africa Israel. Last month, the investments fund Blackrock, which had been the second biggest shareholder in Africa Israel, wiped out its holdings in the company because of pressure from Scandinavian funds. Blackrock denied that its decision resulted from pressure following Africa Israel’s construction in the West Bank.

Israel relieved as Goldstone Report scantly mentioned at UN: Ha’aretz

Following the release last week of the Goldstone commission findings which accused Israel of committing war crimes during its offensive in the Gaza Strip, diplomatic officials feared that the report would weigh heavily on the agenda of this week’s United Nations General Assembly meeting. Israel’s fears proved to have no basis in fact as the report was cited by just a few world leaders. The country that has thus far attracted the most attention is Iran. After accusing Israel of committing war crimes against the Palestinians, Iran itself was the object of criticism. Argentina President Cristina Fernandez blasted Iran for its involvement in the bloody terrorist attacks in Buenos Aires in 1992 and 1994. On March 17, 1992, a suicide truck bomber rammed his vehicle into the Israeli embassy in the Argentine capital, killing 29 people and wounding 242. Two years later, terrorists struck the AMIA building, a Jewish community center, in the deadliest bombing in the country’s history. Eighty-five people were killed and hundreds were wounded. France also took a forceful stand against Iran. “If the Iranians do not accede to the demands of the international community this will be a critical mistake,” French President Nicolas Sarkozy told the UN Security Council. British Prime Minister Gordon Brown told the Security Council that the world should consider “far tougher sanctions” against Iran if its continues to seek a nuclear bomb. “As evidence of its breach of international agreements grows, we must now consider far tougher sanctions together,” Brown said

Why have sanction against a country with hundreds of nuclear weapons, when you can have sanction against a country that does not have any?

Gideon Levy / Obama, you won’t make peace without talking to Hamas: Ha’aretz

It’s as if U.S. President Barack Obama did the least he had to. He “rebuked” Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas. That’s not how a president with star power acts. That is not how a superpower does things. America is again falling down on the job, and Obama is betraying his mission and the promise of his presidency.
True, it’s an anomaly that the United States wants a peace settlement more than the hawkish parties to the conflict, but the leader of the free world has a crucial role, and iheis not fulfilling it. Nine months after Obama assumed the presidency, precious time has been totally wasted, in the Middle East at least, and suspicions are growing that the promise of his presidency is on the wane, even if the man is attractive and uproariously funny on David Letterman. Laugh, laugh, but ultimately, where are the results?
Beautiful speeches like the one last night at the UN General Assembly are no longer enough. Being America means enjoying numerous international privileges, but also involves a few obligations. One of them is to look after world peace. Just as it set off for war and occupation in Iraq and Afghanistan in the name of global goals, however dubious, and just as it is working to prevent a nuclear Iran, America is also obligated to act to settle the Middle East conflict. That is not its right but its obligation. Locals don’t want its services in either Iraq or Afghanistan, but America is shedding its own blood there nonetheless. Why? Because it believes this is essential to world security.When he was elected, President Obama declared that the Middle East conflict was endangering world peace. Nothing is more true. The potential danger between Jenin, Gaza and Jerusalem is no less serious than that in the killing fields of Kandahar and Mosul. But what is the president doing to eliminate the fuel that feeds international terrorism? Or at least to show that he is doing something? He ruins nine whole months over the issue of a construction freeze in the settlements, and even that pathetic goal was not achieved.
It has to be one way or the other: Either Obama thinks a solution to the conflict isn’t a worthy goal and so should get out of the picture and devote his energies elsewhere or he means what he said and must use all his power and act. Meanwhile, instead of change, we have gotten distressing continuity. Instead of “yes we can,” we have gotten “no we can’t.”
Obama needs to turn things upside-down and break with convention. That’s why he was elected. Two decisive steps would change things completely: an American effort to introduce Hamas into the negotiations and pressure on Israel to end the matter of the occupation. Simplistic? Perhaps, but the complex and gradual solutions haven’t gotten us anywhere up to now. Like it or not, without Hamas peace is not possible. The fact that Obama has put his trust only in Abbas’ Fatah has guaranteed failure, which was foreseeable. History has taught us that you make peace with your worst enemy, not with those who are seen as collaborators by their own people.
You also don’t make peace with half a people, in half of the territory. Obama didn’t even try to break this unnecessary spell and automatically went, unbelievably, down the path of his predecessor, George W. Bush. The president who was willing to engage North Korea and Iran and dares Venezuela and Cuba didn’t even think about entering negotiations with Hamas. Why is it okay to talk to Iran but not to Hamas? Obama, too, thinks Hamas is fit for negotiations only over the fate of a single soldier, Gilad Shalit, but not over the fate of two peoples.
The second step, which is no less essential, is applying pressure on Israel. Given Israel’s total dependence and in the face of its blindness to the price of the occupation, Obama’s friendship with Israel is actually to be judged by the steps he would seemingly take against Israel. As Israel’s isolation in the world only grows, and the danger of Iran threatens the country, Israel’s best friend must pressure its ally and save it from itself. Instead, we got another condemnation of the Goldstone Commission report, this time from the new American ambassador to the United Nations, Susan Rice, who had held the promise of major change.
It’s not too late. True, the initial momentum has been lost, but now, following this week’s “summit of rebukes,” America must hurry up and rebuke itself and mainly ponder how to get out of the booby trap to which it has succumbed. Now, too, only America can (and must) do it.

September 19, 2009

The BDS agenda has moved forward enormously this week, in a number of countries. The main news and the most important developemnt were publication of the UN report on the Gaza carnage, and the adoption of a partial boycott of produce, originating in the illegal settlements in Occupied Territories. While the boycott only applies to produce from the settlements, it is a major shift, nonetheless.

British TUC endorses a boycott call: PACBI

One of the largest trade union federations in the world, the British Trades Union Congress (TUC) has overwhelmingly adopted BDS motions in its annual congress!
The South African trade union federation, COSATU, and the Irish Congress of Trade Unions (ICTU) were the two national TU federations that preceded the TUC in adopting BDS.
Given that TUC represents over 6.5 million British workers, this huge success is no small feat. The size and political significance of the British TUC’s endorsement of BDS motions will surely add qualitatively to the impressive rise of the BDS movement after the Israeli massacre in Gaza, further confirming that our South Africa moment has arrived.
The Palestine Solidarity Campaign (PSC) and its partners have worked tirelessly, persistently and tactfully for several years to reach this astounding victory, crowning previous BDS endorsements — direct or indirect — by the Scottish Trade Union Congress (STUC) earlier this year and several leading British trade unions including Unison and the University and College Union (UCU), the latter representing about 120,000 members in academia.
A warm salute especially to the PSC, as well as the STUC, BRICUP and to all British BDS activists who contributed over the years to this watershed in the BDS movement’s history in the UK, Europe and beyond.
It is worth remembering that in the struggle against South African apartheid the British trade union movement was among the very few in the vanguard of boycotts and divestment that eventually spread to the rest of the world, helping the democracy and freedom movement in South Africa bring down the racist regime. Israeli apartheid and its apologists should take note of this.

Below are excerpts from the motion that passed, sponsored by the amazingly principled and courageous Fire Brigades Union (FBU) and amended by the UCU.

FBU Motion adopted by TUC Congress 2009
Motion was amended with final paragraph by UCU

(EXCERPTS)

“Congress condemns the Histadrut statement of 13th January 2009 in which it backed the attacks on Gaza and calls on the General Council to carry out a review of the TUC’s relationship with Histadrut.

Congress calls on the General Council to pressure the Government to:

a) Condemn the Israeli military aggression and end the blockade on Gaza
b) End all arms trading with Israel
c) Impose a ban on the importing of goods produced in the illegal settlements in the Occupied Territories
d) Support moves to suspend the EU-Israel Association Agreement.

Congress further calls on the General Council to encourage affiliation to the Palestine Solidarity Campaign and to develop an effective Boycott, Disinvestment and Sanctions campaign by working closely with the PSC to:
1) raise greater awareness on the issues
2) promote a targeted consumer-led boycott
3) encourage trade unionists to boycott Israeli goods, especially
agricultural products that have been produced in the illegal
settlements.
4) encourage campaigns of disinvestment from companies associated
with the occupation.

Congress asserts that in undertaking these actions each affiliate will operate within its own aims and objectives and within the law.”

UN Report on the Israeli atrocities in Gaza

To read the whole report, use the link above.

Israel condemns UN’s Gaza report: BBC

Israel has strongly criticised a UN human rights report into alleged war crimes during the Gaza conflict.
The report said both the Israeli army and Palestinian militants committed war crimes and possible crimes against humanity during fighting in January.
The report “was flawed from A-to-Z”, the UN panel was “biased” and some of its findings “ludicrous”, said Israeli government spokesman Mark Regev.
The report called for fresh war crimes inquiries under international scrutiny.
It said Israel’s “Operation Cast Lead”, launched in response to militant rocket fire, used disproportionate firepower against the densely populated Gaza Strip and disregarded the likelihood of civilian deaths.
The militant group Hamas criticised parts of the report alleging it fired rockets at Israel without distinguishing between military targets and the civilian population.
Intimidation
Speaking to the BBC, Mr Regev said the panel was “born in sin” because “even the UN” considers the Human Rights Council which commissioned the report “to have a one-side anti-Israeli agenda”.

“The investigations Israel has done into its troops’ behaviour in the Gaza Strip is 1,000 times more serious than this investigation” Mark Regev
He also cast doubt on the impartiality of the four-judge panel, led by South African Richard Goldstone, based on comments one of its members had made before the inquiry.
Mr Regev charged that evidence collected in public hearings in the Gaza Strip, where he said witnesses were subject to intimidation from the militant Hamas movement, had the validity of a “show trial”.
And he rejected the panel’s recommendation that the UN Security Council should call on Israel to fully investigate possible violations by its forces, or face possible referral to the International Criminal Court.
“In the last six months, the investigations Israel has done into its troops’ behaviour in the Gaza Strip is 1,000 times more serious than this investigation,” Mr Regev said.

Ha’aretz responses to the Goldstone Report: JFJFP

Ha’aretz carries a range of responsesto the Goldstone Report including a strongly worded editorial A committee of inquiry is needed (17 September 2009); Gideon Levy’s Disgrace in The Hague; Amira Hass’s The one thing worse than denying the Gaza report; and Aluf Benn’s In wake of Gaza probe, how can Israel go to war again?

There’s a name on every bullet, and there’s someone responsible for every crime. The Teflon cloak Israel has wrapped around itself since Operation Cast Lead has been ripped off, once and for all, and now the difficult questions must be faced. It has become superfluous to ask whether war crimes were committed in Gaza, because authoritative and clear-cut answers have already been given. So the follow-up question has to be addressed: Who’s to blame? If war crimes were committed in Gaza, it follows that there are war criminals at large among us. They must be held accountable and punished. This is the harsh conclusion to be drawn from the detailed United Nations report…”

Gideon Levy, Disgrace in The Hague

Israel vs Human Rights and International Humanitarian Law: The Magnes Zionist

“No, Israel’s battle is not against the human rights NGOs but rather against the whole concept of human rights and international law…”

Remember the time when Israel was praised as a beacon of democracy in an undemocratic region, when the world cheered tiny Israel fighting a sea of hostile Arabs? Now that the Goldstone Report has come out – the last in a series of reports criticizing Israel’s Gaza Operation — Israel is supported by all the usual suspects – rightwing Jews, rightwing Israelis (Ehud Barak and Shimon Peres on the moderate nationalist right to hyper-fascists like Ayalon and Lieberman), and, I suppose, Christian evangelicals and some conservative goyyim. Not a single liberal or progressive will rise to Israel’s defense, because let’s face it – when Israelis, Jews, and the rest of the world rise to criticize the bully’s actions, when the person accused by the prime minister of Israel as conducting a “kangaroo court” is one of the most respected judges and scholars of international law (and a Jew and a Zionist to boot), when all the evidence against the Goldstone report is linked to research done by the rightwing Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs, or the rightwing NGO Monitor (which itself does not do fact-checking but instead a lot of googling to dig up dirt on its opponents), then you know that Israel has already lost.

U.S. pension fund giant confirms divestment from Israel firm: Ha’aretz

The U.S. pension fund giant, TIAA-CREF, confirmed in statements to the media on Friday that it divested from Africa Israel Investments, owned by Israeli billionaire Lev Leviev, earlier this year.
The statements came in response to a letter initiated by a pro-Palestinian group, Adalah-NY, and signed by TIAA-CREF clients.
The fund’s investment in Africa Israel amounted to only $257,000, so the financial effect of the divestment is minimal. The news of the divestment came as the Israeli firm was suffering a deep financial crisis, having recently announced that is unable to meet its liabilities to its bondholders.

Toronto Declaration: No Celebration of Occupation

To read the whole Toronto Declaration, use the link above

The Toronto Declaration is unstoppable.  Over 1,000 filmmakers, actors, writers and other cultural producers from around the world — including Israel and Palestine — have signed on to the statement objecting to the Toronto International Film Festival’s celebratory spotlight on Tel Aviv.
New signatories include music and cinematic legends Harry Belafonte and Julie Christie. Actor Viggo Mortensen, who will be attending this year’s festival, just added his name. Leading intellectual figures Noam Chomsky, Judith Butler and Anne McClintock have also recently endorsed the declaration, along with prominent Canadian writers Rawi Hage, Joy Kogawa, Dionne Brand and Kerri Sakamoto. Celebrated local filmmakers Velcrow Ripper, Min Sook Lee and Lynne Fernie have also signed the letter.
International support for the declaration continues to grow despite denunciations, unfounded personal attacks on earlier signatories Jane Fonda, Danny Glover, and Naomi Klein, and despite an aggressive campaign of misinformation regarding the letter’s content.
Come out this Monday, September 14th at 7:00 p.m. to see some of the names behind the Toronto Declaration, with messages of solidarity and responses to their critics.
For more information, and to read the Toronto Declaration and the full list of signatories, visit: http://torontodeclaration.blogspot.com <http://torontodeclaration.blogspot.com/>

RECENT POSTINGS:
Second PACBI statement on the Tel Aviv protest
http://www.pacbi.org/etemplate.php?id=1100

Jaffa: From Eminence to Ethnic Cleansing

by Sami Abu Shehadeh & Fadi Shbaytah

Jaffa was the largest city in historic Palestine during the years of the British mandate, with a population of over eighty-thousand Palestinians in addition to the forty-thousand people living in the towns and villages in its immediate vicinity. In the period between the UN Partition resolution (UNGA 181) of 29 November 1947, and the declaration of the establishment of the state of Israel, Zionist military forces displaced ninety-five percent of Jaffa’s indigenous Arab Palestinian population. Jaffa’s refugees accounted for fifteen percent of Palestinian refugees in that fateful year, and today they are dispersed across the globe still banned from returning by the state responsible for their displacement.
Jaffa was the epicenter of the Palestinian economy before the 1948 Nakba. Beginning in the early nineteenth century, the people of Jaffa had cultivated citrus groves, particularly oranges, on their land. International demand for Jaffa oranges propelled the city onto the world stage, earning the city an important place in the global economy. By the 1930s, Jaffa was exporting tens of millions of citrus crates to the rest of the world, which provided thousands of jobs for the people of the city and its environs, and linking them to the major commercial centers of the Mediterranean coast and the European continent.
With the success of its citrus exports, the city witnessed the emergence and growth of various related economic sectors, from banks to land and sea transportation enterprises to import and export firms, and many others. As the city grew, Jaffa’s entrepreneurs began to develop local industrial production with the opening of metal-work factories, and others producing glass, ice, cigarettes, textiles, sweets, transportation-related equipment, mineral and carbonated water, and various foodstuffs, among others.

The “matrix of control” that Israel has established in the Occupied Palestinian Territories cannot be taken apart piece by piece, settlement by settlement, bypass road by bypass road. It is too intricate. There is only one hope left for a genuine two-state solution: The international community, led by the United States, must tell Israel to withdraw from every inch of the land it occupied in 1967. At this critical juncture, there is an imponderable: Does President Barack Obama have such a solution in mind, or will he just recycle the half-measures of his predecessors?
Jeff Halper addresses the urgency of “Dismantling the Matrix of Control,” now in Middle East Report Online:

Dismantling the Matrix of Control: MERIP

Jeff Halper
September 11, 2009
(Jeff Halper is director of the Israeli Committee Against House Demolitions. He can be reached at jeff@icahd.org.)
Almost a decade ago I wrote an article describing Israel’s “matrix of control” over the Occupied Palestinian Territories. It consisted then of three interlocking systems: military administration of much of the West Bank and incessant army and air force intrusions elsewhere; a skein of “facts on the ground,” notably settlements in the West Bank, Gaza and East Jerusalem, but also bypass roads connecting the settlements to Israel proper; and administrative measures like house demolitions and deportations. I argued in 2000 that unless this matrix was dismantled, the occupation would not be ended and a two-state solution could not be achieved.
Since then the occupation has grown immeasurably stronger and more entrenched. The first decade of the twenty-first century has so far seen the steady constricting and fragmentation of Palestinian territory through still more wholesale expropriation of Palestinian land, checkpoints and other physical restrictions on freedom of movement, settlement construction, more and more massive highways intended for Israeli settlers, control over natural resources and, most visibly of all, the erection of the separation barrier in the West Bank and East Jerusalem. Since December 2000, according to the Israeli human rights organization B’tselem, the settler population of the West Bank has grown by 86,000 and that of East Jerusalem by 50,000. Gaza was evacuated of settlers and soldiers in 2005, but Israel retains near complete control over egress and exit of people and goods to and from the coastal strip, regularly cuts supplies of fuel and other necessities to punish the residents and mounts military incursions at will. All the Palestinian territories are subject, to one degree or another, to the measures of house demolitions, “closures” that halt economic activity, administrative restrictions on movement, deportation, induced out-migration and much more.

You really like me: Ha’aretz

By Gideon Levy
It’s all because of love. A lack of love, to be precise. And because of provincialism.
Here’s a possible explanation for the embarrassing groveling before our guest singer: our longing for love. How beautiful we are – if not in the eyes of the world, which increasingly ostracizes us – then at least in the eyes of Madonna. It is difficult to find a single European prime minister or opposition leader who has bothered to meet with her. Only in Israel do they stand in line for her graces, the graces of a singer who is only a singer. An entire country is saying “Madonna.”

Are you Israeli?

By Haseeb Shehadeh
For most of the Arab national minority in Israel, who number approximately one and a quarter million, the answer to the question ‘Are you Israeli?’ is not simple, nor does the answer come automatically. This segment of population is the only one in the world that bears the word ‘Arab’ on their Israeli identity cards. The answer to such an inquiry depends on several factors, such as who asks this question and where as well as in which circumstances the question is asked and what is its purpose.
Numerous questions are well known to all Arabs who leave Israel via Ben-Gurion International Airport in Lydda or who return to Israel. These questions may include: what is the reason for your visit to Israel (the homeland)? Where will you stay in Israel? Whom did/will you meet? What is your occupation abroad? Are you carrying any weapon or sharp tools? Did you pack everything in your luggage yourself? Did anyone give you anything to deliver?
The question in my title is not among these routine inquiries. It was directed to me on the 5th of April 2009 at Ben Gurion Airport before I was to board Finnair flight AY 1922 to fly to Helsinki. As usual the passengers on this weekly flight were waiting in Hall C3 in Tel Aviv airport. The overwhelming majority of the passengers were Finns returning to Finland after a short visit to historic and Christian sites in Israel and Jordan. As for me, I was on a research trip sponsored by the Academy of Finland that had lasted two weeks. During that time I visited the two only Samaritan centres — Holon to the south of Tel Aviv and Mount Gerizim in Nablus. This smallest and probably the oldest community in the world which numbers fewer than 750 faithful, lives only in these two cities. The five pillars of the Samaritan faith are: One God who is called Sheema (meaning the ‘name’); the Torah, which differs from the Massoretic Text in more than 6,000 cases; Moses as the only prophet; Mount Gerizim as the holy place; reward and punishment; Taheb as the Messiah.

PACBI Salutes ‘Toronto Declaration – No Celebration of Occupation’ Endorsers: PACBI

Occupied Ramallah, September 10, 2009
The Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel (PACBI) salutes the filmmakers, artists and cultural workers who drafted and endorsed the Toronto Declaration – No Celebration of Occupation [1] protesting the Toronto International Film Festival’s City to City Spotlight on Tel Aviv. The impressive list of signatories includes long-time supporters of a just peace and Palestinian rights and newer friends, all of whom we sincerely thank. It has been heartening to see the efforts of many tireless activists in assuring that Tel Aviv is not celebrated while Palestinians continue to suffer, sometimes invisibly, under Israeli apartheid and military occupation
Support for the declaration has continued to grow in the face of unfounded denunciation campaigns. Celebrities of the calibre of Jane Fonda, Danny Glover and John Berger, have refused to be bullied by these tactics.  We understand the exceptional moral courage and clarity such a stance demands; we deeply appreciate it.
On 27 August 2009, PACBI issued a public statement [2] calling for a targeted boycott of the Spotlight on Tel Aviv.  Whether intentionally or not, such a “Spotlight” serves to “Rebrand Israel,” whitewashing Israel’s human rights violations against the Palestinian people, including recent atrocities like in Gaza and presenting Tel Aviv as a normal, “Western” city, not the hub of colonial and apartheid Israeli policies that it actually is.  For the record, PACBI’s call to protest and boycott was specific to the Spotlight on Tel Aviv; we have not called for a general boycott of the Toronto International Film Festival.

MY RIGHTS, MY REMEDY: EI

By Ahmed Moor, The Electronic Intifada, 11 September 2009

Israel is an apartheid state. It rules over me in Gaza yet does not permit me to vote in an Israeli election. It
hoards my resources in the West Bank, it detains me and dictates the terms of my survival. It issues my travel
documents and denies me the right to travel. I cannot associate or marry or build or import or consume — in
short, I cannot live — without Israel’s permission. Yet, I do not have the right to vote. Ahmed Moor comments for
The Electronic Intifada.

GAZA’S CONFLICTING CASUALTY COUNTS: EI

By Helena Cobban, The Electronic Intifada, 14 September 2009
WASHINGTON (IPS) – This week, two respected human rights organizations — one Palestinian, one Israeli — each came out with very full reports into the extent of the damage caused by the assault Israel waged against Gaza last winter. According to PCHR 1,419 Palestinians were killed during the fighting, of whom 252 were combatants and the rest noncombatants. Three hundred and eighteen of those killed were, it said, children.

ISRAEL TARGETING FISHERMEN, FARMERS IN GAZA: EI

By Eva Bartlett, The Electronic Intifada, 11 September 2009
On 31 August, Israeli gunboats shot at and shelled the fishing trawler of Khaled al-Habil, destroying it
completely and leaving the boat’s 18 fishermen and their families without a source of income. One week earlier, on 24 August, Israeli soldiers along Gaza’s northern border shot dead a young farm worker, Said al-Hussumi.
Sixteen-year-old al-Hussumi was killed while working on land a few hundred meters from the border with his cousin Masoud Tanboura, who was seriously wounded.

Eva Bartlett reports for The Electronic Intifada.

GAZA’S DISABLED CUT OFF FROM PAYMENTS: EI

By Jonathan Cook, The Electronic Intifada, 11 September 2009
Yunis al-Masri was severely injured in a car wreck as he and his brothers traveled to work in Israel 24 years ago.
He is entitled to a monthly allowance of $800 from Israel’s National Insurance Institute, out of which he has
supported his wife and 10 children in their home in Gaza. In early January, however, the transfers of disability
benefits stopped arriving in his bank account in Gaza. About 700 other injured workers are in the same situation.
Jonathan Cook reports.

THE ELDERS’ VISIT TO BILIN: EI

By Jody McIntyre, Live from Palestine, 11 September 2009
Thursday, 27 August was a special day in Bilin. Dozens of blacked-out SUVs approached the village, disturbing the quiet of a usually peaceful morning. However, unlike the Israeli occupation forces who come at night to arrest boys from the village, this arrival was extremely welcome. The SUV passengers were a truly respected group of
international diplomats, known as the Elders.

Jody McIntyre writes from Bilin, occupied West Bank.

PROTESTERS OF TORONTO FESTIVAL’S TEL AVIV SPOTLIGHT SALUTED: EI

Press release, Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel, 10 September 2009
The Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel (PACBI) salutes the filmmakers, artists and cultural workers who drafted and endorsed the Toronto Declaration: No Celebration of Occupation protesting the Toronto International Film Festival’s City to City Spotlight on Tel Aviv. The impressive list of signatories includes long-time supporters of a just peace and Palestinian rights and newer friends, all of whom we sincerely thank.

ACTION ALERT: KICK DAYTON AND HIS MERCENARIES OUT OF PALESTINE: EI

Press release, US Palestinian Community Network, 10 September 2009
The US Palestinian Community Network is appalled that the government of the United States not only continues its unconditional support for Israel, but has engaged in establishing Palestinian contra forces in the West Bank,
aimed at deepening Palestinian internal division and engaging in arbitrary arrests and assassinations of
political activists. We demand an immediate end to all such programs and the immediate withdrawal of US Lt. Gen.

Keith Dayton and his mercenaries from Palestine!

Maybe Israel just needs to acknowledge Palestinian pain: Ha’aretz

By Jonathan Freedl
Many of Israel’s supporters around the world have spotted an alarming trend in the debate on Middle East peace. Call it the “Back to ’48” approach, which argues that any attempt to solve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is doomed unless it gets to the root of the problem, tackling not only the “1967 file” – ending the occupation, plus or minus a chunk of land here or there – but also the “1948 file,” consisting of the issues left outstanding by Israel’s birth.
These 1948 questions are even knottier and more sensitive than the 1967 ones: among them, whether Palestinians can at last come to terms with what was established in that fateful year, namely Israel as a Jewish state, and whether Israelis can at last acknowledge the impact of that event on Palestinians, including the creation of at least 700,000 Palestinian refugees.
Plenty of Jews and Israelis shy away from that latter question, even if they can see that the Oslo approach – focusing narrowly on clearing up the mess left by 1967 – has not exactly been a stellar success.

Israel, Palestinians trade blame for stalled peace talks: Ha’artez

By Barak Ravid, Haaretz Correspondent, and Haaretz Service
Israel and the Palestinian Authority blamed each other on Saturday for the failure of George Mitchell, the U.S. envoy to the Middle East, to secure a deal this week for the resumption of peace negotiations.
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas was quoted by AFP as saying on Saturday that “the road is now blocked,” after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had refused to agree to a complete halt to construction in West Bank settlements. But shortly afterward Israel’s Foreign Ministry accused the Palestinians of actually being the ones responsible for the stalled peace talks.

Report: IDF, U.S. military to simulate Iran missile strike on Israel: Ha’aretz

The Israel Defense Forces and the U.S. military will soon hold a training exercise in which they will simulate missile attacks on Israel from Iran, Syria, Lebanon and Gaza, the pan-Arab newspaper Asharq al-Awsat reported Sunday.

The exercise will be carried out as part of the ongoing maneuvers between Israel and the United States, the London-based paper said, which will reportedly be the broadest-ever this year.

According to the paper, the drill is also part of U.S. President Barack Obama’s new missile defense plan, under which the Pentagon will initially deploy ships with missile interceptors instead of stationing missile defense systems in Eastern Europe.

September 8, 2009

The body parts story seems to be far from over, as more and more facts come into the light. The latest twist is on the BBC today:

Israel organs claim row deepens: BBC

A Palestinian minister and an Israeli Arab member of parliament have stoked a row over allegations that Israel has taken organs from dead Palestinians.
Issa Qaraqae said Israel was hiding the bodies of dead Palestinian prisoners to disguise evidence of organ trafficking.
Israeli Arab MP Mohammed Barakei said he would believe the organ-removal claims unless Israel disproved them.
Israel has angrily denied the allegations, first made in a Swedish newspaper, calling them “outrageous”.
Mr Qaraqae said Israel was “hiding the bodies of Palestinian martyrs to remove the proof of their crimes, including organ trafficking”.
He was speaking at a meeting in the West Bank city of Nablus to demand the return of the bodies of Palestinians killed by the Israeli army.
At the same meeting, Mr Barakei, chairman of the Hadash party in the Israeli Knesset, said it was the right of Palestinians to ask “what Israel’s reasons are for keeping the bodies of martyrs”.
“Have the bodies been mutilated? My answer is yes, barring proof to the contrary. Have their organs been stolen? My answer is yes, barring proof to the contrary,” he said.
‘Outrageous’ claim
Mr Barakei later told Israel’s Yediot Ahronot newspaper: “Seeing as there is no worse way to punish a man and his family than with his death, the question is why Israel continues to hold the bodies.”

Mr Netanyahu said the claims were reminiscent of medieval ‘blood libels’
“The burden of proof falls on Israel, and as long as it refuses to say what the status of the bodies is or return them, it is hiding something awful,” he said.
The organ harvesting story was first published in August in Aftonbladet, Sweden’s biggest-selling daily newspaper.
It claimed that in incidents dating back as far as 1992, Israeli soldiers snatched Palestinian youths and returned their dismembered bodies a few days later.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has urged the Swedish government to condemn the article, saying the accusations were “outrageous”.
Mr Netanyahu compared the claims to medieval “blood libels”, which alleged that Jews used the blood of Christian babies during religious ceremonies.
But Sweden’s foreign minister Carl Bildt has said he would not condemn the article because freedom of expression is part of the Swedish constitution.

September 6, 2009

There has been much consternation about the report in a Swedish newspaper claiming that organs were removed from the bodies of Palestinian detainees who died in Israeli prisons. The Israeli government has termed it ‘antisemitic’ and denied that such things have ever happened. Gradually, there seemed to be some smoke behind the report, and now Shraga Elam is arguing, there is also fire behind it. It now seems clear, from an Israeli goverment report, that the Institute of Pathology was acting illegally in more ways than one… It seems that those who accuse the Swedish report, were not in possession of the facts, or were trying to hide them…

Below are the facts:

http://shraga-elam.blogspot.com/2009/09/swedish-canard-not-only-smoke-but-also.html

The Swedish canard – not only smoke, but also fire
By: Shraga Elam
25 August 2009

http://cafe.themarker.com/view.php?t=1192567

The controversy over the racist Swedish article on the trade in organs of Palestinians should not obscure the fact that the slovenly report has a scandalous basis in fact, which calls for a serious discussion.

It is not an exceptional occurrence that “canards” provoke discussions and processes that are important in and of themselves, and have influence that well-researched serious articles are unable to reach or their authors can even dream of.

For example: generations of serious Swiss historical researchers tried but did not succeed in a meaningful way to compel the Swiss public to come to terms with their country’s very problematic ties to Nazi Germany and the profit that accrued to all of Switzerland as a result of those ties. It was none other than an Israeli journalist by the name of Itamar Levin, today the deputy editor of Globes, who succeeded in changing the situation when he incorrectly interpreted a 1946 Swiss memorandum written in German that he had found in a file on the property of the victims of the Nazis in the Central Zionist Archive. Itamar decided that it this was an official document in which the Swiss government allegedly admitted that the property of victims of the Holocaust that was being kept in Swiss banks amounted to 300 million Swiss Francs, which in the values of 1995, when Globes published the, was 6.4 billion US dollars. My warnings that his interpretation was not correct did not interest the journalist, who did not let the facts confuse him or get in the way of the scoop of his life. His article received headlines all over the world, incited a campaign against the Swiss banks and also brought about a rewriting of Swiss history, and even a prize or two for the author of that journalistic “achievement”.

Today too, there is no doubt that the Swedish journalist did not work in a serious way and his newspaper did not exhibit the professionalism and the sensitivity required for such a problematical subject. There can be no educated European who does not know of the blood-libel and the various conspiracy theories against Jews. It is therefore necessary to strictly adhere to the precautionary principle and not to present a jumble of facts and half-truths that are not clearly and/or necessarily linked to each other.

Behind the purely associative link made between the a network of Israeli organ merchants that was exposed recently and the fact that in 1992 bodies of Palestinians were returned with organs missing is the profound conviction that all Jews are strongly linked by bonds of mutual solidarity. Such linkage made up in the feverish brain of the Swedish journalist should at most have been the starting point for research; certainly they were not sufficient basis for a published article. Any serious editor would have sent him back to do his homework.

Having said all that, it is impossible to ignore the fact that at the root of the story there is definitely a serious problem, and it is no coincidence that the former Israeli ambassador to Germany, Avi Primor, speaking on the current events TV show “ London and Kirschenbaum” on Sunday [23 August 2009], called for an investigation into the subject.

There is ample evidence that trade in organs has been done in Israel, at least for the purposes of research and teaching. That was clearly revealed by the affair of Prof. Yehudah Hiss of the pathological institute at Abu-Kabir, who robbed organs from bodies even of IDF soldiers. If someone takes organs from Jews surely it is not beyond imagining that they might do the same with the bodies of Palestinians.

Ynet reported on the discussion of that matter in the Knesset on 8/1/2002 and the following passage appeared in its report:

“In the course of the debate in the plenary session, Knesset Members Ahmad Tibi and Hashim Mahameed said that parts of bodies of Palestinians that had been taken to the Institute after terrorist attacks, among other things, had been made use of. MK Mahameed claimed that he had received that information from Palestinian doctors who related that “bodies had been returned to them empty of organs”, in his words. He demanded that Hiss be put on trial Hiss for those acts.” http://www.ynet.co.il/articles/1,7340,L-1516428,00.html

The report of the Committee that looked into the actions and the procedures at the medical institute at Abu Kabir included the following points:

The Institute harvests organs for the purposes of teaching and research, without the consent of the families, in contravention of the Law of Anatomy and Pathology, and on the basis of incorrect self-interpretation.

The Institute transfers organs to research institutes and universities, in return for payments and reimbursement of expenses.

The Institute does not have full documentation regarding the organs that were harvested from for the purposes of research and instruction.

All the research done at the Institute were done with the full knowledge and agreement of Prof. Hiss.

Prof. Hiss did not conform to the instructions of the Ministry of Health regarding research, instruction and the consent of the families. The management of the Institute attempted to cover up and to obscure the the seriousness of the acts that appear in the report.

Irregularities were discovered in registration of the money that was given to the Institute in return to for the salvaging of the organs.

On the one hand, the introduction of foreign materials into the bodies of deceased people for the purpose of giving the body a reasonable appearance before its burial, does not constitute disrespectful treatment of the deceased; on the contrary, it is an act that is done for the to for the sake of the dignity of the deceased and that of the family. On the other hand, when organs are taken from the body without the consent family for any purpose at all, then the introduction of foreign material into the body of the deceased for cosmetic purposes is it is an insult to the honour of the deceased and his family.

http://www.ynet.co.il/articles/1,7340,L-653248,00.html

[The following passages concerning the testimony of the head of the official investigation commission, Judge Areyh Segalson were added on 28.8.2009 http://cafe.themarker.com/view.php?t=1197425]

In the report it was said that the organs had been harvested for the purposes of research and instruction and the payment that was received was “only” to cover the expenses and apparently did not include profit. In Judge Segalson’s testimony to the Labour, Welfare and Health Committee (5/8/2003) things sounded a bit different and he termed the phrase “covering expenses” [Heb: kisui ha-hotza’ot] a “rationalization”, one could even say disingenuousness or a swindle. It can be seen that the organs were also sold outside the country and that Judge Segalson was quite shocked at what he saw at Abu-Kabir. That is to say, one can certainly speak of commerce in organs, even though the language of the report was more cautious.
Here is an excerpt from Aryeh Segalson’s testimony:

It is permitted to sell a temporal bridge outside the country for research, with a letter that is written in English and Professor Hiss confirms this, they send it out of the country. But, what is the self-justification? We did not sell, we took a fee for the expenses we incurred in salvaging that bone or the hyoid bone. It revolted me, because when I go to buy a suit I do not ask if it is the price of its cost, or the price of a button or the price of the lining. I buy a suit. The one who paid, that doctor who made the authorizations and I have the price, 300 Shekels for one bone. It goes abroad. If they took 300 Shekels or 250 whether it’s the price of the cost or the price of the profit, that doesn’t change the fact that is its price. We’ll talk about the price later.

Regarding the organs that were removed here are excerpts from Segalson’s testimony:

I’m telling you why I do: because they regularly removed testicles. From every man they removed one testicle. That testicle is also mine, just as they took down from the refrigerator that I was standing beside them and I also helped to put them in place, when they brought them from Holon. From the female soldier they take the tag, the watch, put them in a pouch and they register everything, because that is her property and they give it to the family. Testicles are property too, gentlemen. If there are two, it’s not spark-plugs, you don’t replace them. It is quite possible, and here I am proceeding to the call for leniency in the addition to the report, it is quite possible, as I heard, I do not want to read the report, that without research medicine would be set back 500 years. I understand that very well, but please, if that’s the way it is, change the law. Write in the law that it is permitted to dissect, permitted to do research …

Aryeh Segalson:

I do not know if it is judicial or non-judicial. I have it written here in the protocol on page 4 and I put it to Professor Hiss, that they took bones that were sent out of the country and Professor Hiss replied, that’s how it is written in the protocol: “I am not guilty, I did not publish the protocol.” I am aware of that occurrence, I do not remember the name of that doctor, but it is indeed true that there is such a document and I confirm it. I confirm that, I confirm that such a document exists. That is to say, they took organs out of the country for research purposes. The justification was that it was done for the cost of salvaging bones.

In 2005 the newspaper Haaretz reported:

“Palestinian corpse used for IDF anatomy lesson”

Amos Harel 28 January 2005

The Breaking the Silence organization has collected new testimony from Israel Defense Forces soldiers on harsh actions carried out during the course of the fighting in the territories.

Two of the testimonies pertain to a military doctor who gave medics lessons in anatomy using the bodies of Palestinians killed by Israeli forces.

IDf sources said on Thursday that the army was unaware of the incidents and that the reports would be investigated.

An IDF conscript who served as a medic in the Ramallah district some two years ago told Haaretz that the “lesson” had taken place following a clash between an armed Palestinian and an IDF force.

The soldier said that the Palestinian’s body had been riddled with bullets and that some of his internal organs had spilled out. The doctor pronounced the man dead and then “took out a knife and began to cut off parts of the body,” the soldier said.

“He explained the various parts to us – the membrane that covers the lungs, the layers of the skin, the liver, stuff like that,” the soldier continued.

“I didn’t say anything because I was still new in the army. Two of the medics moved away, and one of them threw up. It was all done very brutally. It was simply contempt for the body. I saw other dead enemy bodies during my service. No other doctor did anything like that.”

The second report came from a soldier who served in Hebron in October 2000. The soldier told Breaking the Silence that a comrade had fired live rounds at a Palestinian youth, Mansour Taha Ahmed, 21, who was standing some distance from a group of stone-throwers.

The soldier said he was firing rubber bullets at the stone-throwers when he suddenly heard his comrade fire live rounds, killing the young man.

No Military Police investigation was opened into the incident.

http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/pages/ShArt.jhtml?itemNo=533018

The Swedish journalist certainly could have discovered those facts if he had made a little effort. Maybe the story be look less juicy, since it was not just about Palestinians; and although it appears that Prof. Hiss was defended by the Health Minister, Nissim Dahan, it is very hard to say that the entire State of Israel was standing behind him.

Translated from Hebrew by George Malent

There has been much anger about the Israeli firm Ahava, based in the Occupied Territories near the Dead Sea, and using mock environmental credential to cover its illegal pudenda, of working illegally in occupied Palestine, a fact never mentioned in its advertisements! Read below about the latest action against this firm:

“Ahava is a dirty business”

MUD-PACK PICKET 1PM SATURDAY SEPT 19, COVENT GARDEN

Ahava, meaning “love” in Hebrew, is the name of an Israeli beauty products company based in the illegal West Bank settlement of Mitzpe Shalem. It exploits Dead Sea minerals to profit from the occupation.

On September 19th we are going to emulate Code Pink protesters in other parts of the world who have smeared themselves with mud to drive home the message – “Ahava is a dirty business”.

Join us outside 39 Monmouth Street, London WC2H 9DD, 1-3 pm

Find it at http://www.ahava.com/_Uploads/dbsAttachedFiles/london_contact.pdf

Bring mudpacks (eg: “Mud therapy” available from Superdrug at £1.95 a tube) .

See these links for background information and news of worldwide protest actions

http://www.bigcampaign.org/index.php?page=ahava

http://www.bigcampaign.org/index.php?mact=CGBlog,cntnt01,detail,0&cntnt01articleid=43&cntnt01returnid=144

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L32Nama7ad8

A big thank you: The Electronic Intifada, 4 September 2009

Ilan Pappe

Israel's wall as seen from Ramallah in the occupied West Bank. (Fadi Arouri/MaanImages)
Israel's wall as seen from Ramallah in the occupied West Bank. (Fadi Arouri/MaanImages)

3 September 2009

Today was a unique day in the history of media coverage and discussion in Israel. All the electronic agencies, radio and television alike, discussed the occupation and the oppression of the Palestinians and more importantly, the possible price tag attached to it. It lasted only for 12 hours and tomorrow the obedient Israeli media will return to parrot the governmental new message to the masses that the “conflict” has ended and is about to be solved. On the one hand, you already have happy-go-lucky Palestinians in the West Bank (see the latest reports by Thomas Friedman in The New York Times and Ari Shavit in Haaretz). And on the other, alas, those who opted out from the blissful new reality: the oppressed Palestinians who still live under Hamas’ dictatorship in the Gaza Strip.

Tomorrow we all will go back to the dismal reality in which Palestinian students are imprisoned daily without trial in Nablus, Palestinian children are killed near Ramallah, as also happened today. We will return to the reality of house demolitions as occurred two weeks ago in Jerusalem, of the continued strangulation of the Gaza Strip and the overall dispossession of Palestinians, wherever they are. But today of all days, those of us who happened to be here on the ground saw a light, a very powerful light, illuminating for a very short moment, the horizon of a different reality of peace and reconciliation.

And it was all due to the decision of the Norwegian government to withdraw its investments in the Israeli hi-tech company Elbit (due to the latter’s involvement in the construction and maintenance of the apartheid wall). We have to keep a proportional view on this: only one section of Elbit, Elbit Systems, was affected. But the significance is not about who was targeted, but rather who took the decision: the Norwegian ministry of finance through its ethical council. No less important was the manner in which it was taken: the minister herself announced the move in a press conference. This is what transformed for a short while the media scene in the Zionist state.

Usually matters of foreign or military relevance are discussed in the Israeli media by generals or recruited political scientists from the local academia who provide the interviewers with what they want to hear as commentary. In this case, as one could gather from the questions they have posed to the individuals they invited, they wished to hear that the Muslim minority in Norway is behind this. Or that traditional anti-Semitism explains it and that the newly formed Elders of anti-Zion, with the new recruits — the Iranian and Libyan governments — concocted it. But since the target was a hi-tech company, the commentators invited to the live bulletins were either experts on economy and finance, such as the economic correspondents of the local dailies or captains of the local industry and hi-tech companies. The views of these commentators are a far cry from those usually expressed here in this and similar venues. But they do deal with economic realities and facts of life, and less with mythology and ideological fabrications. And they explained, on prime time, that it is actually the Norwegian sensitivity to human rights that begot this last action and quite likely similar actions will be taken in the future. For the readers of this site, this may sound boring or too elementary, but the average listener and viewer in Israel has not been exposed to such a clear deduction in the mainstream media by mainstream journalists and personalities for a very long time.

The significance of this alas, short lived exposure of what lies behind the apartheid wall and the fences that encircle the West Bank and the Gaza Strip stems from the seniority of Kristin Halvorsen, the Norwegian finance minister who herself announced the decision to divest. It is the first official act of this kind by a Western government. It is reminiscent of the first day when governments heeded the pressures of their societies in the West to act against apartheid South Africa. We were all moved, and rightly so, when brave trade unions took such decisions against Israel; we were all very hopeful when the International Court of Justice ruled against the wall and when courageous individuals, the last one being the filmmaker Ken Loach, took a firm stand against participating in anything which officially represents Israel. But now there is an evolution, a quantum leap forward and a momentum we have to keep and maintain!

This is a clear message for all the good people in the West looking for ways of helping the Palestinians in their moment of nadir. They want to march and sail peacefully to Gaza, they wish to facilitate more meetings between Israelis and Palestinians and are adamant despite all the hurdles to volunteer in the occupied territories. These are all noble actions but changing the public opinion in the West, is what people in the West can do best. And if one government has already shifted significantly the name and the rules of the game — be it in a very minor decision that may still be revised under the tidal Zionist reaction, others will surely follow. For the time being all we can say is a huge thank you to a brave politician that will enter the pages of history as someone who paved the way to a better future for everyone in Israel and Palestine.

Ilan Pappe is chair in the Department of History at the University of Exeter.

August 31, 2009

Below is a letter to the organisers of TIFF in Toronto, decrying their decision to hold a special even programme for Tel Aviv’s 100th birthday:

Dear organisers of TIFF,
As a former Israeli (but first and foremost as a human being) I feel outraged by your decision to spotlight Tel Aviv in your programme.  As I show in  my numerous publications on Israeli cinema, Tel Aviv (not accidentally named the “White City,”in Zionist and Israeli propaganda) hides behind its claim to be a modern, progressive and essentially cosmopolitan city, the existence of Jaffa, long considered Tel Aviv’s “primitive” and backwards alter ego.  Jaffa’s population was ethnically cleansed in 1948 and the remaining Palestinians who still live there are subject to an ongoing and deliberate institutional and individual discrimination.

Although I was born in Tel Aviv I decided to leave Israel in 2001 to protest against its escalating oppression of the Palestinian people. The recent carnage in Gaza was a reminder, not only to me, but to the whole world, of the criminal nature of the Israeli state.  Your decision to spotlight Tel Aviv in your festival amounts to an attempt to whitewash the crimes committed by Israel, and coordinated from the “Bunker,” the Israeli Army’s headquarters located at the center of Tel Aviv, not far from the maternity hospital where I was born.  This conflation of the so called civilian life of Tel Aviv, and its military core is what this city is  about.  It is a metaphor for fortress Israel disguised as the “only democracy in the Middle East.”

I hope that you would reflect on your misconceived decision and learn the correct lessons from it.

Yours sincerely,

Prof. Yosefa Loshitzky

A new article on BDS:

Boycotts as a Legitimate Means of Resistance
As Determined by the Oppressed People
by Kim Petersen / August 29th, 2009

Prejudice does not always come with an ugly face. The same holds for Zionism and racism. It is entirely possible for well-intentioned people to hold a prejudice and, even worse, act on held prejudices.

Uri Avnery opposes the brutality inflicted on Palestinians. He campaigns for peace with Palestinians. But he also has a Zionist past. He is European born and fought for the terrorist Irgun in perpetration of a holocaust (Nakba) against Palestinans. He later renounced Irgun’s tactics. He is antiwar, but he is not anti-the fruits of war. He approves of a two state solution. In other words, Israeli Jews will keep the fruits of their dispossessing others — this while continuing to press for the return of what they were dispossessed.1
Avnery advocates selective use of tactics against Zionism. This is apparent when it comes to an international boycott of Israel. Avnery states that no one is better qualified than South African archbishop Desmond Tutu to answer this question.2
What does Tutu say? He has called on the international community to treat Israel as it treated apartheid South Africa. Tutu supports the divestment campaign against Israel.3
Avnery’s fellow Israeli, Neve Gordon, agrees that it is time for a boycott.4 Avnery laments, “I am sorry that I cannot agree with him this time – neither about the similarity with South Africa nor about the efficacy of a boycott of Israel.”
Indeed, the apartheids — while in many respects similar — are also different. Gary Zaztman pointed to a key difference:
For all its serious and undoubted evils and the numerous crimes against humanity committed in its name, including physical slaughters, South African white-racist apartheid was not premised on committing genocide. Zionism, on the other hand, has been committed to dissolving the social, cultural, political and economic integrity of the Palestinian people, i.e., genocide, from the outset, at least as early as Theodor Herzl’s injunction in his diaries that the “transfer” of the Palestinian “penniless population” elsewhere be conducted “discreetly and circumspectly.”5
Boycotts as a Tactic against Racism
Avnery says Tutu told him: “The boycott was immensely important, much more than the armed struggle.”
But it was the revolutionary, Nelson Mandela, who refused to give up the right to armed struggle, who negotiated the dismantling of South African apartheid.6
Tutu also told Avnery, “The importance of the boycott was not only economic but also moral.”
Avnery writes, “It seems to me that Tutu’s answer emphasizes the huge difference between the South African reality at the time and ours today.”
So what is Avnery saying? First he states that Tutu is best qualified person to speak to the effectiveness of boycotting as a tool in the fight against racism, then he says Tutu has it wrong. So is Avnery saying, then, that he is best qualified to speak on the effectiveness of boycotts against racism?
Avnery fears that Israeli Jews will feel “the whole world is against us.”
However, isn’t that, in a sense, what the purpose is: to show that the whole world is against Jewish racism against Palestinians? It must be emphasized that the world is not against Jews, as Israeli propaganda would choose to portray it. Although he doesn’t specifically state it, Avnery is using a version of the anti-Semitism smear: if you are against anything Israel does, then you are against Israelis. Hence, you are anti-Semitic. This grotesque perversion of morality and logic holds that to be against racism toward Palestinians makes one anti-Semitic.
Avnery admits, “In South Africa, the world-wide boycott helped in strengthening the majority and steeling [sic] it for the struggle. The impact of a boycott on Israel would be the exact opposite: it would push the large majority into the arms of the extreme right and create a fortress mentality against the ‘anti-Semitic world’. (The boycott would, of course, have a different impact on the Palestinians, but that is not the aim of those who advocate it.)”
Avnery merely states what is the current status quo. Israel is already hunkered down in an extreme right fortress mentality. The boycott is not the cause. Avnery fixates on the population dynamics. What is the relevance of majority and minority in Avnery’s reasoning? It would seem that Palestinians being in the minority – and the fact that the Palestinians support the boycott – to be even greater reason for international support of the boycott. Who and what is Avnery supporting: Palestinians from racism or Israeli Jews from the economic effects and moral stigma of an international boycott?
As for the aim of the boycott campaign: “to deny Israel the financial means to continue to kill Palestinians and occupy the lands.”7
Avnery raises “the Holocaust” arguing that Jewish suffering has imprinted itself deeply on the Jewish soul. That the Nazis rounded up Jews in concentration was a moral outrage. But what is the lesson of World War II? That suffering imposed on any identifiable group of people is evil and wrong, or that one group can appropriate a holocaust, make it their own, and use past suffering as a shield to inflict a holocaust on another people? Avnery argues that boycotting Jews will remind them of Nazism, but when Jews use Nazi-type techniques what should they be reminded of?
Avnery says it is okay to boycott of the product of the “settlements.” He draws a distinction between “settlers” (i.e., “colonisers”) and other Israeli Jews. How then does Avnery rationalize the fact that the “settlers” are in the West Bank?
Avnery asserts, “Those who call for a boycott act out of despair. And that is the root of the matter.” Indeed, despair is life for many Palestinians under occupation or in refugee camps.
Avnery states that an international boycott would be difficult to achieve, and the US would not be behind it. It was not easy to achieve against the apartheid regimes in South Africa either. Is that a reason not to try? Did not the US oppose a boycott of South Africa? Yes, it might take a long time. But times do change. The US (and its western allies’s) recalcitrance was steam rolled in Venezuela, Cuba, Bolivia, and elsewhere. Empires have risen and fallen throughout history.
Avnery finds that the tactic of boycotting is “an example of a faulty diagnosis leading to faulty treatment. To be precise: the mistaken assumption that the Israeli-Palestinian conflict resembles the South African experience leads to a mistaken choice of strategy.”
Avnery continues, “In South Africa there was total agreement between the two sides about the unity of the country. The struggle was about the regime. Both Whites and Blacks considered themselves South Africans and were determined to keep the country intact. The Whites did not want partition, and indeed could not want it, because their economy was based on the labor of the Blacks.”
Seems there is some faulty analysis going on. “Whites did not want partition”? How can Avnery state something so factually inaccurate? What were Venda, Lebowa, the Bantustans, if not sections of South Africa partitioned off by the White government? Furthermore, that Zionism is now no longer dependent on Palestinian labor does not mask that it at one time was dependent on such labor; Avnery is cherry picking in his argument. Denying Palestinians the right to work in historical Palestine is a tactic that evolved from Zionism.
Also, how is it that Avnery can argue against an international boycott of Israel when Israel maintains a crushing illegal embargo against Palestinians – a war crime? As long as Israel uses such a tactic, then resistance through boycott, certainly, is legitimate.
Avnery says Israeli Jews and Palestinian Arabs have nothing in common. However, this same lack of commonality was true between White and Black South Africans as well. Nonetheless, I take exception with the thrust of such argumentation. It prepares the ground for racism. Israeli Jews, Palestinians, Black and White South Africans are all humans. They all eat, work, sleep, have dreams, have families. This should be reason enough to act humanely toward each other: love of humanity. It is entirely possible to embrace our shared humanity and respect diversity.
Avnery concludes, “In short: the two conflicts are fundamentally different. Therefore, the methods of struggle, too, must necessarily be different.”
This is logically flawed reasoning, much like the logical and moral flaw that being a victim of a genocide minimizes one’s own culpability in a subsequent genocide. One suspects that Avnery may well be the victim of a pained conscience and cognitive dissonance. I submit that the two “conflicts”8 are fundamentally similar. Fundamentally, colonial Israel and colonial South Africa share these hallmarks: a racially, culturally, spiritually, linguistically different group of outsiders through preponderant violence dispossessed Indigenous peoples of their homeland, and set up an apartheid system which humiliates the Indigenous peoples and privileges the occupiers.
Avnery focuses on certain “fundamentals” — which I submit are not fundamentals but nuances — that he considers different.
Avnery’s solution lies with “a comprehensive and detailed peace plan” from US president Barack Obama and “the full persuasive power of the United States” to lead to “a path of peace with Palestine.”
Avnery remembers well previous US-backed peace plans, like Oslo and the Roadmap. Why, then, does he cast his audacious hope on AIPAC appeaser Obama? Avnery hopes that Israeli Jews will realize that peace with Palestinians is the way? The peace activist touts a solution that has failed and been rejected many times. He rejects a solution that worked in South African because of the sensibilities of the oppressors.
But let us examine Avnery’s logic that fundamentally different “conflicts” demand different struggles.
Oppression is overthrown by struggle. Fundamentally different “conflicts” can succeed through similar struggles. As one example, revolutionaries overthrew an American-backed dictatorship in Cuba through armed struggle and Cuban revoluntionaries defeated South African forces in Angola through armed struggle.9
In his article’s finale, seemingly assured of his own argumentation over the person he deems the best qualified authority on boycotts as a tool to overcome apartheid, Avnery points to a prayer of Tutu’s – a prayer that would serve all of us well:
“Dear God, when I am wrong, please make me willing to see my mistake. And when I am right – please make me tolerable to live with.”
Hopefully, Avnery abides by such humbleness when he sees the error of his ways as well.
Notes:
See Dinah Spritzer, “Last chance for Holocaust restitution?” JTA, 30 June 2009. [↩]
Uri Avnery, “Tutu’s Prayer,” Gush Shalom, 29 August 2009. [↩]
Desmond Tutu, “Israel: Time to Divest,” New Internationalist magazine, January/February 2003. Available online at Third World Traveler. [↩]
Neve Gordon, “Boycott Israel,” Los Angeles Times, 20 August 2009. [↩]
Gary Zatzman, “The Notion of the ‘Jewish State’ as an ‘Apartheid Regime’ is a Liberal-Zionist One,” Dissident Voice, 21 November 2005. [↩]
See Bill Keller, Tree Shaker: The Story of Nelson Mandela (Boston: Kingfisher, 2008). Mandela wanted to pursue a peaceful, non-violent settlement, but when faced with the violence of state power he felt compelled to use violence as a method of struggle. Mandela did emphasize that this violence was not terrorism: 98. [↩]
”Aim of the boycott campaign,” Boycott Israel Now. [↩]
The word “conflict” minimizes the atrocities wreaked on Palestinians and South Africans by their oppressors. [↩]
Isaac Saney contends that the Battle of Cuito Cuanavale was the “turning point in the struggle against apartheid. ”Isaac Saney, “The Story of How Cuba Helped to Free Africa,” Morning Star, 4 November 2005. Available at Embajada de Cuba en Egipto. [↩]

A very important piece in Ha’aretz, by Anat Matar from Tel Aviv University, making the case for academic resistance to Israeli policies, and for being prepared to pay the price for supporting the BDS initiative

ANALYSIS / Israeli academics must pay price to end occupation: Ha’aretz

By Anat Matar
Several days ago Dr. Neve Gordon of Ben-Gurion University of the Negev published an opinion piece in the Los Angeles Times. In that article he explained why, after years of activity in the peace camp here, he has decided to pin his hopes on applying external pressure on Israel – including sanctions, divestment and an economic, cultural and academic boycott.
He believes, and so do I, that only when the Israeli society’s well-heeled strata pay a real price for the continuous occupation will they finally take genuine steps to put an end to it.

Gordon looks at the Israeli society and sees an apartheid state. While the Palestinians’ living conditions deteriorate, many Israelis are benefiting from the occupation. In between the two sides, Israeli society is sinking into complete denial – drawn into extreme hatred and violence. The academic community has an important role to play in this process. Yet, instead of sounding the alarm, it wakes up only when someone dares approach the international community and desperately call for help.
The worn-out slogan that everybody raises in this context is “academic freedom,” but it is time to somewhat crack this myth.
The appeal to academic freedom was born during the Enlightenment, when ruling powers tried to suppress independent minded thinkers. Already then, more than 200 years ago, Imannuel Kant differentiated between academics whose expertise (law, theology, and medicine) served the establishment and those who had neither power nor proximity to power. As for the first, he said, there was no sense in talking about “freedom” or “independent thought” as any use of such terminology is cynical.
Since then, cynicism has spread to other faculties as well. At best academic freedom was perceived as the right not to ask troubling questions. At worst was the right to harass whomever asked too much.
When the flag of academic freedom is raised, the oppressor and not the oppressed is usually the one who flies it. What is that academic freedom that so interests the academic community in Israel? When, for example, has it shown concern for the state of academic freedom in the occupied territories?
This school year in Gaza will open in shattered classrooms as there are no building materials there for rehabilitating the ruins; without notebooks, books and writing utensils that cannot be brought into Gaza because of the goods embargo (yes, Israel may boycott schools there and no cry is heard).
Hundreds of students in West Bank universities are under arrest or detention in Israeli jails, usually because they belong to student organizations that the ruling power does not like.
The separation fence and the barriers prevent students and lecturers from reaching classes, libraries and tests. Attending conferences abroad is almost unthinkable and the entry of experts who bear foreign passports is permitted only sparingly.
On the other hand, members of the Israeli academia staunchly guard their right to research what the regime expects them to research and appoint former army officers to university positions. Tel Aviv University alone prides itself over the fact that the Defense Ministry is funding 55 of its research projects and that DARPA, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency in the U.S. Defense Department, is funding nine more. All the universities offer special study programs for the defense establishment.
Are those programs met with any protest? In contrast with the accepted impression, only few lecturers speak up decisively against the occupation, its effect and the increasingly bestial nature of the State of Israel.
The vast majority retains its freedom to be indifferent, up to the moment that someone begs the international community for rescue. Then the voices rise from right and left, the indifference disappears, and violence replaces it: Boycott Israeli universities? This strikes at the holy of holies, academic freedom!

The writer is a lecturer in Tel Aviv University’s Department of Philosophy.

Army’s West Bank Tactics Imported To Negev: ZMag

August 28, 2009 By  Jonathan Cook

(Amra) — The inhabitants of the Bedouin village of Amra have good reason to fear that the harsh tactics used by the Israeli army against Palestinians in the occupied West Bank have been imported to their small corner of Israel’s Negev desert.
Over the summer, the Tarabin tribe, all of them Israeli citizens, have had the sole access road to their homes sealed off, while the dirt track they must use instead is regularly blocked by temporary checkpoints at which their papers and vehicles are inspected at length.
Coils of razor wire encircle much of the village, and children as young as eight have been arrested in a series of night-time raids.
“Four-fifths of our youngsters now have files with the police and our drivers are being repeatedly fined for supposed traffic violations,” said Tulab Tarabin, one of Amra’s 400 Bedouin inhabitants. “Every time we are stopped, the police ask us: ‘Why don’t you leave?'”
Lawyers and human rights activists say a campaign of pressure is being organised against the Tarabin at the behest of a nearby Jewish community, Omer, which is determined to build a neighbourhood for Israeli army officers on the tribe’s land.
“The policy in Israel is that when Jews need land, the Bedouin must move – no matter how long they have been living in their homes or whether their communities predate Israel’s creation,” said Morad al Sana, a lawyer with the Adalah legal centre for Israel’s Arab minority. “The Tarabin’s crime is that they refuse to budge.”
The 180,000 Bedouin in the Negev have never been welcome, says Oren Yiftachel, a geographer at Ben Gurion University of the Negev in Beersheva. They are descendants of a few thousand who managed to avoid expulsion from the southern semi-desert region during the 1948 war that founded Israel.
Many of the surviving Bedouin, including the Tarabin, were forcibly relocated from their extensive ancestral lands in the 1950s to an area close to the Negev’s main city, Beersheva, Prof Yiftachel said. Israel declared the Bedouin lands as “state land” and established a series of overcrowded “townships” to house the tribes instead.
“The stated goal is one of ‘Judaisation’,” Prof Yiftachel added, referring to a long-standing policy of concentrating the rural Bedouin into urban reservations to free up land for Jewish settlement. About half of the Negev’s Bedouin, some 90,000, have refused to move.
According to a recent report from the Association of Civil Rights in Israel (ACRI), the townships have “continuously ranked as the poorest, least developed and most crime-ridden towns in Israel”.
The refuseniks, such as the Tarabin, have faced unrelenting pressure to leave their 45 rural communities, none of which is recognised by the state. The villagers endure “third world conditions”, according to ACRI.
“The unrecognised villages are denied basic services to their homes, including water and electricity, and the villages themselves have no master plans,” Mr al Sana said.
As a result, he added, the villagers are forced to live in tin shacks and tents because concrete homes are invariably destroyed by the authorities. In the past two years, several shacks as well as the local kindergarten in Amra have been demolished.
The stark contrast between the dusty encampment of Amra and the green lawns and smart villas of Omer, only a stone’s throw away and the country’s third wealthiest community, is unsettling even for some of Omer’s 7,000 residents.
One, Yitzhak Nevo, a philosophy professor at Ben Gurion University and a leading activist with Dukium, a Negev coexistence group, said that, although the lands on which the Tarabin live fall under Omer’s jurisdiction, the Bedouin have been entirely excluded. “Even though they live within Omer’s municipal limits, their children get no education from us; our health clinic does not treat them; they are not hooked up to our water or electricity supplies and their refuse is not collected.”
He said Amra had been treated as nothing more than an eyesore until the mid-1990s when the powerful mayor, Pinhas Badash, decided that the Tarabin were both harming property values and obstructing the town’s expansion plans.
As Omer’s new neighbourhoods reached the limits of Amra, Mr Badash stepped up the pressure on the villagers to leave. A few years ago he pushed through the building of a new community for the Tarabin away from Omer. Two-thirds of the tribe relocated, while the remainder fought the attempted eviction through the courts.
“It was a very dirty business in which those in the tribe who left first were offered cheap land on which to build while the rest were threatened that they would be offered nothing,” Mr al Sana said.
Amra’s remaining Bedouin have found themselves surrounded by a tall wire fence to separate them from Omer. Two gates, ordered by the courts to ensure the Bedouin continued to have road access through the town, were sealed this year.
Since the beginning of the summer police patrol Amra’s side of the fence around the clock and the Tarabin report that a private security firm chases off any of them found inside Omer.
Nissim Nir, a spokesman for Mr Badash, denied that the Tarabin were being hounded. Omer made a generous offer to relocate them from their “illegal” site, he said.
Recently Mr Badash announced that thousands of acres around Omer would be forested with the intention of stopping the Bedouin from returning to the area once they had been evicted.
Mr Tarabin, 33, accused the police of being little more than hired hands carrying out Mr Badash’s plan.
“We are being suffocated. There are night-time searches of our homes using bogus pretexts, and arrests of young children. We are photographed and questioned as we go about our business. At the roadblocks they endlessly check cars entering and leaving, and fines are issued. No one visits us unless they have to, and we stay home unless we have to leave.”
He added: “Why is it so impossible for Omer to imagine allowing us to be a neighbourhood of the town?”

BDS hits again! This time in Israel itself:

Curators pull out of Tel Aviv art biennial over Gaza war protest: Ha’aretz

Two international curators who were to participate in the planning of ArtTLV, an art biennial taking place in Israel in September, have pulled out of the project after their Israeli counterparts refused to publish articles condemning Israel’s Operation Cast Lead in Gaza and to arrange a symposium on art and war.
The two curators, Viktor Misiano from Russia, and Zdenka Badovinac from Slovenia, had visited Israel prior to the three-week-long operation in Gaza, which began in December 2008.

After the pair pulled out, the curatorial responsibilities were transferred to veteran Israeli curator Edna Moshenson and her colleague Maayan Sheleff.
One of the event organizers, Irit Sommer of Sommer Contemporary Art gallery in Tel Aviv, said the idea for an international collaboration came up in the initial planning stages. But she said this week that she understands Misiano and Badovinac’s decision.
“We decided to invite international curators to participate in the project, but when they arrived war broke between us and they decided they weren’t able to curate an exhibition under the conditions we set. Despite it we’re still on good terms. We have even expressed some interest in an alternative project they’ve suggested with Israeli artists aimed to serve as a platform for public appeal with anti-war references. The idea is great but we currently lack the finances to back it. We’ve invited them to attend the September opening at our expense and I hope they will.”
The project manager, Medi Shavid, said that an international biennial doesn’t require international curators, as it’s enough to display art from around the world.
“It was our decision to terminate the collaboration due to their conditions,” said Shavid. “We chose not to go through with it, and also realized that their budget demands were beyond our means. So we rolled up our sleeves and created an excellent international exhibition by ourselves.”
“It’s a tremendous opportunity to be able to team up with international curators and I hope next year our budget will enable us to expand the project,” said Edna Moshenson, the Art TLV curator. “This year the exhibition is collaboration between foreign and Israeli artists.”

Viktor Misiano and Zdenka Badovinac are unavailable to respond.

AN IMPOSSIBLE RECONCILIATION : Electronic Intifada

By Hasan Abu Nimah, The Electronic Intifada, 27 August 2009

It may not be unknown that Abbas and his Ramallah Authority can only function within specified parameters
tailored for the convenience, indeed the security needs, of the occupying power and the pro-Israel policies of its
foreign supporters. Hamas has no place within that tightly built scheme. Despite Hamas’ willingness to enter the
political system and play by the rules, the idea has been to eliminate the resistance movement from the equation
completely, permitting it no political role whatsoever.
Hasan Abu Nimah comments.

REVIEW: ERASING THE BORDERS IN “A MAP OF HOME” : Electronic Intifada

By Robin Yassin-Kassab, The Electronic Intifada, 31 August 2009

Randa Jarrar’s A Map of Home is a beautifully achieved coming of age novel which follows a clever girl through a
war, a domestic battlefield, and repeated forced migrations. For our heroine, these events are aspects of normal everyday life (because everything’s normal when it happens to you), like school, friends, family and shopping. Robin Yassin-Kassab reviews for The Electronic Intifada.

LEBANON’S POLITICS OF REAL ESTATE: Electronic Intifada

By Sarah Irving, Electronic Lebanon, 31 August 2009

Nostalgia, insists architect and academic Rami Daher, is a legitimate feeling. While most individuals’ instinctive
thoughts of the glories of Levantine architecture might run to ancient mosques, castles and palaces, Daher’s
yearning is towards an era in living memory, and on a more everyday scale. Sarah Irving reports for Electronic
Lebanon.

TORONTO FILM FESTIVAL PROTESTED FOR TEL AVIV SPOTLIGHT: Electronic Intifada

Press Release, PACBI, 31 August 2009

The Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel is gravely concerned that the Toronto
International Film Festival 2009 has decided to spotlight Tel Aviv for its inaugural City-to-City program. We
encourage filmmakers and audiences to boycott the Spotlight as it extends a gesture of “goodwill” to a colonial and apartheid regime which is violating Palestinian human rights with utter impunity.

LEBANON : HUMAN RIGHTS/DEVELOPMENT: Electronic Intifada

NAHR AL-BARED A TEST CASE FOR PALESTINIAN REFUGEES IN LEBANON
By Ray Smith, Electronic Lebanon, 27 August 2009

NAHR AL-BARED, Lebanon (IPS) – Palestinian refugees at Nahr al-Bared in north Lebanon are living under tight military siege two years after a war destroyed the refugee camp. It has now become a test case for a new approach in Lebanon’s security policy towards Palestinian refugee camps.

EVICTION OF ISRAEL’S BEDOUIN PARALLELS ARMY’S WEST BANK TACTICS: Electronic Intifada

By Jonathan Cook, The Electronic Intifada, 27 August 2009

The inhabitants of the Bedouin village of Amra have good reason to fear that the harsh tactics used by the Israeli
army against Palestinians in the occupied West Bank have been imported to their small corner of Israel’s Negev
desert. Over the summer, the Tarabin tribe, all of them Israeli citizens, have had the sole access road to their
homes sealed off, while the dirt track they must use instead is regularly blocked by temporary checkpoints at
which their papers and vehicles are inspected at length.

PRISON WALLS: Electronic Intifada

By Joy Ellison, Live from Palestine, 27 August 2009

“Nasser says hello,” the woman said as she stood in my doorway and smiled. I was barely able to choke out, “Say
hello to him too.” Nasser, the woman’s husband, was in prison. He was arrested on 20 July during a peaceful
demonstration in his West Bank village of al-Tuwani. He did nothing wrong, nothing but build a house on land he owns. A Palestinian need do nothing more to be treated like a criminal. Joy Ellison writes from al-Tuwani,
occupied West Bank.