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How Israel Ploughs a Racist Furrow on Social Media

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If You Call for Exterminating Arabs - that's freedom of speech
If you Call for Intifada then that's incitement

If you are an Israeli Jew and you post the most obnoxious filth about Arabs on social media or the Internet then you can rest assured that there will be no legal consequences.  However if you are a Palestinian and post something like ‘“I am on the waiting list.” then you risk being arrested, detained, beaten up or whatever by the forces of the State.  Of course in theory the law applies equally to everyone but in Israel,  which has a much cleverer form of Apartheid than in South Africa, not everything is written down. 









Raed Saleh of Israel's Northern Islamic League- sentence to 9 months imprisonment for 'incitement to race hatred'
in Israel only the victims of racism get gaoled
Instead discrimination is embedded into long-standing administrative practices.  There are shared understandings between those who control the state apparatus which negate the need for laws specifying that Arabs will be prosecuted for x and y whereas Jews will not be prosecuted.  So just as the Access to Communities Act passed last year left the decision on whether to accept residents to existing residents in communities with less than 500 people, in the full knowledge that this would be used by Jewish residents to bar Arab residents on the grounds that they ‘wouldn’t fit in’ there was nothing in the legislation specifying this.  It was all understood as a way of getting around the Supreme Court decision in Kadan that the State and the JNF couldn’t discriminate in the leasing or renting of land or property between Arabs and Jews.
 graffiti reading in Hebrew 'Jesus monkey, Maria cow, Tag price', sprayed on the walls of Deir Rafat Catholic convent in April near the Israeli city of Beit Shemesh, west of Jerusalem (AFP)
So too it is with social media.  In not much more than 5 minutes going through posts on The Times of Israel site I came across calls to exterminate Arabs and much more besides.  Will the person who posted this or equally vile posts be prosecuted?  Of course not.  There would be thousands of such prosecutions, almost all of them Jews, in Israel.  Instead it is easier just to patrol and police the comments of Israel’s Arab population.  After all they are the enemy in the ‘Jewish’ State.

Tony Greenstein
Posts calling for exterminating Arabs and 'the only good 'Palestinian' is a dead one - no prosecutions if  you are Jewish

 2 November 2015
Israeli police arrest a protester in Nazareth on 8 October.  Omar SameerActiveStills

Writing on Facebook can result in being locked up if you are a Palestinian citizen of Israel.
That became clear in mid-October when 19-year-old Anas Khateeb was arrested and charged with incitement over three comments he had posted on the social media website. The commentsread: “Jerusalem is Arab,” long live the intifada” and “I am on the waiting list.”

In the past week, a magistrate’s court in Akka(Acre) — a city in present-day Israel — extended his detention until 26 November.

His treatment is being perceived as an attack on the right to free expression by Palestinians. The charge of incitement is viewed as absurd. None of the three posts explicitly called for violence.
And none of them received more than 70 “likes,” indicating that Khateeb was unlikely to foment unrest on any significant scale. Under Israeli law, incitement only occurs if there is a strong possibility that a speech or text will encourage acts of violence.

Khateeb’s arrest has been part of a wider crackdown on Palestinians living in present-day Israel, where they make up about 20 percent of the population.

Adalah, a human rights group, has calculatedthat approximately 100 Palestinian activists were arrested in Israel within the space of a week in early October. In most cases, requests by police to extend the detention of these activists were approved by courts.
A Palestinian gravestone vandalised
The courts have ignored evidence that police violently suppress political protests, according to Adalah. The organization also accuses the Israeli forces of abusing their powers and has documented how Palestinian activists have been arrested for organizing an “unlawful gathering,” even though there is no such offense in Israeli law.

Police who overstep their powers are seldom punished.

“This impunity has not only allowed the police to avoid accountability, but has essentially encouraged them to view their brutality as legitimate,” said Amjad Iraqi, an Adalah campaigner.

Strategy of persecution

Monitoring of online activity by Palestinians is undertaken by both the authorities and by employers.
The Association for Civil Rights in Israelfinds that that Palestinians are being dismissed from jobs because of comments they have made. Employers are checking what Palestinian workers write on Facebook and giving the names of young workers to the police, it has been reported.

“The persecution of Palestinian citizens of Israel has been a strategy of the State of Israel for years,” said Khulud Khamis, a feminist campaigner and writer based in Haifa. “It is only changing form, and spreading to the medium of social media.”

“I think those people who publicly voice their opinions do so knowing the risks entailed,” she added. “Others keep silent for precisely the same reason.”

Nadim Nashif, founder of the grassroots group 7amleh, said that young people are more likely to be arrested for Facebook posts as they are the most politically active group in Palestinian society.
The Israeli authorities are seeking to depict a wide variety of comments relating to protests as incitement, according to Nashif.

“A girl from Haifa was arrested because she wrote ‘take an onion with you’ on Facebook,” he said. “The Israeli authorities said that this meant that she was preparing for tear gas to be used.”
“It is ridiculous, they will try to find anything they can [to persecute people],” he added.

Panic

While a number of Palestinians have been jailedfor their online activities in the recent past, Israel appears to be intensifying its surveillance and repression both on the Internet and on the streets in response to mass protests.

A young Nazarethwoman was recently placedunder administrative detention— detention without charge or trial — after stating in a text message that she wished to become a “martyr.” Although administrative detention has been widely practiced against Palestinians in the occupied West Bank, this is the first case in a decade of it being used against a Palestinian citizen of Israel, according to Israel’s Haaretz newspaper.

“Israel is trying to keep things under control; they always panic at a potential uprising,” Nashif said. “They are taking a harsh attitude with Palestinian citizens in order to keep us quiet while they are busy in the West Bank. Things that are acceptable in normal times are not anymore.”

Nashif noted that different standards are being applied to Israeli Jews than to Palestinians.
In October, Reuven Rivlin, Israel’s president, promised he would never release Yigal Amir, who assassinated Yitzhak Rabin, Israel’s prime minister, in 1995. In response, Hagai Amir, Yigal’s brother, wrote on Facebook that Rivlin was a “kiss-up politician” who “must pass from the Earth.”
Hagai Amir was detained for one day, before being released and placed under five days’ house arrest.
By contrast, “Anas Khateeb did not make any specifically violent comments and his detention has been extended,” Nashif said. “It is completely unjustified.”

Racism at the top
Israel’s ruling coalition contains a number of ministers who have made racist and arguably genocidal remarks about Palestinians. The best known example is that of Ayelet Shaked, now Israel’s justice minister.

During Israel’s 2014 attack on Gaza, she claimedthat all Palestinians are “enemy combatants” and advocated the killing of Palestinian mothers while calling their offspring “little snakes.”
Unlike Khateeb’s posts, Shaked’s Facebook comments received thousands of “likes.”
Adalah has complained to Israel’s attorney general about the incitement by Israeli public figures. But no action has been taken.

Among the cases raised by Adalah were that of Avigdor Lieberman, then Israel’s foreign minister, who called in March this year for the beheading of “anyone who is against us.”

And during the summer, Adalah complainedabout how Bentzi Gopstein, director-general of the Israeli far-right group Lehava, had stated publicly that he supported the burning of churches. Adalah contended that his remarks amounted to a call for violence against Palestinian Christians.

“There are lots of racist posts and comments in the Hebrew social media, but they only arrest Arabs,” said Rani Khoury, a Palestinian living in Nazareth.

“Israel does not want Arabs to think politically,” Khoury said. “They want us to be more Israeli. They have been scaring us like this since 1948.”


Alia Al Ghussain is a British-Palestinian born and raised in Dubai. She holds an MA in human rights from the University of Sussex and is currently based in Haifa.

BBC – The Voice of Israel & Zionism

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John Humphries of BBC's Today Programme
Israel's Unpaid Spokesman 

Brighton PSC Demonstration outside BBC Radio Sussex
Whenever there is an upsurge in violence in Israel and the Occupied Territories, be it the genocidal bombing of Gaza or the shooting on sight of Palestinians or just extra-judicial executions, you can rely on the BBC to ensure that only the Israeli side of the conflict is told.  No matter what the atrocities, whether it is phosphorous bombs, attacks on journalists or even attacks on hospitals, the BBC will ensure that only the version of the war criminals gets put over.
Israeli soldier attacks the press with pepper spray - one person is on the floor - not newsworthy for the BBC as no Israelis were hurt
For example there was the recent attack on the press.   If it had happened in Russia or Venezuela it would have been a big story.  In the Occupied Territories?  The BBC didn’t touch it.  Then there was the attack on the Makassed hospital in East Jerusalem.    Again the BBC didn’t go near the story.  Instead it linked to another news outlet Jerusalem Hospitals Pressured to Give Up Injured Palestinian 'Terrorists'  .   The BBC no longer even links to this story.
The most moral army in the world dealing with terrorist cameramen - doesn't accord with the BBC narrative that violence is from the Palestinians only
On October 20th there was, even by the BBC's abysmal standards, a truly amazing dialogue between the overtly pro-Zionist presenter for the Today programme, John Humphries, and Kevin Connolly, someone who passes for a BBC Middle East correspondent.  Below is the dialogue between them and below that is my complaint to the BBC and my appeal against the first stage decision.  Rather than comment further I shall let you be the judge.

Tony Greenstein
Transcript 20.10.15. Today Programme 6.39 a.m.

Humphries – 21 minutes to 7 - Yet another attack on Israelis last night.  This time an Arab man with a gun and a knife killed a soldier & wounded 10 people.  The number is mounting, it’s about 50 now isn’t it? 

No mention that 40 of them Palestinians – including executions

Kevin Connolly: We think about 50 in the past month.  Sharp uptake of violence – Not just that attack in Beer Sheba inside Israel itself.  On Saturday a wave of stabbing attacks in Hebron& Jerusalem.  No sign that this wave of rising tension & rising casualties is going to abate.  The Israeli government frankly is casting about for a convincing answer because the nature of the acts of violence still appears to be random and spontaneous.  The decisions of individuals at a given moment to stage an attack are not the work of organised extremist groups. For that reason it’s been very tough to formulate a convincing security answer
Demonstration outside Currys which sells Hewlett Packard machines
Humphries It is not Intifada is it?

Kevin Connolly:        It’sa very difficult question part of the problem is that media organisations begin asking that question very early in these upsurges of violence.  Whatever we call it, it’s an extraordinarily difficult situation for the Israeli government to deal with because its own people look to it for security.  That very random and spontaneous nature of the attack has left many Israeli citizens feeling that any Palestinian passing them in the street might be carrying a knife, might be planning to attack them and any passing car might at any moment be used as a vehicle against Israeli civilian pedestrians. So although it’s not at all at the level of critical mass of violence that you would need to use the word Intifada, it doesn’t have the leadership perhaps that an Intifada might require it has achieved an extraordinary change in the atmosphere of daily life here, hence the political urgency for the Israeli government.
Humphries: There is talk of more powers for the Police to stop and search but that seems to be fairly inadequate in a way doesn’t it?

Kevin Connolly:  I think that is true.  They are reviving a plan which existed a few years ago to expand stop and search powers so the Police wouldn’t need reasonable suspicion that a crime was being committed before they stopped and searched somebody. I think that was actually originally formulated to deal with a wave of night club stabbings.  So they have that on the books, they have erected a concrete screen between an Arab and Jewish area of Jerusalem, not far from where I’m talking to you, that also has a bit of an ad-hoc feeling to it and they also of course have armed reinforcements in the West Bank. You have Police reinforcements here in Jerusalem.   So they are doing what they can with visible security.  But you can’t get away from the fact that they are struggling with the nature of this upsurge of violence. And that’s also a problem for the politicians.  Because you will be having Benjamin Netanyahu meeting John Kerry later this week.  Probably Kerry also meeting Mahmoud Abbas of the Palestinian Authority.  So the big politics is beginning to kick in here.  But it’s hard to see where the connecting wheels are between those big political meetings and the fact that individuals are taking the decision to stage these attacks for reasons which we are often left to guess at.  Because the attackers often die in the course of the attack.


Doctors and health workers protest at the attack on East Jerusalem's Makassed Hospital - not newsworthy enough for the BBC
Humphries:  Kevin, many thanks. It’s 17 minutes to 7. 19thOctober 2015

Grounds for Complaint by Tony Greenstein 20.9.15.
Humphries interview with Kevin Connolly re violence in Israel.  Mentions 50 dead but not that 40 are Palestinians.  No mention mob violence against Palestinians or  murder of Fadi Alloun, chased by lynch mob, executed by Police. No background to events eg firebombing of Dawabshe family in Duma.  3 dead.  No prosecutions - culprits known.  No mention that West Bank is Occupied.  No mention of 'Death to Arabs' marches in Jerusalem.  And no mention of murder of Eritrean refugee last night though other reporters picked it up.  All of these are documented by video footage Connolly doesn't report.

Brighton Demonstration Against Apartheid Israel
Connolly says 'individuals are taking the decision to stage these attacks for reasons which we are often left to guess at.'  Let me see, what might be the reasons:

i.  An occupation for 48 years.  
ii.  settler violence that is abetted by Military.  
iii.   That this is not a question of law and order but one where the law is in the hands of one party which deprives the other party of basic human rights.  
iv.   Israel is in breach of perpetual breach of international law.  
v. The attack by Police on the Al Aqsa mosque and the Temple Mount Institute and similar messianic groups which openly call for the Mosque's demolition, its replacement by 3rd Temple.  Groups r funded by Israeli gov.  Connolly mentioned Hebron, where violent settlers repeatedly attack Palestinian civilians.  No mention of death of Hadeek al-Hashlamon last month killed by army. 
In other words a complete lack of context

BBC Response 1:

The first BBC response was a standard response, which didn’t address any of the particulars of the complaint.
21 October 2015

Dear Mr  Greenstein 



Thank you for contacting us about the recent escalation in violence in Israel, the West Bank and Gaza. We have received a wide range of feedback about our coverage of this subject across our television and radio programmes, and the BBC News website. In order to use our TV licence fee resources efficiently, this response aims to answer the key concerns raised in complaints received by us, but we apologise in advance if it doesn’t address your specific points in the manner you would prefer.

We appreciate you believe our coverage of this story has shown bias in favour of Israel and against the Palestinians. In this response we hope to explain why we feel this has not been the case.

Across our news bulletins and programmes we have reported on the increasing number of Palestinian deaths and casualties following the actions of Israeli security forces. We have broadcast reports where our reporters have spoken to the families of Israelis and Palestinians killed in the recent violence and have heard their respective stories and own specific takes on the conflict.

We have reported on criticism of Israel’s response to the attacks, which has included the implementation of curfews in East Jerusalem and the West Bank and the destruction of homes of Palestinians Israel claims are connected to the attackers.

We have tried to explain how the current situation has come to pass from the Israeli and Palestinian perspectives. This has included reporting on the tensions around the holy sites in occupied East Jerusalem, the building of settlements and on the daily realities faced by Palestinians living under occupation. We have explored the apathy held by many Palestinians toward the impasse in reaching a lasting peace settlement, and on what many see as Israel’s unwillingness to end the occupation which would see the creation of an independent and sovereign Palestinian state.

BBC News tries to report on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict in an accurate and duly impartial manner. Sometimes this means we can’t always reflect the full extent of the complexities of the conflict during one standalone report or bulletin. We try to tell the story of the conflict as experienced by both sides, across programmes and bulletins and over time. We believe this has been the case during our coverage of this recent spike in violence.

We have raised your concerns with senior editorial staff at BBC News, who consider the range of feedback received from our audience when deciding how they approach reporting on stories. Thanks again for taking the time to contact us.

Kind Regards

BBCComplaints



After I had pointed out that this was unsatisfactory I was sent a second, equally unsatisfactory response.
BBC Response 2:
31st October 2015
Dear Mr Greenstein

Reference CAS-3535889-VX0RCY

Thank you for contacting us regarding the BBC Radio 4 'Today' programme on 19 October.
I've taken a look into this and note your original complaint to us along with our response - we apologise for the initial misunderstanding.

We raised your complaint with Today, who responded as follows:

“We’re sorry you didn’t enjoy Kevin Connolly’s discussion with John Humphrys on Monday morning.

Having listened back to it, we don’t agree with your interpretation of the exchange. Kevin was reporting on the security situation inside Israel. The attack at Beersheba bus station attack was the latest in a serious of attacks by Palestinians in Israel. We talked about the attacks and the security measures being taken to counter them by Israel security agencies. There was also discussion of the random nature of this violence.


Doctors and health workers protest at the attack on East Jerusalem's Makassed Hospital - not newsworthy enough for the BBC
John started by saying “Yet another attack on Israelis last night” but as this was one of a number of similar attacks recently so I think that is fair.

The other exchange was;

JH : “The number is mounting now isn’t it Kevin. it’s about 50 now isn’t it?”

KC “we think around 50 dead over the last month or so in this sudden, sharp, uptick in violence”
At no point did either John or Kevin say that it was solely Israelis dead in this period of violence.
Again, the report was about the internal security situation in Israel and the political problems it was causing the Netanyahu government. In that context it is legitimate to discuss how scared this latest violence is making Israeli citizens.

Kevin states that the most of the motives are unknown, because in the context of recent history, they are. This nature of these attacks, and the fact the attackers often die in the attacks mean they cannot be investigated, therefore the precise motivation is unknown. We think anyone listening to the piece will understand that Kevin was talking about why this form of violence is happening now. The wider causes and context of the Israel/Palestinian conflict are frequently discussed across the BBC.

We know this subject inspires real passion on both sides but at the BBC we remain committed to impartial reporting on all controversial issues.”

We hope you now find this satisfactory and thank you once again for taking the time to contact us with your concerns.

All complaints are sent to the relevant news teams and to senior management, I've included your points in this report. This is a daily report of audience feedback that's circulated to many BBC staff, including members of the BBC Executive Board, and other senior managers. This helps inform their decisions about current and future programmes.

Once again, thank you for contacting us.

Kind regards

Anna Sweeney
BBC Complaints

I have now made a second stage appeal (below) to the Editorial Complaints Unit.  I won’t be holding my breath!

2nd November 2015

Reference CAS-3535889-VXORCY

To ecu@bbc.co.uk, Alison.Wilson2@bbc.co.uk

Dear ECU,

I wish to appeal against the dismissal of the complaint which I submitted to you on 20th October 2015 concerning John Humphries conversation with Kevin Connolly on the upsurge in violence in Israel.

Despite being assured by Alison Wilson, the Complaints Manager for the Editorial Complaints Unit  on 22ndOctober 2015 that ‘BBC Complaints will establish whether there is anything further to be added to the response that has been given, and advise the complainant on the appropriate path for escalation.’ I was not advised on the appropriate path for escalation.

Given your failure to follow your own procedure I will now submit this to ECU and trust there will be no further attempt to delay considering an appeal.  Given the cursory treatment to date, please also advise of any further escalation that will be necessary if the complaint is treated the same as at the first stage.
I didn’t enjoy the repartee between John Humphries [JH] and Kevin Connolly [KC].  It told me nothing and its bias was self-evident.
My appeal in respect of your response is:
i.                The unnamed person who responded from Today is either hopelessly biased or is simply incapable of understanding the complaint.  S/he says:
‘Kevin was reporting on the security situation inside Israel. The attack at Beersheba bus station attack was the latest in a serious of attacks by Palestinians in Israel.’ 
This precisely sums up what my complaint is about.  What actually happened at the Beersheba bus station was not just an attack by a lone Palestinian but also the lynching of an Eritrean refugee.  KC failed to make even a cursory mention of the fact that an Eritrean refugee, guilty of nothing other than being in the despise category of refugee in Israel, (Israel doesn’t admit refugees as a matter of policy, they are called ‘infiltrators) was murdered.  Shot by a security guard and then kicked and beaten until he died.  Not one word of this lynching passed KC’s lips. 
By way of contrast the on-line version of Israel’s largest daily paper, Yediot Aharanot, on 18th October, managed to include in its report both the killing of an Israeli soldier andthe murder of a refugee.  Perhaps you could explain such an omission – bias or just ignorance? http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-4712997,00.html
ii.              You say that ‘We talked about the attacks and the security measures being taken to counter them by Israel security agencies.’  That is indeed the problem.  It is just a security situation, what is happening is simply a matter of individual criminality.  There is no recognition that what is happening is a reaction, on an individual level, to a harsh military occupation of the West Bank and Jerusalem, to say nothing of the nakedly racist treatment of Israel’s own Arab citizens.  It’s just a situation of law and order, so the BBC avoids all context.  It is a continuation of your bias against understanding.
iii.             The response to that part of my complaint relating to the suggestion that those who were killed were treated as being solely Israelis (i.e. Israeli Jews) is incomprehensible.  You simply deny what is plain and evident from the transcript.  Like Humpty Dumpty words mean what you want them to mean.
JH says:  “Yet another attack on Israelis last night” and you comment on this saying that ‘this was one of a number of similar attacks recently so I think that is fair.’   You then say that ‘The other exchange was;
JH : “The number is mounting now isn’t it Kevin. it’s about 50 now isn’t it?”
KC “we think around 50 dead over the last month or so in this sudden, sharp, uptick in violence”
You assert that ‘At no point did either John or Kevin say that it was solely Israelis dead in this period of violence.’
The reference by JH and KC was solely to Israelis and yet most of the dead were Palestinians.  So even at the most basic level it was wrong.  There was no mention of Palestinians other than as attackers.  Hence it would have been reasonable for viewers to conclude that the only people who were dead were Israeli Jews. 
Of course you could have mentioned the fact that there have been a number of attacks on Palestinians by Israeli Jews and even attacks by Jews on Jews, who were mistaken for Arabs.  These are dressed up as retaliations, for example the murder of Fadi Alloun.  For example the online news magazine +972 carries the video of his shooting plus an accompanying article. New video shows accused stabber posed no threat when shot  http://972mag.com/new-video-shows-accused-stabber-posed-no-threat-when-shot/112593/
In Jerusalem there are regular attacks by Jewish mobs on individual Palestinians led by groups such as Lehava, which target Arabs in ‘Jewish’ areas.  Their favourite chant is ‘death to the Arabs’ [Mavet La’aravim]  But this phenomenon has never been reported on by the BBC.  Fadi Alloun is believed to have been targeted  by just such a group and executed by the Police who only asked questions afterwards.
There have been a number of other such shootings for example of an Arab woman in Afula bus shelter who it was later admitted had not been trying to stab anyone.  Israeli Arab Woman Shot in Bus Station Not a Terrorist, Conclude Security Serviceshttp://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/1.682928  Of course since the BBC never seems to manage to report on such things they didn’t happen.  It’s a vicious circle which maintains the constant bias that you indulge in.
iv.            You said that
‘Kevin states that the most of the motives are unknown, because in the context of recent history, they are. This nature of these attacks, and the fact the attackers often die in the attacks mean they cannot be investigated, therefore the precise motivation is unknown. We think anyone listening to the piece will understand that Kevin was talking about why this form of violence is happening now. The wider causes and context of the Israel/Palestinian conflict are frequently discussed across the BBC.’
This is totally absurd.  It is as if you have compartmentalised the knife attacks and associated violence on the one hand and the Occupation on the other, ne’er the twain do they meet.  Are you really saying that it has never occurred to your correspondent in Israel, KC, that there might, just might, be a connection between the random violence of individual knife attacks and the fact of the Occupation?  Does he not consider that the daily ritual humiliations of being harassed by the security forces, stopped at check points, subject to random violence by unaccountable border police, living in an uncertain situation where land confiscation takes place all around you, where your residency rights in Jerusalem can be withdrawn at a moments notice etc. etc. might just have some connection with the violence that arose?  If KC really does not appreciate these things, perhaps you might consider transferring him to report on the Chelsea Flower Show?
v.              You talk about how ‘this subject inspires real passion on both sides’.  That is a convenient way of dismissing a complaint but my concern is not passion but accuracy or the lack of it and now dissembling by the Today team.
vi.            You also state that ‘we remain committed to impartial reporting on all controversial issues’.  RT and Al Jazeera have reported tonight on the attacks on Palestinian and Lebanese journalists by the Israeli para military Border Police.  Nothing on BBC.  No doubt if Israeli journalists were being attacked in an Arab country, it would be headline news.  Bias by omission is another facet of your coverage.  Your commitment to reporting on all controversial issues is therefore just a pious statement of intent rather than an established practice.
I therefore do not find your handling to date of the complaint as satisfactory.
Yours faithfully,

Tony Greenstein

I also made a complaint today against the fact that Danny Cohen, one of the most senior BBC Executives, had signed a letter in the Guardian last week which opposed the Cultural Boycott of Israel.  Couple this with the complaint of former BBC Chairman Lord Grade Ex-BBC chairman Lord Grade attacks corporation over Israel coverage that the BBC is too sympathetic (!) to the Palestinians and one gets a measure of the institutional and systematic bias in favour of Zionism and the Israeli State that exists in the BBC.
Complaint Against Danny Cohen, BBC Director of Television
PO Box 173
Rottingdean
Brighton
BN51 9EZ
Rona Fairhead,
Chair,
BBC Trust,
BBC Broadcasting House,
Portland Place, London, W1A 1AA

Wednesday, 04 November 2015

Re Danny Cohen

Dear Ms Fairhead,

On Thursday 22nd  October a letter headed Israel needs cultural bridges, not boycottsappeared in the Guardian.  One of the signatories to this letter was a certain Danny Cohen, the BBC’s Director of Television.  Mr Cohen was one of 150 people calling for Israel to be protected from cultural boycotts.

Cohen joined senior figures from the Conservative Friends of Israel, 13 of whose officers and members signed it, and one from the Labour Friends of Israel.  Unsurprisingly, there were no pro-Palestinian MPs among the signatories.

The letter claimed that “Cultural boycotts singling out Israel are divisive and discriminatory” and goes on to call for “cultural engagement” in place of boycotts.  Perhaps if the BBC were to fairly cover Israel’s behaviour in the Occupied Territories, East Jerusalem or indeed inside Israel itself, you would soon be aware of what discrimination really means. 

The BBC has consistently failed to cover the attacks of the Israeli military on journalists or even the recent attack, with tear gas, sound bombs and rubber bullets on the Makassed hospital in East Jerusalem, which other news outlets (RT, Al Jazeera) manage to cover.  Its news agenda is that of Israel’s Information Ministry and Press Office.  If you were at all concerned about discrimination then how can one account for your consistent failure to cover the persistently high levels of racism in every aspect of Israel as a Jewish state, as measured by opinion polls.  For example the fact that 75% of Israeli Jews oppose the idea of living next to an Arab. http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3381978,00.html

There is of course nothing new in this.  Throughout the period of the cultural Boycott against South Africa, the BBC consistently supported Margaret Thatcher’s policy of ‘constructive engagement’.  We expect nothing better from the BBC, which was born in the womb of the state.  Nonetheless you have a formal legal obligation to be neutral and it is that which you are in persistent breach of.

Cohen is a member of the BBC’s executive board and one of the most senior figures in the organisation. His role within the BBC demands neutrality and yet he has publicly made known his support for Israel and its Apartheid policies and practices.

The Royal Charter, which governs the BBC, demands that the organisation must be impartial in its reporting.  This must also be a key requirement of its staff. The fact that Danny Cohen has signed this letter, in the company of openly pro-Israel figures, without subsequent censure from the BBC, demonstrates that this is not the case.”

Cohen has so far faced no public censure from the BBC Trust for his behaviour.  I am therefore writing to you to ask whether or not you intend to take any action against him. 

Cohen is not just another employee of the BBC.  He has huge influence within the organisation, overseeing the BBC’s four main channels, in addition to BBC iPlayer, and online content for BBC Television. He also oversees the Drama, Entertainment, Knowledge and Comedy genres and BBC Films. Further responsibilities include the BBC Television archive and BBC Productions, Europe’s largest television production group.

Yours sincerely,


Tony Greenstein


“The official designation of Israel as a ‘Jewish and democratic state’ is an oxymoron. "

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Given that Zionists usually explode in flame when you compare their spoilt brat of a state to Apartheid in South Africa, the article below should be of some interest.  Contrary to his image as some kind of martyr to peace, Rabin was a hardliner who instructed the military to 'break bones' during the First Intifada.
During the Nakba he was responsible for the expulsion of the Palestinians of Lod and Ramle and the massacre of hundreds of them.  He never supported a Palestinian state either, advocating some form of autonomy - much like today's situation yet he could see, as the article makes clear, where Zionism was heading.
Tony Greenstein
'Rabin: In His Own Words' to screen on 20th anniversary of assassination

In 1976 interview, Rabin likens settler ideologues to ‘cancer,’ warns of ‘apartheid’

Never before heard comments show a prime minister frustrated with ‘one of the most acute dangers’ facing Israel








 September 15 2015

Birds of a Feather - Menachem Begin, Moshe Dayan,  John Vorster (South African PM) & Yitzhak Rabin 
 In a previously unpublicized recording of a 1976 interview, Israel’s fifth prime minister, Yitzhak Rabin, can be heard calling the still-nascent West Bank settler movement “comparable to a cancer,” and warning that Israel risked becoming an “apartheid” state if it annexed and absorbed the West Bank’s Arab population.

Yitzhak Rabin with South Africa's Apartheid  Bureaucrats
The recording is being publicized for the first time in the documentary “Rabin: In His Own Words.” The film, timed to the 20th anniversary of Rabin’s November 1995 assassination by a Jewish extremist, traces Rabin’s life using original and sometimes never-before-seen footage. This ranges from a 1949 home movie by an American tourist showing Rabin as a young operations officer in the nascent IDF’s Southern Command, to the last days and hours of his eventful life, as the prime minister who launched the Oslo peace process with the Palestinians.
Friends Together
The candid recordings of Rabin were preserved thanks to Dan Patir, press secretary in Rabin’s first 1974-1977 premiership, who diligently recorded all of the prime minister’s interviews with journalists. The recordings include Rabin’s “off-the-record” comments to his interviewers, comments the journalists never published and which are coming to light for the first time.
“There’s nothing tougher for a man than to say what he is. It’s hard for me to say. It’s true that to a great extent I’m a ‘closed’ person,” Rabin says in one candid moment about his famously quiet and introverted personality.
Some highlights from the film, including an interview with its director and editor Erez Laufer, aired Thursday night on Channel 2.
Arafat, Rabin & Peres showing off Nobel Peace Prizes
In the 1976 interview in which Rabin delivers the searing critique of the settlement movement, he prefaces his comments by saying, “I have said, and this I ask really not be used, I’m not going to [say it publicly], and I’m not a political lunatic for saying this.”
‘Gush Emunim is not a settlement movement. It is comparable to a cancer in the tissue of Israel’s democratic society’
He complains of the settlement movement’s strategy of forcing the Israeli government into clashes with its activists over countless small, out-of-the-way hilltops on which they had squatted. “From a historical perspective, a person might ask what the State of Israel was dealing with in 1976, in some crappy, insignificant place, in a mystical argument on which they pin the existential problem of the State of Israel. It’s unbelievable,” he says.
Rabin’s famously imperturbable monotone betrays increasing anger as he complains about the settlements growing in number and size during his premiership.
“I see in Gush Emunim [the ‘Bloc of the Faithful,’ the ideologically driven founders of the settlement movement,] one of the most acute dangers in the whole phenomenon of the State of Israel,” he confides.
“What is ‘settlement’ anyway? What struggle is this? What methods? ‘Kadum’ [a settlement] is a bloated fart.”
He adds: “Gush Emunim is not a settlement movement. It is comparable to a cancer in the tissue of Israel’s democratic society. It’s a phenomenon of an organization that takes the law into its own hands.”
Yitzhak Rabin plays ping pong in rare footage seen in the film 'Rabin: In His Own Words.' (screen capture/Channel 2)
Yitzhak Rabin plays ping pong in rare footage seen in the film ‘Rabin: In His Own Words.’ (screen capture/Channel 2)
Unknown to historians or his countrymen at the time, Rabin offers the journalist, who is not identified in the Channel 2 report, what may be the first signs of his later political program.
“I don’t say with certainty that we won’t reach [the point of] evacuation, because of the [Palestinian] population. I don’t think it’s possible to contain over the long term, if we don’t want to get to apartheid, a million and a half [more] Arabs inside a Jewish state.”
John Vorster, South Africa's Apartheid  Premier at the Wailing Wall
“On that question,” he insisted, “I’m willing to go to elections.”
Rabin’s first government fell in 1977, leading to a historic victory for Menachem Begin’s Likud in what was the Labor party’s first election defeat since Israel’s founding 29 years earlier. But in 1992, Rabin fulfilled that off-the-record promise, winning the premiership on an explicit platform of peace with the Palestinians and some form of withdrawal from the West Bank and Gaza.
'Rabin: In His Own Words' editor and director Erez Laufer. (screen capture/Channel 2)
‘Rabin: In His Own Words’ editor and director Erez Laufer. (screen capture/Channel 2)
The film may rekindle many debates among Israelis about opportunities lost and taken, the chances for peace, the settlements and the future of Israel’s relations with the Palestinians. Indeed, it may be one of the acute ironies of Israeli history that Israel’s dramatic territorial withdrawals — amounting to over four-fifths of the territory Rabin’s IDF captured in the 1967 Six Day War, including the pullouts from Sinai in the early 1980s and Gaza in 2005 — were carried out not by Rabin’s Labor but by Begin’s and Ariel Sharon’s Likud.
“Rabin: In His Own Words” will be shown next week at the Haifa film festival.

The Angel of Death Sets Her Eyes on Palestinian Children

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The Angel of Death beside a dead 'snake'
It is perhaps a fitting comment on Israel's justice system that it has far-right zealot Ayelet Shaked as its 'Justice' Minister.  She wants to tear up even the most minimal protection for Palestinians in the Israeli state.  She has waged a long-standing war against the 'pro-Arab' bias of Israel's Supreme Court i.e. it occasionally finds for Palestinians when the law doesn't allow it to do otherwise. [see Ayelet Shaked Plans to 'Rein In' Israel Supreme Court , Forward 17.5.15] 
Shaked and the leader of the religious settler party, Naftali Bennett Jewish  Home
This is one of the myths of Israel, that the Courts are 'biased' against Zionism.  It is a long-standing prejudice of all settler societies when their court system has to pay at least nodding tribute to the principles of justice.  Unlike previous occupants of the post, Shaked has no legal qualifications.  Even the Nazis' Ministers of Justice used to have law degrees but Netanyahu deems that if the only qualification necessary to be Justice Minister is to be a 100% bigot, why insist on a law degree?  

Tony Greenstein


“I visited my son in jail. I saw marks from electric shocks on both his arms, they were visible from behind the glass. I asked him if it was from electric shocks...
Israeli’s extremist Justice Minister, Ayelet Shaked, has shocked even her most ardent supporters by proposing a new criminal law that will allow minors under the age of 14 to be imprisoned.
Shaked in the Knesset
Shaked is aggressively pursuing the change in law as prosecutors attempt to charge a 13-year-old Palestinian boy with attempted murder for allegedly stabbing two Jewish Israelis.

Current law dictates that minors can only be charged at age 12 and can only be sent to prison at age 14.
Ahmed Manasra and his 15-year-old cousin allegedly stabbed a man in a neighborhood in northeastern Jerusalem, before stabbing a second victim, a 13-year-old Jewish boy.

If Mansara is found guilty before turning 14 years old, the judge will not be able to sentence him to prison, according to Israeli law. The judge can intern him in a youth facility, but only until age 20.
Shaked would like to amend the law quickly to ensure Manasra receives jail time if convicted.
Short of that, the prosecution could try to extend the trial against him until January when he turns 14, the Jerusalem Post reports.
A Palestinian child being brutally detained by Israeli occupation forces
Shaked’s spokesman was unsure that the amendment would happen fast enough to apply to Manasra, but hoped that changing the law would solve the issue for future cases, according to the Post.
A Justice Ministry spokeswoman said a request had been received from Shaked to move forward on the issue and they are in the early stages of exploring the legal implications of such a change.
After the attack, Manasra’s cousin was killed by police, while Manasra was hit by a car and injured as he fled.
The Red Cross refuses to call on Israel to release Palestinian children held by army
The stabbings were a part of the latest wave of clashes in the Palestinian-Israeli conflict which has killed dozens and injured more in the past month.
Shaked has earned a controversial reputation for inflammatory statements about Palestinians. Last summer, she posted to Facebook a quote from a late Israeli activist. It described the entire Palestinian people as “the enemy,” called youths who become “martyrs” while attacking Israelis “snakes” and said their mothers should “go to hell” with them.
Some criticized the post as a call for genocide of the Palestinian people.


It was not her first controversial comment about Palestinians. When asked during a 2012 Israeli television interview if she hoped her husband – an Israeli air force pilot – “would be pounding the Arabs hard with bombs”when he flew, she laughed and then replied “Yes.

The Alliance Between Zionism and Christian Fundamentalism

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John Hagee of CUFI demonstrating that Hitler was a hunter of Jews sent by god
Although we have seen manifestations of Christian Zionism in Britain, for example Christians fascists made up a significant part of the Zionist counterdemonstrators at Sodastream (turning away more customers than even we managed to do) it is in the United States that there is a multi-million strong Christian Zionist community.

Unlike the EDL/BNP loving Sussex Friends of Israel most Jewish groups in the United States are wary of the embrace of Christian Evangelist groups.  Christian Evangelist groups are fundamentalist groups which are, at one and the same time, both avidly Zionist and anti-Semitic.  They certainly want Jews to ‘return’ to Palestine in order that they can then have the battles of Armageddon, Rapture and the mass genocide of most Jews.  Most notable amongst the Christian fundamentalists is Pastor John Hagee, President of Christians United for Israel. 
Hagee it was who said that Hitler was a ‘hunter’ sent by god in order to ferret out the Jews from their hiding places and drive them to  Palestine.  Not much different from Netanyahu you might think, except that Hitler was an agent of the Mufti.
Hagee and the Rapture
It was the Christian fundamentalists and Bible belt Christians who, during the holocaust, were the most vehemently opposed to the immigration of Jewish refugees just as today they are the most hostile to refugees and migrants as well as welfare recipients and anyone else down on their luck.  It isn’t a Christianity of love your neighbour so much as beggar your neighbour!
So most Jews in the USA tend to be liberal despite the leadership of the Zionists being vehement supporters of the neo-Cons and a pro-imperialist foreign policy.  Nowhere was this clearer than on the agreement with Iran.  Whereas most Jews were in favour of the agreement, by large majorities, the main Zionist lobby group, AIPAC campaigned fervently to block it in Congress.
This article in Forward, a liberal, previously socialist publication, gives a flavour of these dilemmas.

Tony Greenstein

Is Evangelical Group a Useful Ally in BDS Fight— or Bigoted Albatross?


Nathan Guttman November 5, 2015 

Image: Courtesy of PJTN

Laurie Cardoza-Moore is responsible for one of the signal achievements in the battle against attempts to boycott Israel: a bill passed in the Tennessee state legislature condemning boycott, divestment and sanctions against Israel as anti-Semitic, before any other such measure reached the capitals of other states.
John McCain was forced to disavow Hagee when he ran 4 President because of Hagee's anti-Semitism
But search Cardoza-Moore’s name, and one of the first results will take you to a 2010 video clip from the Daily Show in which she claims, citing “the Internet” as her source, that in America’s Muslim community, “30% are terrorists” and that they maintain “35 training camps across the United States.”
These convictions catapulted Cardoza-Moore into leadership of a movement to stop the expansion of a mosque in Murfeesboro, Tennessee, where it had existed peacefully for 30 years, claiming it was part of a plot targeting Middle Tennessee because it is the heart of the Bible Belt.

Through the organization she has founded, Proclaiming Justice to the Nations, and her own public statements, Cardoza-Moore has became a key player on two fields that many American Jewish leaders say they want to keep strictly separate: a staunch pro-Israel evangelical out to recruit fellow Christians, and a fierce crusader out to eradicate what she views as Islamic indoctrination in America’s heartland but who is often accused of deep-seated Islamophobia.
Stupid Finnish Christian Zionists
Nevertheless, with her clear message to Christians across the world via documentaries and web videos, Cardoza-Moore and her organization have become the darlings of American Jewish donors committed to fighting BDS.

“The Jewish community is starting to acknowledge that their only friends on earth right now are Bible believing Christians,” Cardoza-Moore said in an October 25 interview. “I constantly call on Christians to speak out against the tremendous atrocities that are going on. It is our responsibility as Christians to defend the Jewish people.”

Locally, Jewish organizations have bonded with PJTN strongly. “Energy and dynamism are very important in making the case for supporting Israel,” said Mark Freedman, executive director of the Jewish Federation of Nashville, which partners with PJTN on pro-Israel advocacy campaigns. “Our community appreciates the evangelical support for the state of Israel, and in terms of advocacy we consider them great partners.”

PJTN was founded in Nashville, Tennessee in 2001, in what Cardoza-Moore describes as a response to the 9/11 terror attacks. “Together with our Bible in hand, we came to understand 9/11 through the prism of ‘good vs. evil’ and we made a plan to answer God’s call,” the group states on its website. Its mission is to battle anti-Semitism and anti-Israel sentiments using TV and radio interviews, and movies that the group says reach millions of Christians worldwide. The media outreach, it claims, educates them “on their responsibilities as Christians to uphold the protection and welfare of our Jewish brethren.”

The group also strongly opposes a two-state solution to Israel’s conflict with the Palestinians, defending Israel’s permanent retention of the occupied West Bank and isolation of Gaza.
The pro-Israel evangelical advocacy scene has been dominated for the past decade by Pastor John Hagee’s Christians United for Israel, a national organization which boasts more than 2 million members and draws thousands to pro-Israel nights in Washington and across the country. PJTN is much smaller, with an annual budget of $559,000 in 2013 and only three full time staffers. But the group’s stress on media and its recent foray into anti-BDS activism have made the small Nashville organization a growing presence in pro-Israel circles. Cardoza-Moore, who grew up Catholic, discovered after visiting Israel’s Diaspora Museum in 2003 that she may be a descendant of Portuguese Jews forced to convert during the Inquisition. She began inquiring among family members, and heard that her great grandfather, on his deathbed, told his children about the Cardoza family’s Jewish roots.

Last April PJTN was the driving force behind a resolution in the Tennessee state legislature that condemned BDS as a form of anti-Semitism.

Though only declarative, the resolution, which passed easily, was the first such action taken by any state legislature. It was followed by legislation in South Carolina and Illinois that barred businesses involved with BDS from doing business with those state governments.

Cardoza-Moore recently presented a framed copy of the Tennessee bill to Yuli Edelstein, speaker of Israel’s Knesset, during a three-week visit to Israel. While in Israel, she filmed her latest documentary, titled “Victims of Peace,” which, she said, will “expose BDS” as anti-Semitic. In the film, now in production, two Palestinians, one from Gaza and the other from the West Bank, tell Cardoza-Moore they are grateful to Israeli employers who hired them and that boycotting Israel will cause them to lose their jobs.

Her work on behalf of Israel and taking on supporters of BDS have landed Cardoza-Moore and her organization financial backing from many Jewish donors known for their aggressive, uncritical support for the Jewish state.

The Irving Moskowitz Foundation, which backs exclusively Jewish settlements in the Palestinian sectors of Jerusalem, provided PJTN with a $70,000 donation in 2013. Other donors include Chicago’s Larry Hochberg, the former chair of Friends of the Israel Defense Forces, a board member of the Zionist Organization of America and a major donor to the American Israel Public Affairs Committee; conservative talk radio host Dennis Prager, and Israeli-American businessman Adam Milstein.

PJTN was among the groups invited by Sheldon Adelson and other Jewish funders to attend the Las Vegas kickoff of what is shaping up to be the Jewish community’s most heavily funded anti-BDS operation, known as the Maccabees Task Force. PJTN, like other participants, is now expected to pitch the Adelson-led initiative with programs for funding.

But while the group’s pro-Israel activity has been widely welcomed by the Jewish community, its anti-Islamic actions do not win broad support.

The Nashville Jewish Federation made clear its cooperation with PJTN is limited to common interest areas concerning Israel and not to other activities of the group aimed at Muslim Americans.

“It’s tragic when you see Jewish organizations join forces with anti-Muslim extremists, not only because of the obvious history of discrimination, but also because it is counter-productive on many levels,” said Ibrahim Hooper, national communications director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations.

In 2010, the Anti-Defamation League filed an amicus brief against PJTN’s attempt to block building of the new Islamic center in Murfreesboro. ADL claimed that attempts by Cardoza-Moore and others to stop the Islamic center project and investigate alleged ties with extremists in Somalia and Gaza violated religious freedom.

The group’s legal actions to stop the mosque’s expansion were ultimately dismissed by a federal appeals court in 2014 after a years-long battle.

Organized opposition to the Murfreesboro mosque, said Hooper, “was seen as a watershed moment for Muslims facing Islamophobia in America.” This was also the event that prompted comedian and former host of the Daily Show Jon Stewart to dispatch his “senior Muslim correspondent” Aasif Mandvi to Tennessee, for a report centering on an interview with Cardoza-Moore, in which she said her campaign is “about stopping the advance of radical Islam in America.”

Mandvi turned to Cardoza-Moore and asks: “You do know I’m Muslim, right?” to which she answers, without missing a beat: “Nobody’s perfect.” “It was comedy,” she told the Forward, adding that she is constantly invited to United Nations discussions on women’s rights in the Muslim world. “If I’m such an Islamophobe, then why do they invite me to these panels?”

But speaking at an August 2010 rally in New York against the intention to build an Islamic Center in the vicinity of Ground Zero, Cardoza-Moore suggested she viewed the emergence of Muslims in American as an alien phenomenon, at best. “How many Muslims signed the Declaration of Independence?” she asked. “Or the constitution?” The audience roared: “None.” “How many Muslims fought in our revolutionary war?” she then asked and responded: “Zero.”

PJTN’s next project will be focused on what the group views as the threat of extremist Islamic content in school textbooks. “They’re indoctrinating our children with pro-Islamic rhetoric that violates the Establishment Clause,” Cardoza-Moore said. She pointed to a mention of Palestinian terror attacks against Israeli teens in a pizza parlor as raising the question of the whether terror can be justified.

While PJTN’s main focus now is on BDS, it holds strong views opposing a two-state solution to Israel’s conflict with the Palestinians. In 2013 Cardoza-Moore produced the film “Israel Indivisible: The Case for the Ancient Homeland,” which argues against division of the land into two states.
“Israel has the right for the entire land,” Cardoza-Moore said. “There’s no reason Israel cannot hang on to their land and continue allowing free life to the Christians and Muslims in its territory.”

This stance did not seem to prevent a group of five members of Congress, including California Jewish Democrat Alan Lowenthal, from going on a PJTN-sponsored trip to Israel in mid-October. Both Republican and Democratic administrations have publicly supported a two-state solution.

Lowenthal is endorsed by J Street PAC, a dovish group whose main issue is promoting a peace agreement based on the division of the land. 

Scottish National Party MPs Echo Zionist Propaganda

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The EDL attacking Birmingham PSC stall - with Israeli flag giving the Hitler salute!
Alex Salmon former leader SNP and know to be pro-Zionist

SNP MPs  - Friends of Palestine and Friends of Israel?
SNP fall for the oldest Zionist trick in the book
Attack Palestinians, Shout ‘anti-Semitism’

For those who have illusions that the SNP is a left-wing, progressive party, the post below should be an eye opener.

Yesterday I received a copy of Early Day Motion 652 ANTI-SEMITISM AND PALESTINE SOLIDARITY which clearly originated with the SNP.  Of the 33 MPs who have so far signed this motion, 28 are from the SNP, 2 from the Labour Party, 1 from the Tory Party and 2 from Northern Ireland’s SDLP.

At first sight the motion seems innocuous whereas in fact it is a wolf in sheep’s clothing.  Or maybe a Zionist in an anti-racists' guise.  There are a number of problems with the motion:
1.             It couples anti-Semitism and Palestine solidarity together and assumes that there is a linkage.  In fact there is no evidence whatsoever that the Palestine solidarity movement in Britain has, or ever has had, any connection with anti-Semitism or anti-Semites.  The connections with anti-Semitic and holocaust denial groups have been between the Zionist movement and the English Defence League and British National Movement.  In 2012 Palestine Solidarity Campaign at its annual conference voted to expel a holocaust denier, Frances Clarke-Lowes from National PSC (Brighton PSC had already done so locally) and to make it clear that Paul Eisen's Deir Yassin Remembered had no place in the Palestine Solidarity Movement.
Jonathan Hoffman - co-vice-Chair of the Zionist Federation alongside Roberta Moore of the Jewish Defence League with the EDL in khaki in the background
Soon after Ali Abunimah and a number of prominent Palestinians and Arabs, including Omar Barghouti of the Boycott National Committee and Joseph  Massad issued a clear cut statement dissociating the international Palestine movement from an ex-Israeli anti-Semite living in London, the jazz player Gilad Atzmon.  Palestinian writers, activists disavow racism, anti-Semitism of Gilad Atzmon  
Jonathan Hoffman of the Zionist Federation with a friend
As Ruth Smeed of the Board of Deputies of British Jews stated in the Guardian ‘‘The BNP website is now one of the most Zionist on the web – it goes further than any of the mainstream parties in its support of Israel’  BNP seeks to bury antisemitism and gain Jewish votes in Islamophobic campaign, The Guardian, April 10th 2008  Likewise the English Defence League combines holocaust denial and admiration of Hitler with a single-minded devotion to Israel and Zionism.  Whilst attacking the stall of Birmingham Palestine Solidarity, the EDL’s thugs carried an Israeli flag whilst giving Hitler salutes at the same time. The Fascist EDL Attacks Birmingham Palestine Solidarity Campaign Stall 
Brighton EDL cornered by anti-fascists after a failed attack on PSC stall - protected by a phalanx of police
1.            There have been repeated instances of Zionist activists, including those from the Zionist Federation, demonstrating alongside the EDL and the neo-Nazi Jewish Defence League.  One notorious example were the Zionist Federation and EDLcounter-demonstrations outside Ahava, an Israeli shop in Covent Garden  
The Community Security Trust is a far-right Zionist organisation with close links to Israel's Mossad
2.            The Community Security Trust that the SNP EDM quotes is an overtly far-right Zionist group, which sees its role as ensuring that the Jewish community remains free of anti-Zionist influence.  It has close links to Israel’s Mossad (MI6) and keeps copious files on Jewish activists.  Its predecessor the CSO was criticised by Liberty for having barred 5 members of the Jewish Socialists Group from a Jewish communal event solely on the grounds of their political viewpoint.   As my letter to the signatories of the EDM makes clear the CST play fast and loose with the definition of what constitutes an anti-Semitic incident.
3.             The EDM claims that the biggest ‘the single biggest contributing factor [to the doubling in anti-Semitic incidents in the UK] to have been anti-Semitic reaction to the armed violence between Israel and Gaza in July 2014.’   If that is true then it also means that some people in Britain associate Israel’s genocidal attack on Gaza with Jewish people in Britain.  Why might that be?  One reason could be Israel’s claim to be a Jewish state which acts on behalf of, not only its own Jewish citizens but Jews worldwide.  Another reason might be the fact that the Board of Deputies repeatedly comes out with statements and organises demonstrations and pickets, as it did recently outside t he Palestine Mission in London, supporting Israel’s attacks on the Palestinians.  Anti-Zionist Jews in Britain took to demonstrating outside the BOD offices in London during Operation Protective Edge claiming that they don’t speak on behalf of us.  Is it any wonder that some misguided people then hold individual British Jews responsible for what Israel does?  That is not the fault of anyone in the Palestine solidarity movement but the Zionist movement.  The SNP MPs should direct their attention in that direction.

4.            The suggestion  that our criticism of the Israeli state and its policies spills over into ‘group-blame or racist stereotyping’ is simply a lie and we challenge the SNP MPs to provide one example.

SNP Early Day Motion 652
That this House notes with concern that the Community Security Trust recorded a doubling of anti-Semitic incidents across the UK in 2014 to 1,168; further notes that the pattern of these attacks reveals the single biggest contributing factor to have been anti-Semitic reaction to the armed violence between Israel and Gaza in July 2014; condemns all forms of racism and affirms that anti-Semitism has no place in campaigns of solidarity with Palestinians; calls for the adoption of all necessary measures to eliminate racism and anti-Semitism, while emphasising the democratic right to criticise the governments and policies of any and all states whilst ensuring this avoids spilling over into group-blame or racist stereotyping; further calls on all sides of the House to combat racism, and for hon. Members to make clear the distinction between the Jewish community and to encourage responsible public debate and use of language around enhancing inter-communal co-operation and education; and calls on the Government to actively seek a just and stable resolution to the conflict that would bring the benefits of peace to both the Palestinian and Israeli people.

Open Letter to Signatories of the SNP Early Day Motion 652

Dear Member of Parliament,

I am writing to you because you have signed an Early Day Motion on anti-Semitism and Palestine solidarity. 

I am one of the original founders of Britain’s Palestine Solidarity Campaign.  I am also Jewish.  As well as having been an anti-fascist activist for over 30 years, I have also sought to successfully exclude anti-Semites such as Paul Eisen and Gilad Atzmon from the Palestine solidarity movement.  Mr Eisen was only discovered by the mass media during Jeremy Corbyn’s campaign this year but I exposed him 8 years ago. [The Seamy Side of Solidarity, Guardian Comment is Free, 19.2.2007] 

Although it may be well intentioned, the EDM is both misguided and wrong. 
1.     
The EDM notes the doubling of anti-Semitic incidents across the UK in 2014, as recorded by the CST.  The CST’s statistics are not reliable and neither is the information they distribute. 

On October 27th they boasted, regarding the attempt by the Home Office to deport the leader of Israel’s Northern Islamic League, Raed Salah, that ‘CST provided evidence of Salah's inflammatory and antisemitic statements to the Home Office and we are pleased that this evidence was accepted by the court.

What they didn’t publicise was that the Upper Immigration Tribunal overturned this decision on appeal.


‘The principal source for the decision to ban him, … was a report compiled by the CST.  Almost a year on, all four charges against Salah, supporting his deportation, have been thrown out by the vice-president of the Upper Immigration Tribunal. In his ruling, Mr Justice Ockelton said May was misled and "under a misapprehension as to the facts"….

The CST's confidential advice to the home secretary was accompanied by a well-orchestrated and poisonous campaign against Salah in the media, who so swiftly and conclusively condemned him as a "hate preacher".

2.      The CST is a far-Right Zionist organisation bankrolled by Gerald Ronson, a right-wing industrialist.  It has a political agenda and is vehemently anti-Palestinian.  When I received two posts at my blog, one denying the holocaust, the other expressing a desire that my family and myself had perished at Auschwitz, I filed a complaint. The CST determined that the former post was anti-Semitic but not the latter – because it was posted by a Jew (& Zionist). 

3.      The EDM ‘affirms that anti-Semitism has no place in campaigns of solidarity with Palestinians’.  This presumes that anti-Semitism has ever had a place in the Palestine solidarity movement.  This is wholly untrue.  Indeed the main bastion of support for Israel and Zionism lies on the anti-Semitic far-right of British and European politics.  Both the BNP and EDL are ardent supporters of Israel and its attacks on Muslims.  The EDL has attacked a number of Palestine events.  In Birmingham theyattacked a PSC stall displaying an Israeli flag in one hand and giving Hitler salutes with the other!
  
4.    The EDM states that ‘violence between Israel and Gaza’ in July 20014, in fact an unprovoked attack by a military superpower on a civilian population, when over 550 children died, produced a rise in anti-Semitic incidents in Britain.  The reasons for this should be obvious.  Israel claims its actions are those of a ‘Jewish’ State and that they are carried out on behalf of all Jews, not merely its own Jewish citizens.  Even worse, the Board of Deputies of British Jews has repeatedly organised demonstrations and issued statements supporting the attacks on Gaza. 

In August 2014 a group of British Jews held a demonstration outside the Board’s offices ‘BritishJews Against Genocide Protest Outside the Offices of the Board of Deputies of British Jews’ protesting at the fact that the Board deliberately associates the Jewish community in Britain with Israel’s murderous attacks on the Palestinians.  The Board of Deputies deliberately makes British Jews targets for those angered by Israel’s actions.  It is not surprising that some people take the Board at its word and then attack individual Jews. 

However such attacks have nothing to do with the organised Palestine solidarity movement and your strictures would be better directed at those who are primarily responsible for associating British Jews with Israel’s actions.  We agree that people should not ‘group blame’ Jews for Israel’s actions, however your words would be better directed at those responsible.

As currently worded, the EDM is directed at the wrong target.  In so far as there has been an increase in anti-Semitic incidents as a result of Israel’s genocidal and racist behaviour, these are random attacks by individuals who have nothing to do with the Palestine solidarity movement.

Yours sincerely,


Tony Greenstein

These are the names and email addresses of the SNP and other dupes who have signed this motion.  Please contact them to let them know your feelings on the matter

richard.arkless.mp@parliament.uk<richard.arkless.mp@parliament.uk>; hannah.bardell.mp@pariament.uk<hannah.bardell.mp@parliament.uk>; kirsty.blackman.mp@parliament.uk<kirsty.blackman.mp@parliament.uk>; phil.boswell.mp@parliament.uk<phil.boswell.mp@parliament.uk>; bottomleyp@parliament.uk<bottomleyp@parliament.uk>; deidre.brock.mp@parliament.uk<deidre.brock.mp@parliament.uk>; alan.brown.mp@parliament.uk<alan.brown.mp@parliament.uk>; douglas.chapman.mp@parliament.uk<douglas.chapman.mp@parliament.uk>; ronnie.cowan.mp@parliament.uk<ronnie.cowan.mp@parliament.uk>; martin.docherty.mp@parliament.uk<martin.docherty.mp@parliament.uk>; mark.durkan.mp@parliament.uk<mark.durkan.mp@parliament.uk>; marion.fellows.mp@parliament.uk<marion.fellows.mp@parliament.uk>; patrick.grady.mp@parliament.uk<patrick.grady.mp@parliament.uk>; peter.grant.mp@parliament.uk<peter.grant.mp@parliament.uk>; neil.gray.mp@parliament.uk<neil.gray.mp@parliament.uk>; calum.kerr.mp@parliament.uk<calum.kerr.mp@parliament.uk>; stewart.mcdonald.mp@parliament.uk<stewart.mcdonald.mp@parliament.uk>; carol.monaghan.mp@parliament.uk<carol.monaghan.mp@parliament.uk>; paul.monaghan.mp@parliament.uk<paul.monaghan.mp@parliament.uk>; roger.mullin.mp@parliament.uk<roger.mullin.mp@parliament.uk>; gavin.newlands.mp@parliament.uk<gavin.newlands.mp@parliament.uk>; margaret.ritchie.mp@parliament.uk<margaret.ritchie.mp@parliament.uk>; robertsona@parliament.uk<robertsona@parliament.uk>; tommy.sheppard.mp@parliament.uk<tommy.sheppard.mp@parliament.uk>; mike.weir.mp@parliament.uk<mike.weir.mp@parliament.uk>; eilidh.whiteford.mp@parliament.uk<eilidh.whiteford.mp@parliament.uk>; corri.wilson.mp@parliament.uk<corri.wilson.mp@parliament.uk>; wishartp@parliament.uk<wishartp@parliament.uk>

Irving Weinman (1937-2015) - an Indefatigable Fighter - RIP Comrade -

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A tribute to a much loved member of Brighton PSC and Jews 4 Justice 4 Palestinians


I first met Irving Weinman many years ago on a Palestine solidarity demonstration in Brighton.  Irving was a gentle giant of a man, who was born in Boston, USA and educated at Trinity College in Dublin and Cambridge University.
Irving was a prolific and much respected author and poet and wrote a number of books explaining the art of creative writing.  He was also a lawyer and had a wonderful wry sense of humour.
Irving was also a Jewish anti-Zionist and a long-standing supporter of the Palestinians.  A few years ago he went to Gaza to deliver much needed aid but unfortunately was prevented, over a period of over 3 weeks, from entering Gaza by the Egyptian police state, which did and still does do Israel’s bidding.
Israel’s Yad Vashem has a category of ‘righteous gentile’ – those non-Jews who put their own lives at risk in order to save Jews during the holocaust.  Irving was one of that rare breed, a righteous Jew, who realised that the Palestinians are today’s Jews of the Middle East.   He stood up against the racist messianic fundamentalism which has gripped Israel and is leading it towards a modern day version of Armageddon. 
I talked to him a number of times about how Israel has taken on many of the characteristics of the anti-Semitic European states that Jews fled from in the past century, including Nazi Germany.  Israel’s definition of itself as a Jewish state, its demographic obsessions and its concern with who was born in the night, are they Jewish or an Arab, whose desire for an ethnic-religious purity mirror’s Hitler’s concerns for Aryan racial purity.  

It is little wonder that Netanyahu seeks to pin the blame for the holocaust on the Palestinians, with his suggestion that the  Mufti of Jerusalem Hajj amin al-Husseini was responsible for persuading Hitler to exterminate the Jews.  Hitler have been more than willing just to expel them.

I had the good fortune to attend a memorial meeting in Irving’s memory today in Lewes, where he and his partner, Judith Kazantzis lived.  Judith, who is also not well, was Irving’s devoted companion and a noted poet in her own right.  She always accompanied Irving on demonstrations and to meetings in Brighton.  Both of them came on the pickets of Sodastream in Brighton, where we managed, over the course of nearly 2 years to shut down an Israeli shop in Brighton that traded in the stolen goods of the Palestinians on the industrial park of Mishtor Adumim on stolen land on the West Bank.
Irving in a brown hat on demonstration against the attack on Gaza 11.1.09.





I learnt much about Irving today that I hadn’t known beforehand, in particular about his literary and poetic achievements.  He was indeed a man of the world and he will be sorely missed, not only by his family but by the Palestine solidarity movement and Jewish anti-racist and anti-Zionist groups.

Irving was a member of Jews for Justice for Palestinians because he felt a particular responsibility, as someone who was Jewish, to speak out against the mass murder and expulsions perpetrated against the Palestinian people in the name of Jews, by the so-called Jewish state.  Irving stood in an anti-racist tradition that went back to the Jewish fight against anti-Semitism in Europe, not the Zionist tradition of anti-Arab racism.  Irving was proud to be Jewish.  His attitude to Israel's war crimes was 'not in my name'.

We salute you Irving.  You will always be in our thoughts.  Lotta continua.

Tony Greenstein


Irving in a brown hat on demonstration against the attack on Gaza 11.1.09.
Below is a tribute from fellow novellist and member of Brighton & Hove Palestine Solidarity Campaign, Naomi Foyle
Irving's parents were shtetl Jews from Romania who lived in Paris before emigrated to Boston in the thirties where Irving was born in 1937. 

His mother spoke seven languages and Irving grew up hearing mainly Yiddish, Russian and French, and also much music in the house. Irving had recently written fiction about the pogroms, and spoke of his mother to me after I returned from Odesa last year - he was very taken by the fact I had seen Isaac Babel's drinks cabinet in the city's small Jewish museum. 

Irving was also a talented musician, jazz piano being his first love before switching allegiance to literature. He attended writing classes with Sylvia Plath and Anne Sexton in his youth, co-founded the Key West Writers Workshop, and as well as novels, poetry and short fiction more latterly wrote books on the craft of fiction. 


Irving in a brown hat on demonstration against the attack on Gaza 11.1.09.
He was married for thirty five years to the poet Judith Kazantzis, and together the couple were staunch members of BHPSC. As well as participating in local protests, Irving co-founded British Writers In Support of Palestine, helping to run letter writing campaigns promoting the cultural and academic boycott of Israel; he also spent four weeks in 2010 as a driver for the Road to Hope Convoy to Gaza, about which he blogged en route.  A dear friend to so many, he will be sorely missed. 

SNP MPs Don’t Take Kindly to Criticism over Palestine ^ 'anti-Semitism'

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SNP EDM Motivated by Desire to Attack 

Corbyn over Kaufmann


Hands across the water


Former leader Salmon is known for pro-Zionist stance -   the attitude of Nicola Sturgeon is not known
The question is how far does friendship go?
Oh dear it appears I’ve upset the SNP with the blog I posted suggesting that their Early Day Motion owed more to the Zionist ‘anti-Semitism’ lobby than Palestine solidarity.  The person who drafted it, one Gary Spedding, texted me furiously tonite decrying my suggestions.
The real anti-Semites:  EDL attack on Birmingham PSC stall - Hitler salutes and Israeli flag too!

Having gone on to his blog it would appear that he is pro-Palestinian, in a vague sort of way, but in a controlled and directed manner, i.e. he has to have his ‘pet’ Palestinians who agree with his liberal imperialist viewpoint which is one of conflict resolution etc.  No mention of Zionism or the structures of oppression.  It’s no surprise that he boasts of having worked for the Alliance Party in the North of Ireland.  Republicanism must be an alien tradition which is why the North’s SDLP signed the EDM.
The limits of nationalism are demonstrated by equivocation over Israel and BDS

I stand by my critique of the resolution.  Indeed the longer I look at it the worse it looks.

i.                     It notes that ‘the single biggest contributing factor’ to the rise of anti-Semitism has been the reaction to the ‘armed violence between Israel and Gaza.’  This is then linked to anti-Semitism being part and parcel of the Palestine solidarity movement.

ii.                  It cites the CST uncritically, despite them being a vehemently anti-Palestinian group, which hates anti-Zionist Jews in particular.  Spedding says he consulted anti-Zionist Jews first.  This I doubt if one or 2 contributors to comments on his blog are anything to go by.

iii.                The description of the genocidal attack of Israel on the Gaza is described as ‘the armed violence between Israel and Gaza’.  A curious formulation.

iv.                It engages in the politics of equivalence, talking about bringing the benefits of peace to both the Palestinian and Israeli people’ which is a convenient way of ignoring who is the oppressed and who is the oppressor.  It also omits all mention of Zionism.

v.                  It’s also wrong about the ‘benefits of peace’ being equal.  Israelis are privileged by Zionism, Palestinians are not.  The benefits to them are far less tangible, indeed arguably non-existent.  Spedding should read  Martin Luther King’s ‘Letter from an Alabama gaol’ on how the privileged don’t ever give up their privileges voluntarily.

What puzzles me even more is that Spedding is drafting all these EDMs, 50 at least he says, yet he is unpaid.  The SNP contingent in Parliament must be getting a  few million pounds in ‘Short’ money.  Why isn’t he being paid?  Me thinks young Gary is being exploited and should demand the living wage.!

Tony Greenstein
Gormless fascists in Brighton attack PSC stall and beat a hasty retreat
SNP Early Day Motion 652
That this House notes with concern that the Community Security Trust recorded a doubling of anti-Semitic incidents across the UK in 2014 to 1,168; further notes that the pattern of these attacks reveals the single biggest contributing factor to have been anti-Semitic reaction to the armed violence between Israel and Gaza in July 2014; condemns all forms of racism and affirms that anti-Semitism has no place in campaigns of solidarity with Palestinians; calls for the adoption of all necessary measures to eliminate racism and anti-Semitism, while emphasising the democratic right to criticise the governments and policies of any and all states whilst ensuring this avoids spilling over into group-blame or racist stereotyping; further calls on all sides of the House to combat racism, and for hon. Members to make clear the distinction between the Jewish community and to encourage responsible public debate and use of language around enhancing inter-communal co-operation and education; and calls on the Government to actively seek a just and stable resolution to the conflict that would bring the benefits of peace to both the Palestinian and Israeli people.

It also appears that the motivation for this EDM was a thoroughly sectarian one.  Labour’s Gerald Kaufmann MP has been under attack for some unwise words about ‘Jewish money’ which in the context are not anti-Semitic.  It would appear that the SNP sought to take advantage of this to embarrass Jeremy Corbyn and to do it at the expense of the Palestinians.  That really is shameful.
Tony Greenstein
You should at least talk to me and others before going around claiming that the motion I drafted is a Zionist conspiracy
What you've written and your attempt to coerce MPs to withdrawing their signatures is insulting and a disgrace
I'd very happily discuss with you
  • Today
  • Tony Greenstein
https://static.xx.fbcdn.net/rsrc.php/v2/y4/r/-PAXP-deijE.gif18:07
good then let's discuss. But what is disgraceful is the suggestion that the existing Palestine solidarity movement tolerates, in any shape or form, anti-Semitism. As someone who is Jewish I find that particularly insulting and there is a far higher percentage of Jewish people involved in the PS movement, than their share of the population would warrant. Not that the mass media would ever supply you with such information.
'Anti-semitism' or to be more accurate the 'new anti-Semitism' is the last resort of the desperate. Apparently Obama has joined the long list of anti-Semites if Netanyahu's press spokesman is correct. Indeed Hitler himself was an unwilling participant in the holocaust, having been browbeaten into it by the Grand Mufti.
The motion itself is clumsily worded, preaches to the converted and manages to insult those of us who have withstood the daily brickbats of being called 'traitors' and 'self haters' (just as the Nazis termed German anti-fascists),
The SNP hasn't given a great deal of practical support to the Palestine solidarity cause and Alex Salmond I recall has been pretty sympathetic to those confusing anti-Zionism and anti-Semitism. It would have been helpful to have consulted first and acted afterwards.
In the circumstances I had no option but to act as I did but if you wish to discuss or talk further fine. My email is xxxx
  • Gary Spedding
https://static.xx.fbcdn.net/rsrc.php/v2/y4/r/-PAXP-deijE.gif18:15
As a member of this movement I can say it does tolerate and is complicit in some anti-semitism. I see it at the meetings I attend. I see it in parliament.
I understand you are set in your ways, but the majority of left-wing anti-Zionist Jews with whom I consulted on the drafting of this motion approved it and even offered ideas for changing the initial wording.
If you only see anti-semitism as a last ditch attempt by desperate Zionists then you need to reevaluate yourself seriously. You also need to apologise publicly for smearing the SNP - especially to Philippa Whitford who has a very clear record in supporting Palestinian rights.
The motion itself has one mistake in it. The rest is absolutely crystal clear. The SNP has made huge commitments to Palestine solidarity - I would know, because I've been advising them on these things and taking Palestinians to parliament to meet with them.
You acted without first checking the facts. I already have your email address, it's been splattered all over my inbox with the various emails you sent to the MPs that I work closely with on these and other matters.
  • Tony Greenstein
https://static.xx.fbcdn.net/rsrc.php/v2/y4/r/-PAXP-deijE.gif18:15
excellent
  • Gary Spedding
https://static.xx.fbcdn.net/rsrc.php/v2/y4/r/-PAXP-deijE.gif18:17
What might be embarrassing for you, In fact it is already embarrassing, is that you suggested in your blog post that this is all a Zionist formulated idea. In reality, the motion came from an individual (myself) who is on record as being very anti-Zionist.
I've even used one or two of your blogs in the past
But what you wrote about the SNP does untold damage to Palestine solidarity and also harms you as an activist
This is me speaking very frankly, without anger or malice as I've not got time for any of that nonsense
Mostly though you've upset a lot of MPs who are doing their best to tackle a system in Westminster they're very unfamiliar with
  • Tony Greenstein
https://static.xx.fbcdn.net/rsrc.php/v2/y4/r/-PAXP-deijE.gif18:19
the motion has all the appearance of being drafted from a Zionist perspective. Anti-semitism isn't the problem./ It's the daily death toll in Palestine and the way spurious allegations of anti-semitism are being used to deflect attention from this.
Anti-semitism in this country is not a problem. It is marginal. Where it occurs I have always fought it , not least on blogs like this. Perhaps you would like to google the Zeon French cartoonist .
  • Gary Spedding
https://static.xx.fbcdn.net/rsrc.php/v2/y4/r/-PAXP-deijE.gif18:19
And the reason the SNP put the motion is because Labour under Corbyn wouldn't and I didn't want the conservatives to do it because I'm tired of the fight against anti-Semitism being monopolised by right-wingers, used to bash the fight against islamophobiq as if it's a competition and then gets pro-Israel rhetoric inserted into it.
  • Gary Spedding
https://static.xx.fbcdn.net/rsrc.php/v2/y4/r/-PAXP-deijE.gif18:20
Islamophobia
Where there are spurious accusations of anti-semitism it's absolutely vital to point them out. But this motion is NOT one of those.
Activists on 972 Magazine from Palestine wouldn't be writing about anti-Semitism having no place in Palestine solidarity if it wasn't a problem
Heck I wouldn't be writing about it and kicking up a fuss if it wasn't a problem
  • Tony Greenstein
https://static.xx.fbcdn.net/rsrc.php/v2/y4/r/-PAXP-deijE.gif18:23
Well I'm sorry if I upset people and if the motion was well meaning but that is not how it comes across. The priority at the moment is solidarity with the Palestinians. I am not going to get into the Corbyn thing except to say that the attacks on Jeremy have been part and parcel of the false use of 'anti-Semitism'.
I am more than aware of +972 magazine but they have the right priorities. Where is y our EDM on theextra-judicial executions of Palestinians, or the description of Palestinians as animals and sub-human by the Deputy Defence Minister in charge of the Territories, Eli Dahan.
This motion is seriously wrong. And anti-Semitism does NOT and never has had a place in the PS movement. Even the Board of Deputies representative was forced to concede that I led the fight against Gilad Atzmon.
  • Tony Greenstein
https://static.xx.fbcdn.net/rsrc.php/v2/y4/r/-PAXP-deijE.gif18:24
I have to go now because I have a meeting. E-mail me and I will look again at what you write later regards Tony G
  • Gary Spedding
https://static.xx.fbcdn.net/rsrc.php/v2/y4/r/-PAXP-deijE.gif18:25
I can go through the EDM list and send you the ones that I've authored - I've done one on extrajudicial killings and I'm waiting for amnesty Israel to get back to me on wording.
I could spend hours sending you the 50 or so EDMs I've drafted
NB: I am one person, with no organisation behind me or funding
I'm a full time student
I can't do everything
  • Tony Greenstein
https://static.xx.fbcdn.net/rsrc.php/v2/y4/r/-PAXP-deijE.gif18:27
fine but this is the only one I've seen. And it's suggestion that anti-Semitism in the PS movement is a problem is simply wrong.
I am also unpaid!
  • Gary Spedding
https://static.xx.fbcdn.net/rsrc.php/v2/y4/r/-PAXP-deijE.gif18:30

I don't think it is wrong - it accurately reflects a problem and demonstrates that pro-Palestine MPs take the issue seriously. It only strengthens their position as Palestine solidarity advocates.

Israel's Lynching of Haneen Zoabi

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I’ve written before about the attacks of the Israeli state and politicians from all the Zionist parties – (with the partial exception of Meretz) on Haneen Zoabi, the incredibly brave Israeli Palestinian Member of the Knesset for Balad/Joint List.
Haneen Zoabi
As readers of the blog will be aware from previous posts eg. The Witchhunt Against Arab-Israeli Knesset Member Haneen Zoabi Haneen Zoabi is subject to what can only be called a lynch mob mentality inside the Knesset, Israel’s ‘parliament’ from Zionist  MKs.  The reflection of this attitude outside the Knesset is, not surprisingly even worse.  If the campaign continues it can only be a matter of time before an attempt at assassination of Zoabi occurs.  And if that takes place the responsibility will lie not just on Jewish Home (Habayit HeYehudi) or Likud but on the Israeli Labour Party/Zionist Union and Yesh Atid, the ‘moderate’ Zionist parties.
Frankfurt synagogue set alight

Mosque set alight by settlers
Despite all their fulminations against Islam and Islamic fundamentalism, the Zionists demonstrate that what they really fear is Arab nationalism and secularism, not least a woman who isn’t the caricature female in a Burka but an unveiled woman from a Muslim background.  As I’ve often documented on this blog, despite its attacks on Islam, Israel is most happy with Islamic fundamentalists and in spite of its rhetoric it played a key part in the foundation of Hamas.  
Haneen Zoabi first aroused the Zionist ire when she was a passenger on the Marvi Marmara, the ship that Israel attacked killing 10 people on the high seas as it tried to break the Gaza blockade.  When she challenged the view that the killing of 3 settler youth last year was ‘terrorism’ as opposed to individual killings she was suspended for 6 months by the Knesset from effectively being an MK.  When the ‘Justice’ Minister posted genocidal comments on her FB page calling for the murder of Palestinian mothers to stop them giving birth to ‘little Palestinian nakes’ there was no comeback.  Israeli racism is acceptable, Palestinian opposition is always unacceptable.

Below is an interesting article comparing the pogrom against Germany’s Jews in November 1938 to the attacks on Haneen Zoabi.

Tony Greenstein

by Richard Silverstein on November 9, 2015

MK Haneen Zoabi fights back against attacks on her by Israeli Jewish rightists
Haneen Zoabi attacked during election campaign
Israeli Palestinian MK Haneen Zoabi is once again stirring up a hornet’s nest among Israeli Jews.  For those not well versed in how she is perceived, imagine Malcolm X in the year or two before he died, when he was reviled by white America as a white-hating firebrand and inciter of racial violence.  She has been threatened with death too many times to mention, including a Facebook group which put a bull’s-eye right above her forehead.
(credit: Jewish Voice for Peace)
Invited to address a Dutch Jewish leftist group, Platform Stop Racism and Exclusion, in Amsterdam on the anniversary of Kristallnacht, Zoabi took the opportunity to link the victimization of European Jews by the Nazis to the suffering of Palestinians under Occupation.  Zionists insist they have a monopoly on suffering and the world’s sympathy and exploit the Holocaust regularly for this purpose.  Having a Palestinian probe the issue and point out both the flaws in the argument and the implications racial hatred may have in today’s Israel-Palestine conflict is simply maddening.
Synagogue burning in Kristallnacht
the Church of the Multiplication of the Loaves and Fish at Tabgha, near Tiberias




That is why Zoabi is not just vilified, but under constant police investigation and repeatedly scolded by her Knesset colleagues who strip her legislative privileges for her temerity.  Another impact of her activism is to rebut the Likudist meme that Palestinians are the modern incarnation of Nazis (remember Bibi’s false claim that the Mufti told Hitler to “burn them”?).  Zoabi, in effect, turns the tables and notes that it is the Israelis who are adopting many of the practices of the Nazis, if not yet the cardinal one of genocide.

Kristallnacht/Nakba
The coverage of Zoabi’s speech is incomplete.  Most Israeli news outlets paraphrase bits of it.  And I don’t yet have a transcript of her remarks (UPDATE: I do now here).  But a Dutch newspaper published an interview with her just before she spoke this evening.  In it, she goes over the points she would’ve likely made in her talk:

Faced with criticism from Netherlands, Zoabi said by telephone, they can “just laugh.”

“I’m used to it, that I am accused of being anti-Semite or Hamas supporter. The fact is that I stand up for the Palestinian people. This makes many Israelis, and apparently others angry. That is the real reason for the sedition against my person. ”

Do you understand that Israelis feel that you undermine the state?

Zoabi: “For Israelis, the Palestinians have no right to resist. After all, they find that there is no occupation of Palestinian territory. In their eyes, the Palestinians do not suffer humiliation, arrests, land grabbing and so on. Israel is in total denial of the occupation, the harassment of Palestinians, of crimes against humanity. If you demonstrate against it, you’re supposedly agitating. They even have a problem with Europeans supporting the Palestinians, who they seek to prevent entering the country. Israel is the one who incites against the truth.  Every critical European voice it silences by calling it anti-Semitic. ”

What do you think of the accusation that you are an anti-Semite?

“That is political terror. A method to impose silenced on people . Any criticism of [Israeli] oppression is called anti-Semitism. ” But I’m not making that oppression. I did not create the reality. How do they want me to react to it? They expect that I should agree with it? Israelis seem to think we will not resist. ”

What does the commemoration of Kristallnacht for you personally?

“It is very important to commemorate Kristallnacht. I stand up for freedom, dignity and human rights. Kristallnacht was an important stage on the way to the demonization of Jews. If the majority of the Germans and the rest of the Europeans had not demonized the Jews, there would have been no Holocaust. For me, the silence of the majority an important role. Not everyone agreed, but they kept their mouths shut in the face of demonization of the Jews. ”

How do you explain the link between Kristallnacht and the situation in Israel and Palestine?

“The majority of Israelis supports the suppression and demonization of Palestinians. The message of the Kristallnacht is precisely: do not be silent. Of course we have no problem with Jews. But in this country privileges are to be given to one group, in this case the Jews. That is the wrong message. You can not combat racism and oppression by handing out privileges. Racism must be countered by equality, justice and human rights.”

972 Magazine journalist, Avi Blecherman affirmed Zoabi’s views about the decline of Israeli society into a semblance of proto-Nazism in this Facebook post I translated:

A society doesn’t lose itself in a single day.  For the Germans too it took time.  We’re speaking of a long process of deterioration until the inevitable catastrophe.  We [Israelis] are on the way there.  The last remnants of what morality we had are breaking down, sinking into a mire of self-righteousness and victimhood.  We’re turning our neighbors into sub-humans, murderous beasts: we must not buy from them, live next door to them, permit our daughters to be defiled by them.  Most of all, we must “neutralize” them, destroy and plunder their homes, and deny them citizenship, which they only had on a conditional basis anyway.

Israel is already deep into free-fall towards the abyss.  Prime Minister Fascist-yahu is already dripping into our brain the new comparison: Palestinians=Nazis.  MK Yinon Magal has lately been quoted telling us that the time has come to stop talking about a single Nakba [1948], and start talking about future ones.  A ‘Blue and White’ Kristallnacht is coming, it’s only a matter of time, don’t worry yourself.  We’ve taken on a role much closer to the Nazis, the closing of the ultimate circle.

In this passage, Blecherman refers to this Channel 10 interview with Bayit Yehudi resident-fascist MK, Yinon Magal.  Among other candid statements he makes are:

…After the first Intifada, Rabin surrendered to terror and signed the disgusting, worthless Oslo Accord, the results of which we saw in the second Intifada and up till today.

Before Oslo, most of the world was with us– [rejecting] this folly that there is a people here, a so-called Palestinian people–there is no such people and there will never be such a state–and we must hack away at this hope.  The Palestinians must understand that in war, whoever waves a knife–we can say “Meet Comrade Machine-Gun and Comrade Bullet” [a reference to Haim Guri’s 1943 poem of revenge in which he introduces Zionist weapons as characters who offer revenge for the murder of Europe’s Jews]; that we can count not just Intifadas, but Nakbas [a reference to the two Intifadas and one 1948 Nakba].   Whoever starts a war runs the risk of paying a very heavy price.

What interesting about the reference to the Guri poem is that it was written in 1943, both at the height of the Shoah in Europe and heightened confrontation between Palestinian and Jewish militias in Palestine.  The “comrades” exact revenge not only against the Nazis who exterminated Jews, but also against the Palestinians for making it impossible to save more Jews in Palestine.  Thus, Magal is closing a circle that Netanyahu began by linking the Nazis to the Palestinians.

As far as Israeli politics is concerned, Netanyahu has almost become a figure of the past.  A bridge between the Likudist past of Shamir and Begin and the future of who knows?  The Magals, Hotovelys, Shakeds, and Yaalons are the Likud of the future (see JVP graphic #IsraeliIncitement).  Magal has promised Palestinians a future Nakba.  He’s laid out on a silver platter the future plans of the Jewish state to ethnically cleanse its non-Jewish population.  This is the sort of moral abyss Blecherman refers to in his Facebook post.

Anyone reading this who attempts to dismiss or minimize it, calling it rhetoric, is deluded.  The assassination of Yitzhak Rabin began in just such incitement.  Yinon Magal promises us a future Blue and White Kristallnacht, an Israeli Jewish version of the Third Kingdom, which we might just as well call the Third Reich.

You’re seeking consolation perhaps?  No, there may not be a Shoah.  Small consolation.  No ashes of Palestinian corpses flying up chimneys.  Just an ethnic cleansing of a few hundred thousand or million Palestinians.

Germany’s Racist Green MP Volker Beck Calls for the Repression of Palestinian supporters

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Die Grunen - Germany's Greens spearhead the Zionist Attack on BDS in Germany

Calling Green Parties in Britain & Internationally to Dissociate Themselves from Germany's Green Party

You might expect a Green Party, of all parties, to extend a hand of solidarity to the oppressed.  If Green politics means anything it must mean opposition to racism ethno-nationalism and systematic discrimination and genocide.  But when it comes to Germany’s Green Party, it would appear that it’s a case of Green Imperialists ‘R US.

The rot set in in 2002 when the German government, which was a Green-SPD coalition, with Joshka Fischer of Die Grunen as Foreign Minister, sent German troops into a war, the Afghanistan War, for the first time since World War 2.
The label may read Green but the reality is racist 
But Volker Beck of Die Grunen has really outdone any of this.  Knowing full well that the Palestinians are living in an Apartheid state and Volker Beck is no fool, he nonetheless accuses supporters of BDS of ‘anti-Semitism’.
Volker Beck describes Al Quds day as hateful as hundreds of Berliners take to the streets in support of the Palestinians
Even worse, this rat of a green, tries to get the German state to employ the full    panoply of its powers.  He is asking the State to begin employing repressive and coercive measures against those who are  trying to build solidarity with an oppressed people.  If what is happening to the Palestinians were to happen to the Jews in Germany then Beck would be the first to cry anti-Semitism.  Or would he?  Given that anti-Semitism and Zionism are the opposite sides of the same coin one suspects that Volker Beck would turn a blind eye to native racism.
Germany's racist Green  MP
The question is why this bigot has not been criticised by either fellow Greens or other Green parties internationally.  If the whole of the German Green Party is now compromised and beyond salvation then we would expect Green parties in other parts of Europe, including Britain, to speak up.
The racist Green who accuses anti-Zionist Jews of 'anti-Semitism'
Volker Beck was responsible for the removal of Jewish and Israeli anti-Zionists Max Blumenthall and  David Sheen from the Bundestag earlier this year on the false grounds of anti-Semitism.

The irony is that the German conservatives, the CDU rejected Volker Beck’s suggestion that BDS was anti-Semitic (see below).

So we have the position that Beck is to the rightof the Christian Democrats on the question of Palestine!

Tony Greenstein
Enjoying a joke at the expense of the oppressed
 German lawmaker outraged: 'BDS aims essentially against Jewish Israelis and is therefore anti-Semitic'
Germany has rejected a definition of anti-Semitism that labels the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement (BDS) as anti-Semitic, the Jerusalem Postreported Monday.

Responding to a legislative questionnaire released Thursday by leading Green Party MP Volker Beck, the Merkel administration wrote that “there does not exist a general academic definition” of anti-Semitism.

Beck, who heads the German- Israel parliamentary group in the Bundestag, sharply criticized the Merkel administration: “Here the federal government has cowered,” he said. “There is no doubt of the anti-Semitic motivation within the spectrum of the BDS campaign. BDS aims essentially against Jewish Israelis and is therefore anti-Semitic. Whoever aggressively boycotts Israeli goods and people, should also be viewed as anti-Semitic by the federal government.”

The German government said it defined anti-Semitism, as “political, social, racist and religious” hostility toward Jews.
Add caption

Volker Beck's questions whose purpose was to begin the repression of Palestine solidarity supporters
Volker Beck’s Questions to the Government and the Responses
google translation: 

29. Does  the federal government  classify the so-called BDS campaign against Israel (BDS - Boycott, Divestments and Sanctions) as anti-Semitic?

If so, why? If not, why not?

a) How many followers and supporters does this campaign have in Germany according to the knowledge of the Federal Government ?

b) Is the BDS campaign or its supporters according to the the knowledge of the Federal Government under observation of the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution?

The questions 29, 29a and 29b are answered together.

The Federal Government has no knowledge of the activities listed above of the
campaign, which is allowed under § 3 BVerfSchG observation by the BfV.

The Federal Government has not got any evidence concerning the findings in terms of the question.

The BfV has no knowledge of the observation of the campaign by a State Office for the Protection of the Constitution.

BfV = Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution


Open Letter to SNP Members of Parliament – Don’t Be Fooled by False Accusations of anti-Semitism

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John Mann MP, Zionist Chair of Parliament’s ‘anti-Semitism’ Sub-Committee Joins the Signatories

Gary Spedding - the Walter Mitty Character who drafts SNP EDMs
 
Another self-seeking publicist and narcissist -   the Blue Labour MP 'rent a gob' John Mann 
  
Dear Member of Parliament,

I wrote to most of you at the weekend in response to the signing of EDM 652 by predominantly SNP MPs (28/33).  I also enclosed a link to a blog article entitled ‘Zionism in anAnti-Racist Guise - SNP falls for the oldest Zionist trick in the book - AttackPalestinians, Shout ‘anti-Semitism’ 
Being anti-Semitic is no obstacle to being a supporter of Israel and Zionism
I note that it has now garnered an extra 9 signatures -  mainly the more reactionary Labour MPs (John Mann in particular) as well as a stray from Plaid Cymru and the UUP, who clearly thought her friends in the SDLP needed the company of Protestant supremacism.

The EDM, although deceptively worded, clearly has a Zionist pedigree.  My objections, as a longstanding Jewish anti-Zionist, to the motion  were five fold:
John Mann's racist friend - former New Labour MP Phil Woollas who ran an openly racist campaign but was deselected by the High Court
1.             It affirmed that ‘anti-Semitism has no place in campaigns of solidarity with Palestinians’ thereby assuming that it ever has had such a place.

2.             It cites as a reliable source the statistics of the Community Security Trust, an overtly right-wing Zionist organisation, which supplied false information to the Home Office to secure the deportation of Raed Salah, a Palestinian leader in Israel.  The Upper Tribunal threw the case out when it was revealed that this information had been forged.  There is good reason to believe that the anti-Semitic incidents that the CST records are similarly suspect.
Robert Zile MEP, Latvian LNNK - another anti-Semitic friend of Israel - likes to march with the veterans of the Latvian Waffen SS every March
3.             It refers to ‘armed violence’ between Israel and Gaza whereas in reality there was what the noted Israeli author, Ilan Pappe described as ‘incremental genocide’.  2,200 Palestinians were killed, including 551 children, whereas approximately 70 Israelis died of whom 90% were soldiers.
Zionist Federation vice-chair Jonathan Hoffman demonstrates alongside Roberta Moore of the neo-Nazi Jewish Defence League
4.             It calls for members ‘to make clear the distinction between the Jewish community…’ and ends there.  Presumably this illiterate motion means the Jewish community and the actions of Israel.  I agree but it is somewhat unfortunate that the Israeli government repeatedly claims that it acts on behalf of all Jews, inside and outside Israel and that the Zionist Board of Deputies of British Jews goes out of its way to associate the British Jewish community with the actions of Israel.  Is it any surprise that some people take the claims of Zionists seriously?
John Mann MP did his best to stop Jeremy Corbyn MP being elected and used the racist Daily Express - which in the 30s ran a campaign against admitting Jewish refugees from Nazi Germany - to further his campaign
5.             The issue is not ‘anti-Semitism’ but the virulent racism of the Israeli state.  The issuing of a book Torat HeMelech by Rabbi Yitzhak Shapira which advocated killing non-Jewish children and infants, as they would grow up to hate Jews.  The precise argument Himmler gave to senior SS officers in October 1943 as a justification for killing Jewish children.  No prosecution of Shapira ever took place and when he was temporarily detained by Police for one day hundreds of rabbis protested against this.  The examples of Israeli racism, such as barring Arabs from Jewish towns, forbidding the right of Israeli Palestinians to rent ‘Jewish’ homes are numerous.
The Zionist CST sees its job as excluding left-wing Jews from communal meetings
What I didn’t realise was that the EDM had been drawn up, not by the initial signatories to the motion but by a Gary Spedding, who claims to be part of the Palestine solidarity movement but who is widely derided by activists for his self-seeking publicity seeking.   I and others have been bombarded by him with comments for most of this week. 
Smug, reactionary, not very bright but 'concerned' about 'anti-Semitism'
Mr Spedding informed me that Your opinion of me matters very little. My performance is judged on how threatened the Israel advocacy groups feel by the work I do and I can tell you that they're terrified. Absolutely terrified.

Well he certainly terrifies his few remaining friends and he should terrify you!  He is an extreme example of narcissism.  A Walter Mitty character. 
Spedding, has made it clear that, in his opinion, I ‘choose to remain blind to the anti-semitism that blights our movement. I have asked Spedding repeatedly what exactly this blight consists of.  His silence has been deafening.  When there were anti-Semites hanging around the Palestine solidarity movement, Gilad Atzmon and Paul Eisen in particular, it was Jewish anti-Zionists who rooted them out.  Gary Spedding was nowhere to be seen.  In his arrogance, Mr Spedding thinks he knows more about anti-Semitism than Jews who work within the Palestine solidarity movement

I would therefore ask you to remove your signature from this overtly Zionist inspired EDM.  It constitutes a direct attack on Palestine solidarity work in this country.  It serves no purpose whatsoever and it is not surprising that the high priest of false accusations of anti-Semitism, John Mann MP, has become a signatory.  You should also think very carefully before signing anything by Gary Spedding again.  Anti-Semitism is repeatedly used by the Zionist movement and the Israeli government as a weapon against their detractors.  Today it is the European Union for labelling goods made in the West Bank.  Yesterday it was President Obama.  Two weeks ago the Palestinian people were blamed for forcing the holocaust upon Hitler.

This wild use of the term anti-Semitism simply lets the real anti-Semites off the hook.  Like the boy who cried wolf, it immunises people to anti-Semitism when it does occur and drains the term of all meaning.

I hadn’t realised when I wrote to you that one activist had even gone so far as to set up a Spedding Solidarity Movement page!  Please don’t be taken in by this charlatan again. 

Yours sincerely,

Tony Greenstein

It would be unkind not to make a particular mention of John Mann MP, since he too loves publicity - good or bad.

As Chair of the Parliamentary Sub-Committee on 'Anti-Semitism' John Mann MP, despite not being Jewish, considers himself an expert.  The anti-Semitism that concerns him is that which is connected with opposition to Israel - like Boycotts, Sanctions and Disinvestment.

So when the Universities Colleage Union decided to boycott Israeli Universities for their involvement in research for the Israeli military, training its officers and running programmes specifically designed to meet its needs, as well as institutes of security and the like, John Mann MP and the corrupt Dennis MacShane MP swung into action.

When an action for racial discrimination was brought by Anthony Julius of Mishcon de Reya, an ardent Zionist solicitor, against UCU for racial discrimination (the argument being that Zionism is an inherent part of being Jewish and therefore to be anti-Zionist is to be anti-Jewish and therefore racist) John Mann MP was more than willing, with Dennis MacShane, to give evidence.  The  Tribunal case - Fraser v UCU was comprehensively lost and the Tribunal had this to say about the two MPs:

"We did not derive assistance from the two Members of Parliament who appeared before us. Both gave glib evidence, appearing supremely confident of the rightness of their positions. For Dr MacShane, it seemed that all answers lay in the MacPherson Report (the effect of which he appeared to misunderstand). Mr Mann could manage without even that assistance. He told us that the leaders of the Respondents were at fault for the way in which they conducted debates but did not enlighten us as to what they were doing wrong or what they should be doing differently. He did not claim ever to have witnessed any Congress or other UCU meeting. And when it came to anti-Semitism in the context of debate about the Middle East, he announced, “It’s clear to me where the line is …” but unfortunately eschewed the opportunity to locate it for us. Both parliamentarians clearly enjoyed making speeches. Neither seemed at ease with the idea of being required to answer a question not to his liking."

Die Linke – Germany’s Left Party Scabs on the Palestinians

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A good article on  America’s Jacobin site, on another German party, this time the left Social Democratic Party, Die Linke, which was formed by the former SDP MP Oscar Lafontaine and the ex-German Communist Party PDS led by Gregor Gysi.

Instead of challenging the establishment consensus around support for Israel Die Linke and Gysi in particular has caved into a nakedly chauvinist and racist position of supporting Israel in all circumstances.
People tend to explain this as the way Germany atones for the holocaust but that is not true.  You don’t atone for one abominable crime by committing another.  Shame over previous racism isn’t atoned for by another form of racism.

The position of Germany’s parties – all parties from the Christian Democrat CDU/CSU to the Social Democrats SDP and Green Party Die Grunen– of unflinching support for Israel has more to do with Germany’s position as an unflinching supporter of American imperialism in Europe and the Middle East than atonement for the holocaust.

Israel is, despite its recent disagreement over the Iran deal, the US’s vicious watchdog in the Middle East.  It is armed and equipped by the USA to ensure that western interests in the region are protected.  Of course there are occasions when Israel and the USA disagree but as former Secretary of State Alexander Haig once said, Israel is America’s unsinkable aircraft carrier in the region.  It is a stable pro-western state and for that reason any human rights violations can be overlooked, not that the USA is particularly concerned anyway.

Although the position of Die Linke isn’t as bad as that of the Green Party, it is still appalling.  Last December I covered thecowardly reaction of Gregor Gysi when two Jewish and Israeli anti-Zionists, Max Blumenthall and David Sheen came to the Bundestag.  They were accused of ‘anti-Semitism’ by Gysi and of course the Green’s Volker Beck.  It ended up in Gysi taking cover in the toilet as Blumenthal and Sheen chased him around the building.

The behaviour of Die Linke is at one with the record of the former German Communist Party which veered, according to the Soviet Union’s Foreign Policy, from support for Israel and Zionism in 1948 to hostility to Israel as the latter threatened the USSR’s allies in the region, whilst at the same time supporting Stalin’s anti-Semitic ‘Jewish Doctors’ policy around 1953.

The German Left’s Palestine Problem


Die Linke protestors against Afghanistan war
Die Linke’s position on Palestine has isolated it from the global solidarity movement.

It was a truly bizarre scene, worthy of a Peter Sellers film: a man frantically running through the Bundestag’s lifeless corridors. Behind him, another man, David Sheen, accuses him of smears and putting his life in danger from Israeli right-wing thugs. The man is Gregor Gysi, head of the Left Party’s (Die Linke) parliamentary caucus. He walks to a bathroom and closes the door shouting to Sheen “Raus mit dir!” (“Out with you!”).
Annette Groth and Inge Höger, two Die Linke parliamentarians who were aboard the 2010 Free Gaza Flotilla, try to calm Sheen and his associate, Max Blumenthal.

What exactly happened?

It seems that Gysi went out of his way to cancel an event with Blumenthal and Sheen scheduled to take place at Die Linke’s premises in the Bundestag. Another party MP, Petra Pau, co-signed a letter along with a politician from the Green Party and a Social Democrat heading the main Israel lobbying organization in Germany, urging the Volksbühne Theatre to cancel an event with Blumenthal and Sheen scheduled for November 9.
The letter claimed Blumenthal and Sheen were a “one-sided duet” who compare Israel to Nazis, and who had the nerve to stage an anti-Israel event on the anniversary of Kristallnacht.

Pandemonium ensued after the release of the video showing Gysi heading to and from the toilet. Die Linke’s reformist right-wing not only forced the party’s parliamentarians who invited Blumenthal and Sheen to apologize to Gysi, but is now openly calling for their expulsion from the caucus, more or less accusing both of them of antisemitism.
Gregor Gysi - Die Linke leader
Heike Hänsel, another allegedly sympathetic MP, went as far as to openly state that she will never work with Blumenthal and Sheen again. That a German party, even a left-wing one, should be somewhat cautious in criticizing Israel, in a country where the definitions of Judaism, Israel, and Zionism have been consciously conflated for half a century, should not come as a surprise. But that parts of its top brass should actively work with the media to smear two internationally known Jewish anti-Zionists as “antisemites” is truly alarming and casts serious doubts on the party’s ability to relate to the global Palestine solidarity movement.

The history of the German left’s attitude to Israel/Palestine is truly complex and for the uninitiated foreign leftist, perplexing and occasionally shocking.

When I first moved to Germany from Cyprus during the height of the Second Intifada, I didn’t pay much attention to the conflict other than instinctively lending my moral support to whoever happened to be the oppressed in this and any other conflict. But at university, I was shocked to find that when left-wing, mostly autonomist-minded activists on campus used to talk about Palestine, it wasn’t even to adopt the minimally acceptable position of condemning Israel’s brutal “pacifying” of the West Bank and Gaza Strip, but to romanticize the country as some kind of Middle Eastern Cuba under threat from Nazi-inspired Palestinian suicide bombers.

Clearly this attitude was not and is not representative of the entire left on this issue, but it nevertheless points out a more problematic trajectory than in other Western European countries.
While the fact that Germany is responsible for the industrial murder of millions of Jews partially explains the German left’s Palestine problem, the East-West dimension is equally crucial; Gysi has been the official face of East German post-communism for the last twenty-five years. The case of Die Linke merits special attention here, since the inner dynamics of an outcast left-reformist party in Chancellor Angela Merkel’s modern Germany amid the contradictions of the Eurozone crisis also influence its approach to the Middle East.

The German Left and Palestine: A Brief History

Like the British Labour Party, the German Social Democratic Party (SPD) and the trade union bureaucracy were stridently pro-Zionist in the 1950s and 60s. Postwar social democracy saw Israel as a socialist-inspired state, paving a “third way” between Western liberal capitalism and Eastern “totalitarianism.”

Such a policy was seen as permissible from a left-wing point of view. After all, German conservatives — despite paying reparations to Israel for the Holocaust — refused to establish diplomatic relations with Israel until 1965, despite secretly arming the new state. This was done ostensibly to uphold the “traditional German-Arab friendship,” but was in reality aimed at preventing a wave of recognition for the “illegitimate” German Democratic Republic (GDR) by the Arab states.
For young Marxist intellectuals on the fringes of the SPD, establishing diplomatic relations with Israel became a left-wing cause in response to a political establishment that integrated former Nazis into the state apparatus, most notably Hans Globke, a top advisor to Konrad Adenauer and co-author of the infamous Nuremberg race laws.

East Germany’s Communist government, on the other hand, had to follow the twists and turns of Stalinist foreign policy. Accordingly, the Soviet line on supporting the Zionist militias was adopted in the crucial period of 1947-49. On the other hand, the East German bureaucrats engaged in party purges in the early 1950s that effectively mobilized antisemitic sentiments against undesirable elements, prompting a Jewish exodus from East Germany.

With the Soviet Union’s pro-Arab tilt around the same time, the GDR also tried to outdo itself in anti-Israeli rhetoric to gain vital diplomatic recognition by the Arab states. The GDR was anti-Zionist insofar as it opposed Israel’s policies. But like the Soviet Union, it never questioned its settler-colonial nature, seeing Israel’s alliance with imperialism as simply a matter of bad choice. It was Israel’s territorial expansionism at the expense of Soviet allies that bothered the Eastern Bloc, not so much the discriminatory nature of its ruling ideology.

Meanwhile in the West, things were changing. Israel was now the United States’ prime ally in the Middle East, while the latter was fighting an unpopular war in Vietnam. Germany and Israel established official relations two years before and the war witnessed a multitude of pro-Zionist frenzy in the right-wing Springer press.

As Israel officially became a front-line state in the struggle against communism, West German students, organized in the Socialist German Student Association (SDS) were joining their peers in the United Kingdom, France, Scandinavia, and elsewhere, in proclaiming their solidarity with the Palestinian fedayeen. Palestinians were now not just a logistical refugee issue but visible subjects, with the more left-leaning organizations of the Palestinian Liberation Organization contributing greatly to the framing of this struggle as part of the wider endeavor for self-determination in the Global South.

After SDS disbanded in 1970, its different successor organizations also took up Palestine as a cause (although due to the German historical context, much less than in other Western countries). The most prominent examples were undoubtedly the Red Army Faction (RAF) and the Revolutionary Cells, two terrorist groups that were to a great extent armed and trained by the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine.

While overemphasized, these were not the only examples. Palestine solidarity in one form or another existed along the entire spectrum of the Left — from the Maoist “communist groups” and Trotskyist and workerist tendencies, to the “milder” pro-Soviet German Communist Party and even the youth section of the SPD.

Death of a Movement: The Antideutsch

The collapse of a pro-Palestinian consensus is undoubtedly linked to the global retreat of the left that commenced in the late 1970s. The German radical left after 1968 was never a mass movement with a wide appeal in the working class, unlike its counterparts in Great Britain, France, and Italy. West German capitalism was better at integrating the upheaval of 1968.

In political terms, it was Social Democracy that was the main beneficiary of 1968. The radical left found itself increasingly isolated, a part of it turning to urban terrorism. The bloody crescendo reached its climax in the “German autumn” of 1977, when kidnappings and plane hijackings by the RAF ended in the deaths of two of its imprisoned founding members.

This only helped accelerate a turn away from the support of armed struggles in the Third World and toward broader ecological and pacifist movements, a turn that was given political expression by the Green Party. Some Marxist groups continued to operate but mostly ineffectually.

Meanwhile, other militant sections coalesced around the autonomist movement. The Autonomencontinued to uphold anti-imperialism, including the Palestinian cause. They were a subculture as much as a movement, characterized by squatting and militant confrontations with the police. But their profound disdain for theory also made them susceptible to the effects of the cataclysmic political events that came in 1989.

In the face of a neo-Nazi offensive following reunification, a significant part of the autonomists adopted the worldview of the Antideutsch, the “anti-Germans.” These ex-Maoist remnants expressed the view that the biggest enemy for the German left to confront was the abstract notion of “Germany” as nation. An alliance was necessary with anyone perceived to be against “Germany.”

Israel did not figure prominently in the beginning of the Antideutsch movement. This changed after the outbreak of the Second Intifada and 9/11. The Antideutschwere already thrilled by Daniel Jonah Goldhagen’s Hitler’s Willing Executioners. They now fervently applied his idea of “eliminatory antisemitism” to virtually any movement opposing US and Israeli hegemony in the Middle East, be it secular nationalist or Islamist.

Matthias Küntzel, an ex-Maoist and Antideutsch ideologue in the tradition of the French nouveaux philosophes, even devoted an entire book to “prove” (without the slightest knowledge of Arabic) that the ideology of Hamas and Hezbollah was “Nazi-inspired.” By this point, the hardcore of the Antideutsch bid the Left farewell, proclaiming it “dead.” Remnants of the movement have since made common cause with far-right Islamophobes.

However, the cultural aesthetics and ideas of Antideutsch — a bizarre mix of techno music, self-managed housing projects, and endless discussions on the “structural antisemitism” of the anti-globalization and Occupy movements — characterize a large share of the current German radical left. This is especially true in eastern Germany, where a strong far right often engages in a demagogic, antisemitic kind of anti-Zionism. This, incidentally, is also the part of the country where the disastrous legacy of Stalinism and the chronic weakness of organized labor are more visible.
Newspapers like Jungle World that celebrate autonomy in Chiapas, queer politics, and radical ecology are stridently pro-Israel in their outlook. It’s not that all autonomists in Germany support Israel in every instance or are indifferent to the existence of Islamophobia. But openly questioning Israeli oppression of Palestinians is deemed out of bounds, since this could open the gates to existing latent antisemitism.

When Israeli bombs fall on the Gaza Strip killing and maiming thousands, many from the alternative scene abstain from protesting in solidarity with the victims, arguing that since Hamas doesn’t present an “emancipatory alternative,” there isn’t really anyone the Left can embrace.

In this, there is an uncomfortable and often unwilling convergence of autonomist discourses with the rampant Islamophobia currently plaguing Germany, with regular attacks on mosques coupled with calls on Muslims to “integrate” and “disassociate” themselves from ISIS. When a mob of five thousand hooligans, many of them active neo-Nazis, gathered in front of Cologne’s main train station on October 26 to protest “Salafism,” the far smaller counter-demonstration assembled under the abstract slogan “against racism and religious fundamentalism,” apparently eager to disassociate itself from the Salafism.

This had the rather unsettling effect of equating young discriminated Muslims with the direct political heirs of Himmler and Goebbels.

At a subsequent meeting convened to discuss the aftermath of the demonstration, I witnessed how left-oriented German students could genuinely not fathom why the counter-protest’s slogan was outright wrong. This drew the desperate ire of a comrade of Iranian background, a symptom perhaps of a deepening rift between significant parts of the Left and Muslims living in Germany.

Enter Die Linke

Die Linke is vital terrain to struggle against this tendency. Born from a 2007 merger between those fleeing the SPD’s turn to the center — as well as activists energized by the anti-globalization and anti-war movements — and the Party of Democratic Socialism (PDS), the successor to the former East German ruling party, the party runs the entire gamut of the German left.

Those inside the tent include center-left trade unionists, Trotskyists, left-Keynesians, East German ex-communists, autonomists, and even an Antideutsch-inspired group with influence in the party’s youth wing. The party’s founding momentum was the result of a twin rejection of neoliberalism as well as “humanitarian intervention” abroad, which the SPD and the formerly pacifist Greens had championed in Yugoslavia and Afghanistan.

The question of Palestine has subsequently become a largely symbolic issue between those who see it as a matter of principle that an internationalist party should show solidarity with a liberation movement and those who envisage future Die Linke participation in a coalition government as a junior partner of the SPD and the Greens.

A layer of professional politicians from the PDS section — a mass party in the eastern states — leads the second camp. It had already participated in coalitions with the Social Democrats in a few states, including Berlin, where it has often subordinated its left-wing program to neoliberal fiscal concerns. The people currently calling for pro-Palestine MPs Annette Groth and Inge Höger to be expelled include supporters of these coalitions like Stefan Liebich, who professes to be a member of “Atlantik-Brücke,” a think tank dedicated to strengthening the German-American alliance.

They also include Klaus Lederer, Die Linke’s chairman in Berlin, who spoke at a pro-Israel rally during the 2008–9 war on Gaza. “Reflection” and “guilt” over East Germany’s record of “one-sidedness” in the conflict are stated as the main reason for this tilt to the Zionist point of view. Descending from the old GDR’s state-affiliated professional caste, it is not hard to recognize why being in government is seen as a more effective way to change things than being in a movement.
Gysi has been careful to play a more integrative role within the party. But during a speech in 2008 at the Rosa Luxemburg Stiftung, the party’s think tank, he explicitly linked the prospect of Die Linke joining a future coalition government with the acceptance of the German Staatsräson, or national interest, shared by all other parliamentary forces. In addition to acceptance of Germany’s commitment to NATO and the European Union (EU), this includes assent to its “special relationship” with Israel.

This relationship is evident in German sales of nuclear-capable submarines to Israel, as well as German vetoing of initiatives within the EU to upgrade the status of Palestine. By couching its support for Israel in moral terms, Germany is thus cynically providing a fig leaf for an otherwise morally indefensible status quo that profits its armaments industry.

On the other hand, Oskar Lafontaine, the former SPD maverick whose defection from the Social Democrats was crucial in forming Die Linke, has rarely commented on Palestine. The only exception was a 2006 radio interview during the war on Lebanon, where he spoke of an additional, indirect German responsibility towards the Palestinians.

In all of this, there has been a synergy between the Antideutsch within the party and key sections of the mainly eastern ex-Communists. The first group has engaged in smearing its political opponents as antisemites, something the latter has also taken up, since those outspoken on Palestinian rights often tend to be opposed to future participation as a junior partner government.

Mobilizing the media has been an important aspect of this slander. In 2011, a member of the Antideutsch caucus BAK Shalom – which regularly engages in occupation apologetics – published a “scientific study” on “anti-Zionist antisemitism in Die Linke” in the Frankfurter Rundschau, a mainstream daily. This caused a media storm, with the other parliamentary parties convening a special hearing in the Bundestag on Die Linke’s “antisemitism.”

Amid a subsequent heated internal debate within the party’s parliamentary caucus, a directive was issued prohibiting any discussion on the one-state solution, participation in the BDS campaign, or the second Free Gaza Flotilla. The decision was far from unanimous. Many MPs boycotted the bill, and others were forced into signing off after Gysi threatened to resign if it was rejected. While this has shielded the party from further accusations of antisemitism, it has also driven a wedge between the biggest left-wing German party and the growing global solidarity movement.

Since then, things have been quiet. The party doesn’t just unceasingly call for a two-state-solution, but has elevated it to a political identity, completely detached from realities on the ground and to be defended against Palestinian activists or Israeli leftists like the ones who called on Die Linke to disassociate itself from outfits like BAK Shalom.

However, a significant number of officials and activists actively avoid bringing up the subject, given its divisive potential. The historical weakness of the postwar German left and its constant fragmentation have led to an almost compulsive need for “unity,” even by people whose support for Palestine is not under question. This is often justified by framing the debate as a useless squabble that has no concrete effect.

Up to a certain point, this is understandable. Die Linke is engaged in a delicate effort to create a popular opposition to the powerful Merkel consensus. But this is also a dishonest approach, tantamount to denying the special responsibility of the German government in propping up the occupation, as well as the potential of the German left to actively challenge this collusion with apartheid and to engage in effective — not just symbolic — solidarity. 

Israel and German Islamophobia

The internal dynamics of Die Linke and its structural position between opposition and accommodation contribute to its position on Israel. Unfortunately, those same dynamics have prevented the party from taking a principled stance against the EU. Out of fear of being seen as veering too close to the positions of the Eurosceptic right-wing Alternative für Deutschland (“Alternative for Germany”), Die Linke has emphatically rejected questioning the wisdom of the single currency, while at the same time rightly rejecting austerity in the European South, a somewhat unconvincing and contradictory approach.

But its position on Palestine is also derivative of the wider historical and social structure. For this is not just any issue; it is closely linked to Germany’s obsessive need for an assertive new post-1990 national identity, as well as the prevailing Islamophobic climate.

Ever since the Green foreign minister Joschka Fischer justified Germany’s first combat mission since 1945 in Yugoslavia by claiming the aim was to prevent “another Auschwitz,” the historical lessons from the Holocaust have been constantly perverted by Germany´s political elite to pursue dubious political goals at home and abroad.

German pro-Zionism has had the historical function of reintegrating Germany into the “international community.” With Germany now a respected member of that community, Angela Merkel has deemed “Israel’s security” as in Germany’s national interest, which only serves to exclude German Muslims 
for the fictitious narrative of a “Judo-Christian legacy.”

In this, there’s a convergence with the discourse of “failed” multiculturalism. The killing of the Kilani family in Gaza and the silence of Germany’s political class is a brutal example of which German citizens are considered worthy victims and which are not. A commentary in the Welt, a right-wing daily owned by the Springer Group, even accused Muslims of indulging in constant self-victimization. The publication didn’t receive the slightest bit of backlash.

The overemphasis on “Muslim antisemitism” is a further symptom of this pervasive new ideology. Just consider the protests against Israel’s latest offensive on the Gaza Strip this summer. Media outlets were filled with reports of “Muslim antisemitism,” as antisemitic slogans were heard during spontaneous anti-war marches, where “ethnic Germans” make only a tiny minority of participants.
To be sure, the danger of antisemitism in Germany is a real one and shouldn’t be underestimated. Verbal abuse against Jews has been reported, as well as an arson attack on a synagogue in the city of Wuppertal. As Richard Seymour has shown in the case of France, this antisemitism also exists within Muslim communities that happen to be the victims of constant discrimination themselves.

But this phenomenon is also partly the result of the media’s constant conflation of antisemitism with criticism of Israel, as Rolf Verleger, a former member of Germany’s Jewish Board of Deputies has pointed out. Even a great deal of the German left speaks of “antisemitism and racism,” the implication being that while racism is something easily analyzable, antisemitism is beyond logical explanation.

On another level, this confusion also stems from the Left’s practical inability to relate to events on the street and actively seek dialogue with Muslim communities. Instead, a troublingly elitist emphasis on largely abstract theoretical debates is the typical approach of a large part of Die Linke on this issue.

When party organizations in the Western state of North Rhine-Westphalia organized protests in Cologne and Essen against Israel’s war on Gaza last summer, reformist party officials in Berlin stated that they would not tolerate members of Die Linke marching on demonstrations where antisemitic slogans are heard. This was a top-down approach towards the contradictory nature of spontaneous movements in general, and one that was also accompanied by the media slandering of local party activists as “pandering to Islamic antisemitism,” often in concert with those same party officials.
Activists on the ground, however, have defiantly organized successful protests in Berlin together with Palestinian communities and progressive Jewish organizations, including parts of Berlin’s large Israeli expatriate community. The experience demonstrates that when protests are strategically organized and coordinated, the results open up a number of possibilities, not just to engage in practical solidarity with Palestinians, but also to break the wide gap between the organized left and immigrant workers. Indeed, one might wonder what the possibilities would be if Die Linke threw its entire weight behind such an effort, instead of letting the right-wing media determine its actions.
This is not just an issue of solidarity with a people abroad. It’s a pressing social issue. For in Germany, the powerful ideological domination of capitalism is also the effect of an extremely elitist educational system that separates children from an early age and places them into three distinct types of schooling, only one of which provides eligibility for higher education.

Not surprisingly, it is people from immigrant and working-class backgrounds that are most harmed by the structure of the education system, while the student left tends to be largely middle-class. If the German left is to break the hegemony of Merkelism, it must actively challenge Germany’s alliance with Israel, for it currently serves as the spearhead of a wider Islamophobic discourse that weakens resistance to neoliberalism at home by dividing opposition along cultural lines. This is done by intentionally conflating criticism of Israel with antisemitism, which in turn places the damaging stigma of the latter on those more likely to express solidarity with the besieged of Gaza.

On the other hand, the moral underpinning of German support for Israel cynically serves as a way of absolving German capitalism from its expansionist past, thus allowing German power to be projected abroad again; economically in the European South through austerity, and geopolitically against other imperialist powers like Russia. The historic circumstances are different, but Palestine is today to Germany what Algeria was to France in the 1950s — a source of chronic and self-inflicted weakness for the Left.

Which Way Forward for Die Linke?

The main challenge for activists within Die Linke is to link solidarity with Palestine to the struggle against all forms of antisemitism and Islamophobia in Germany. Boycotting Jewish activists like Max Blumenthal and David Sheen is an obvious setback and one that reinforces the current ideological status quo, which ultimately works against the party’s stated goals. Gregor Gysi might have momentarily garnered the sympathy of the right-wing Springer press, but the social and political agenda he stands for has been weakened in the long-run.

Die Linke, after all, will only be accepted by the establishment if it dumps its key defining positions on neoliberalism and foreign interventions. No doubt, some key people on its right-wing would like nothing more than that. But this would render the party unnecessary and politically irrelevant.
The Left within the party is fragmented, a great deal of it placing its hopes in winning the internal debate against reformists on a programmatic basis. This is a mistaken approach, since the party and parliamentary structure is inherently biased in favor of those wishing to soften Die Linke’s positions for the sake of government participation.


What can tilt the balance is an active linking with the international solidarity movement, as some scholars of the Rosa Luxemburg Stiftung attempted last summer, pointing to the striking contradictions between the party’s internationalist identity and its stance on Palestinian national liberation. It’s part and parcel of creating a movement dynamic enough to challenge the “new German ideology.

'The only democracy in the Middle East' bars visitors on political grounds

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As the Israeli state heads full steam towards becoming a fully fledged police state, yet another nutty far-right piece of legislation falls into place.  From now on, if you support boycotting Israel you won’t be admitted to the country.  Bear in mind, of course, that this means that people who wish to visit the Palestinians on the West Bank or in Gaza, will also be affected.
In a rare example of non-discrimination, Jewish people who are entitled under the Law of Return to enter Israel, will also be banned.  So it will officially become a State of Jewish racists and fascists.
The two Apartheid states used to comfort each other
It may, at first superficial sight, seem right that people who want to boycott a state should not visit it.  However people boycott a state not out of some primeval desire to cut it off from civilisation but because they wish the state to change, to become better, to become non-racist or non-Zionist.  It makes sense then for people who support Boycott to engage with people in Israel who also support these aims.
Another Boycott campaign the Zionist movement opposed - The Zionists negotiated a trade agreement with the Nazis, Ha'avara, which destroyed the Jewish Boycott of Nazi Germany
We should also bear in mind that even South Africa didn’t introduce legislation that barred people from its shores simply because they had advocated BDS.  What this means in reality is that people entering Israel will now be scrutinised as to what they believe.  Your entry will be dependent on your beliefs, surely a first in the world but of course not incompatible with Israel’s status as ‘the only democracy in the Middle East’.  You can now believe in anything you want just as long as those running the Israeli state agrees with you.
The Zionist movement has always favoured certain Boycotts - e.g. the Boycott of Arab Labour and Produce
This is another Bill from the openly racist, semi-fascist Jewish settlers' party, HaBayit HeYehudi (Jewish Home).  There was a time when a party like Jewish Home would have been confined to the margins of Israeli society, now its Ministers hold the Justice, Education and deputy Defence Minister positions.

However, lest some people carp about the 'only democracy in the Middle East's'' right to ban supporters of BDS, it is only fair to point out that Israel is being consistent.  

In the 1930's the Zionist movement fought tooth and nail against the Jewish boycott of Nazi Germany too.  The Zionists preferred to trade with the Nazis.  So enthusiastic were they that in August 1933 they agreed a trade agreement Ha'avara which enabled the Zionists to lay their hands on the wealth of German Jewry.   Their aim was to 'save the wealth of Germany Jewry' a rich community.  They weren't so bothered about saving German Jews though.

Between 1933 and 1939 some 60% of capital investment in the Zionist economy in Palestine came from Nazi Germany. [David Rosenthall, Jewish Frontier May-June 1998]


One unfortunate side effect of Ha'avara was that it destroyed the Jewish Boycott of Nazi Germany.  That was why Hitler had agreed to it.  The Nazis were able to say that whilst gullible non-Jews were boycotting Germany, the Jews were taking advantage of this to make extra profit.  It was difficult to point out that the Zionists were the quislings of the Jewish community.
Tony Greenstein

Bill Banning BoycottBackers From Israel Passes Preliminary Reading

'Anyone who wants to boycott is welcome to do so from Syria,' says MK Yinon Magal, who submitted the bill. Gov't supports such a law but finds current version extreme.

Jonathan Lis Nov 11, 2015 2:25 PM

A man wearing a T-shirt with the message, "Boycott Israel Apartheid" holding a Palestinian flag during an anti-Israel protest in Paris, France, August 13, 2015.Reuters

European Commission adopts guidelines for labeling products from Israeli settlements
Israel is in national denial regarding its oppression of Palestinians
The Knesset approved Wednesday the preliminary reading of a bill forbidding entry into Israel of anyone who calls for a boycott against Israel. The bill, which passed 55-31, followed Wednesday morning's decision of the European Union to adopt new guidelines for labeling products from Israeli settlements. 
A massive Jewish Boycott rally in the United States - the Zionists fought tooth and nail against it
"Anyone who wants to boycott Israel will be able to do it here," said MK Yinon Magal (Habayit Hayehudi), who submitted the bill. "He is invited to boycott Israel from Syria. The absurd situation in which a person exploits Israeli democracy and what Israel has to offer to advance boycotts against it is about to stop. The days are over when people who called for boycotting Israel landed at Ben-Gurion and took a taxi to Bil'in to throw stones at soldiers."
Interior Minister Silvan Shalom, who responded in the name of the government, said: "This bill is no doubt extreme, and there needs to be a thoughtful discussion about it and provisions for exceptions. The government is supportive subject to coordinating legislation with it."

MK Dov Khenin (Arab Joint List), who opposed the bill, said, "The real headline for this bill is the law for encouraging boycotting the State of Israel." He observed that according to the bill, "anyone who participates in labeling products can't enter Israel."
He added: "All of Europe is out. People are prepared to pay the price of deepening delegitimization and of hurting tourism in order to protect the settlements."
The European Commission adopted Wednesday morning the Notice on indication of origin of goods from the territories occupied by Israel since June 1967, a senior EU official said. Following the decision, EU Ambassador to Israel Lars Faaborg-Andersen was summoned to the Foreign Ministry in Jerusalem for a reprimand.




Zionist Barbarians Attack Palestinian Hospital and Kill Hospital Visitor

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Not content with their raid on the Makassed  hospital last week, when tear gas and  sound grenades were used, undercover Israeli soldiers have now raided Hebron hospital, killing the cousin of a patient whom they detained.

The phrase ‘the most moral army’ in the world is taking on a very sick flavour.
Naturally this is a war crime but not one that the BBC will see fit to publicise nor the American President to condemn.

Tony Greenstein

Video: Undercover Israeli soldiers kill one, arrest one inside Hebron hospital

Early Wednesday morning, an undercover Israeli special forces unit disguised as Palestinian civilians accompanying a pregnant woman inside a Hebron hospital killed one man and arrested another while holding doctors at gunpoint. The arrested man, Azzam al-Shalaldeh, 22, is reportedly suspected of attacking an Israeli weeks ago.

Security camera footage from the al-Ahli hospital published by local media shows a group of officers with faux beards and mustaches, and traditional Palestinian scarves entering the medical facility shortly before 3:oo am.

They rush past a reception desk in the surgical ward into a treatment room where Azzam al-Shalaldeh was recovering from injuries sustained during clashes with the Israeli army outside of Hebron 20 days ago. The Israeli forces then arrested Shalaldeh, during which Israeli forces shot and killed his cousin Abdullah al-Shalaldah, 27.

Palestine Today reported Israeli forces shot al-Shalaldah four times in the chest and head, with a weapon that was fixed with a silencer.

The Palestinian Ministry of Health released a statement condemning the operation inside of the medical facility, stating 21 Israeli undercover officers participated.
Abdallah al-Shalaldeh
Immediately following the shooting the Israeli forces were filmed exiting the hospital holding handguns. Staff at al-Ahli said the identity of the woman who entered with the Israeli officers is unknown.

“A hospital should be the safest place even in times of war, yet they have penetrated the hospital, arrested someone and murdered someone in it,” the director of the al-Ahli medical complex Dr. Jihad Shawour said to Mondoweiss, describing the incursion as “an ugly and disrespectful manner to enter the hospital.”

“We are used to getting arrested in various places and we have seen this scenario playing out before,” said Shawour, making a reference to another Palestinian arrested from a hospital bed by Israeli security forces in Nablus two weeks ago on similar suspicions of attacking an Israeli, “however this is the first time there has been a murder in the hospital.”

“So now the Palestinians are being killed in the road, the mosque, the church, the school and now the hospital,” Shawour added.

Palestinian parliament member Qais Abdel Karim called the incident a “double heinous crime” and said Israeli forces had “executed” al-Shalaldah.

Terror Attacks in Paris – As The West Sows So Shall It Reap

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The bombings and shootings in Paris last night should be condemned unreservedly.  There isn’t a shred of justification for the murder of over 120 innocent people by the fascists of ISIS. 

However, as the article from New Matilda in Australia makes clear, our grief should not be selective.  47 people died in twin suicide bombings in Beirut this week and there was no outpouring of grief.  Likewise over 100 people died in Ankara last month at a Kurdish peace rally.  Again there was little reaction.
Two  explosions outside football match
The first two bombings were carried out by ISIS, the latter bombing was very likely to have been carried out by the Turkish state which had deliberately been operating a strategy of tension in order to secure a victory for Erdogan’s AKP in the general election last weekend.
Demonstration in Turkish Kurdish areas against the Ankara bombings are tear gassed
But it goes further than that.  The West has condoned, if not supported, the maintenance of a rear base in Turkey by Isis.  The Turkish state, for whom the Kurdish PKK and PYD are the main enemy, has deliberately supported Isis, allowed its fighters and supporters to cross the border, allowed its trade in oil and other materials from Turkey to Syria whilst doing its best to prevent support for the Kurds in Syria to reach its intended target.
The aftermath of the Ankara bombing by the Turkish state and ISIS
NATO has specifically supported the Turkish attack on the Kurds, even though the Kurds are the only effective ground fighters against Isis, as even the United States has had to accept.  Even worse, the USA has supported, via its Saudi and Gulf clients, the supply of weaponry to a variety of Jihadist groups in Lebanon, including the al-Qaeda group Al Nusra and similar groups.
Erdogan's Ankara bombings
Our own BBC is, not unnaturally, party to this cover-up.  In How the BBC Erased All Trace of Saudi Support for Al Qaeda in Syria I cited Glenn Greenwald as showing that the Saudi claim that it was not supplying al-Nusra (al Qaeda) but only Jaish al-Fatah (Army of Conquest) was a complete lie since al-Nusra is the main component of the Army of Conquest.  When this was  pointed out to the BBC, since it is common knowledge,  (even The Telegraph, in an early October article complaining that Russia was bombing “non-ISIL rebels,” noted that the Army of Conquest “includes a number of Islamist groups, most powerful among them Ahrar al-Sham and Jabhat al-Nusra”and even the CIA station Voice of America noted that “Russia’s main target has been the Army of Conquest, an alliance of insurgent groups that includes the al-Nusra Front, al-Qaida’s affiliate in Syria, and the hard-line Islamist group Ahrar al-Sham, as well as some less extreme Islamist groups.”
trio embrace after Bataclan concert hall bombing in Paris
What did the BBC do?  It simply edited out all mention of The Army of Conquest  Gulf Arabs 'stepping up' arms supplies to Syrian rebels stating that ‘The well-placed official, who asked not to be named, said (that) … those groups being supplied did not include either Islamic State (IS) or al-Nusra Front, both of which are proscribed terrorist organisations. Instead, he said the weapons would go to the Free Syrian Army and other small rebel groups.’  If you look at the small correction at the bottom of the article it says ‘Correction 23 October 2015: A reference in an earlier version of this story had wrongly indicated Jaish al-Fatah did not include the Nusra Front and has been amended.’ However this would be meaningless, since there is no other reference to Jaish al-Fatah in the article.
Beirut bombing
Isis did not come out of nowhere.  It was formerly Al Qaeda in Iraq.   It is the nakedly sectarian stance of the US imposed Maliki government in Iraq which drove Sunni Iraqis into its hands.  Supplied by the Saudis, whose Wahhabism is similar to it, and staffed by senior military ex-Baathists, Isis has grown in strength in Iraq over the last year, despite US bombings, having taken Ramadi and Fallujah following their capture of Iraq’s second city, Mosul.  The only force that has been able to successfully fight them is the Kurdish Peshmerga. 
Aftermath of Ankara bombings
The only victory for the Iraq forces is in Tiqrit, Saddam Hussein’s old town.  However its former Sunni inhabitants are too afraid to return because of the reputation of the Shi’ite militia who captured it. Isis in Iraq: Why Tikrit remains a ghost town two months after its liberation from militant fighters 
Beirut bombing
It is the West’s ‘peace keeping’ starting with the invasion of Iraq that caused the situation whereby  Isis have grown in strength and now been able to mount a co-ordinated attack in the heart of  Paris.  Those who, like Britain’s moronic Defence Minister, Michael Fallon, believe it is 'Morally indefensible' not to bomb IS in Syria’ http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-34742361need their heads examined. 
Police clash with protestors over Ankara bombing 
The West has been complicit in supporting the ‘moderate’ Islamists of al-Qaeda and Ahrar al-Sham in Syria.   That is why the ‘moderates’ of the Free Syrian Army were resurrected when Russia started bombing the Jihadists.  Regardless of whether one supports Russia’s intervention, the fact is that Russia has had more success in one month than the US has had in over a year of bombing, breaking the year long siege on Kweyris airbase near Aleppo last week.  That is what has caused the panic in the West, not least in Turkey and with Erdogan, whose plans to invade Syria and attack the Kurds have had to be shelved.
Beirut bombings
The fruit of the West’s duplicity was played out last night in Paris and in Beirut last week and in Ankara last month.

Tony Greenstein

Paris Attacks Highlight Western Vulnerability, And Our Selective Grief And Outrage

By Chris Graham on November 14, 2015 International Affairs
Beirut bombings
As France enters yet another period of mourning, Lebanon is just emerging from one. Not that you probably heard anything about it. Chris Graham reports.
The Eiffel Tower
If you didn’t know better, you could be excused for believing that the planning behind the latest terrorist attack in Paris is about more than just causing widespread death and fear in the West.
It looks like it’s also designed to highlight our selective outrage.
France Paris Shooting
Overnight, dozens of people have been confirmed dead in a series of coordinated attacks in Paris.
News sites have fired up live blogs. Serious news Channels such as Sky are providing blanket 24-hour coverage of the event, and, as with all things tragedy, media are competing with each other for scoops and gory videos.

World leaders are also out in force, condemning the attacks. Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull held a press conference in Berlin a short time ago, after sending out this message of solidarity with the French people.
injured man carried by rescue workers Paris
Australians’ thoughts, prayers & resolute solidarity with people of France as they respond to brutal terrorist attacks in Paris tonight.
— Malcolm Turnbull (@TurnbullMalcolm) November 14, 2015

He was joined by his Foreign Minister Julie Bishop.

We stand in solidarity with people of France in condemning horrific terrorist attacks – my press conference: https://t.co/WQI7m65ic6— Julie Bishop (@JulieBishopMP) November 14, 2015

Labor’s Tanya Plibersek also tweeted in support.
Terrible news coming out of Paris. My thoughts are with the people of France.
— Tanya Plibersek (@tanya_plibersek) November 13, 2015

French president Francois Hollande has declared a national State of Emergency, and closed its borders.
inside football stadium
Meanwhile, in a brown part of the world, as the attacks began in Paris, Lebanon was just emerging from a National Day of Mourning, after 43 people were killed and 200 more were injured during a series of coordinated suicide bombings in Beirut.

The attacks – for which ISIS has reportedly claimed responsibility – occurred in the southern Beirut suburb of Burj al-Barajneh, a predominantly Shia community which supports the Hezbollah movement. Not counting Israel’s assaults on Lebanon, the slaughters represent the deadliest bombings in Beirut since the Lebanese civil war ended more than two decades ago.
Like suspicions around the attacks in France, the bombings in Beirut are believed to be in response to Hezbollah’s decision in recent weeks to send in troops to support efforts in northern Syria against Islamic State.
Lebanese bombings
But the bombings in Lebanon drew no tweet from Malcolm Turnbull, no social media statement from Barack Obama, no live media blogs from Western media, no wall-to-wall media coverage. And no twitter hashtags from Australians in solidarity with the Lebanese.
People crowd onto football pitch
It’s a curious state of affairs, when you consider that there are around three times as many people of Lebanese descent living in Australian, compared to French nationals.

You’d think if we were able to identify with anyone, it would be with Lebanese Australians – after all, so many of them are among the most beloved in this nation, and have contributed enormously to public life.

Marie Bashir – perhaps the most admired Australian governor in history – is the child of Lebanese immigrants. Her husband, Nick Shehadie is as well – he’s the former Lord Mayor of Sydney, and a member of the Australian Rugby Union Hall of Fame.
shooting Paris outside cafe
Queensland parliamentarian Bob Katter has Lebanese roots. Former premier of Victoria, Steve Bracks does as well. One of the most loved rugby league stars of all time is Hazem El Masri. Benny Elias’ parents come from Lebanon. So do Robbie Farah’s.

In the AFL there’s Milham Hanna and Bachar Houli, and the current coach of the Australian Wallabies, Michael Cheika, is of Lebanese descent.
site of twin suicide bombing in Burj al Barajneh, Beirut
The Lebanese contribution to Australian business has also been immense – John Symond, the founder of Aussie Home Loans has Lebanese heritage. Jacques Nasser is the former CEO of Ford Motors in Australia. Ron Bakir of Crazy Ron’s mobile phones was born in Lebanon, and migrated to Australia.
There have, of course, been many great contributions by Australians with French heritage – commentator Richie Benaud, actress Cate Blanchett, businessman Robert Champion de Crespigny, politician Greg Combet, and the iconic AFL star Ron Cazaly.

But how do we explain our identification with French suffering and our apparent indifference to Lebanese suffering? Or more to the point, how do we explain our indifference to the suffering of people we perceive as different, Lebanese, African, Hazara, Muslim…. Brown people.
The sad reality is, Australia has been here before, and just 11 months ago. A few days before the Charlie Hebdo massacre, terrorist organisation Boko Haram razed the town of Baja in Nigeria, killing more than 2,000 people.
street in Beirut where bomb went off nr market
The world’s media – and most of its politicians – were mostly silent. Last month, at least another 30 people were killed in another attack on Nigerian mosques by Boko Haram.

That followed 10 people killed in a coordinated attack near the Maiduguri Airport, again by Boko Haram.

In Islamabad Pakistan, at least 20 people were killed in a suicide attack on minority Shias. That came a day after 12 were killed in an attack on another Shia shrine, this time in the province of Balochistan.
It is the Shia who were manning many of the boats that we turned away a few years ago, as sectarian violence reached unspeakable levels in towns like Quetta in Pakistan. When the Pakistani Taliban targeted the Hazara community in Quetta in September 2010 at the Meezan Chowk (a market in the middle of the city), they managed to kill at least 73 people and injure 160 more. In the background of the bloody carnage is a billboard sponsored by the Australian Government, warning Hazaras against the dangers of getting on a boat to come to Australia.

The Meezan Chouk attack in Quetta, In September 2010. In the background is a billboard sponsored by the Australian Government, warning locals of the danger of getting on a boat to seek asylum.
In September, at least 117 people were killed at a mosque in Nigeria, again at the hands of Boko Haram. The simple fact is, Muslims are far more likely to die at the hands of other Muslims – or more to the point, Islamic extremists who bear no resemblance to average Muslims. They’re also more likely to be killed by Westerners, who are seeking to kill Islamic extremists. The difference is, they’re unlikely to see an outpouring of grief in Australia, or most of the rest of the world. But unlike Parisians, they already live in a state of perpetual terror. That’s why many of them have fled the Middle East for Europe, a reality which prompted this tweet this morning from American movie star Rob Lowe, a man who adequately sums up the outrage and frustration of white bigots everywhere.

Oh, NOW France closes its borders. #Hollande— Rob Lowe (@RobLowe) November 13, 2015

The sad reality is that these attacks will increase. You can’t stop five or eight people with a gun and a twisted ideology, just as you can’t stop an American or Australian military with a commercial, strategic and political interest in slaughter.

Westerners are finally being given just a small taste of the constant fear that people from other nations have endured for generations. So solidarity with, and compassion for, the French is a good thing.

But solidarity and compassion for the victims of terrorism everywhere is even better, in particular those who’ve fallen victim to the terrorism sponsored in all our names.

Batting for Apartheid - JK Rowling stumps for Israel — what would Harry Potter do?

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Even the young Harry might have worked this one out
One of the most interesting things about the letter calling for cultural co-existence with Israeli Apartheid is how few cultural figures were represented on the list of signatories.  Apart from JK Rowling, there was the washed out feminist, Fay Weldon, the star of BT’s adverts, Maureen Lipman and a couple of other has beens.
 What it lacked in cultural input  it more than made up for in members of the Conservative Friends of Israel who signed the letter.  People not normally known for their tolerance or belief in dialogue were enthusiastic to put their signature at the bottom of a hypocritical call for dialogue with a racist regime that has refused to accept one single Syrian refugee, because they are non-Jewish. 
A good example of the depths of Israeli and Zionist racism was provided by a story in last week’s Jewish Chronicle Revealed: How the last Jews of Aleppo escaped.   
Israeli artists protesting at the lack of dialogue in Israel - as their funds are cut for not supporting the settlements and Likud's far-right agenda
An American/Israeli philanthropist, Moti Kahana, arranged the escape of the last Jewish family, the Halabis, in Aleppo from under the noses of Isis, who were closing in and would have slaughtered them.  They were taken on a circuitous and risky journey to Turkey.  The Jewish Agency then arranged for the family to be accepted in Israel under the Law of Return.
Eric Pickles - Chairman of Conservative Friends of Israel - his only dialogue is with an oversized luncheon
The only problem was that one of the daughters of the 88 year old mother, Gilda, had converted to Islam and married an Arab, Khalib.  They had 3 children.  Because she had converted she was no longer Jewish and could not enter Israel.  Having no funds she was forced to go back into Syria and risk her life and that of her husband and children again.  Israel would not accept her because she was not Jewish even though Isis would have killed her because, in their eyes, she was Jewish.  That in a nutshell sums  up the racism of the Israeli state.  Being Jewish is a racial category, defined as it was in Germany according to religious criteria. 
Even Dumbledore would fine it difficult to get out of this one
Eric Pickles, who is not famous for his cultural sensitivities or input, demonstrated his belief in dialogue by exerting pressure, as a member of the Cabinet  by successfully putting pressure on Southampton University to cancel a conference last year on international law.  Pickles is someone whose commitment to fighting anti-Semitism was demonstrated by his overt support for the anti-Semitic Polish MEP Michal Kaminski.  Kaminski opposeda national Polish apology for the burning alive of up to 900 Jews in 1941 in the village of Jedwabne. 
The fascist Polish politician Michal Kaminski who Pickles defended
Pickles is also someone who, like Fay Weldon, is known as an Islamaphobe.  He was the moving spirit behind the judicial coup d’etat in Tower Hamlets earlier this year when the democratically elected Mayor Lofthur Rahman was ousted by the High Court.
Eric Pickles - the bigot at the heart of JK Rowling's Boycott Letter
One wonders whether Ms Rowling is enjoying the company of the supporters of an Apartheid Israel (& Maureen Lipman for example defends any and every action of Israel including their treatment of Palestinian children) whilst claiming that she opposes the actions of the Israeli state in the Occupied Territories?

Tony Greenstein

JK Rowling stumps for Israel — what would Harry Potter do?


Annie Robbins on October 23, 2015

JK Rowling
JK Rowling has staked out territory as a prominent face of the anti-BDS movement. She’s signed on to a heavily publicized open letter in the Guardian, “Israel needs cultural bridges, not boycotts“, encouraging “dialogue about Israel and the Palestinians” in a “wider” cultural and creative community.
Eric Pickles - landed Rowling in a right pickle!
The Rowling normalization/dialogue letter, with 150 co-signers, opens with a reference to the Artists’ Pledge for Palestine, published by the Guardian last February. It is a pledge to boycott Israel culturally and professionally until it complies with international law and universal principles of human rights — signed by over 1,090 British artists representing every field of the arts.

Anti Boycott letter co-signer Sir Eric Pickles – Chairman of Conservative Friends of Israel (Photo: Joe Giddens)

The cosigners of Rowling’s letter are also promoted as “UK Artists“, however the list of signatories include a slew of Tory politicians including (but not limited to) Sir Eric Pickles, ex-chairman of the Conservative party and current Chairman of Conservative Friends of Israel (CFI), MP David Burrowes, officer of CFI, MP Mike Freer (who resigned his position as parliamentary private secretary to Nick Boles in order to vote against the motion to recognize Palestine), and MP’s Bob BlackmanGuto Bebb — all conservative members of CFI. A regular Who’s Who list of BICOM‘s favorite UK politicians!

From the letter:

Cultural boycotts singling out Israel are divisive and discriminatory, and will not further peace. Open dialogue and interaction promote greater understanding and mutual acceptance, and it is through such understanding and acceptance that movement can be made towards a resolution of the conflict.
And, allegedly they support two states. Were MP’s Oliver Dowden and John Howell (also Vice Chairman of CFI), both conservative cosigners of the letter, promoting “greater understanding and mutual acceptance” while only expressing “support for Israel against terror attacks” , cited today on CFI’s website? Many of these politicians have been on several CFI delegations to Israel. Sorry, this has lobby written all over it — a distinctly non grassroots vibe — and the timing is completely tone deaf

Maajid Nawaz, founder of the so called “counter-extremism” neocon think tank Quilliamis a cosigner too.

And guess what? A new site has been launched called “Culture for Coexistence“, the letter’s cosigners “declare our support for the launch and aims” of the network:

We seek to inform and encourage dialogue about Israel in the wider cultural and creative community. Whilst we may not all share the same views on the policies of the Israeli government, we all share a desire for peaceful coexistence.

What about Palestinians? There is not one Palestinian co-signer on the list.

The Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel (PACBI) has responded to the Rowling and friends “dialogue” initiative that condemns the boycott of Israel: 
PACBI spokesperson:

“Some British cultural figures, including known Israel apologists, seem intent to revive Thatcher’s ‘constructive  engagement’, equating the colonisers with the colonised, which in the struggle to end apartheid in South Africa proved to be downright unethical and complicit.”
“Earlier this year, more than one thousand British cultural figures, a list of who’s who in film, literature and performing arts, signed a cultural boycott pledge against Israel’s regime of occupation and apartheid until it respects international law. That impressive list, which included some of the best known Jewish writers and artists in the UK, endorsed BDS as the most effective and ethically sound strategy to end Israel’s oppression and to stand in solidarity with the nonviolent Palestinian struggle for freedom, justice and equality.”

“Earlier this year, more than one thousand British cultural figures, a list of who’s who in film, literature and performing arts, signed a cultural boycott pledge against Israel’s regime of occupation and apartheid until it respects international law. That impressive list, which included some of the best known Jewish writers and artists in the UK, endorsed BDS as the most effective and ethically sound strategy to end Israel’s oppression and to stand in solidarity with the nonviolent Palestinian struggle for freedom, justice and equality.”

The original letter can be found here: artistsforpalestine.org.uk. Signatories included Brian Eno, Jarvis Cocker, Kate Tempest, Roger Waters, Richard Ashcroft and: 

Theatre writers/directors Sir Jonathan Miller, Mark Ravenhill, Caryl Churchill, Dominic Cooke CBE (former Royal Court AD), David Edgar (major British playwright who has previously opposed the boycott), Vicky Featherstone, current Royal Court AD, Phyllida Lloyd (theatre and film director), Mark Ravenhill, Bonnie Greer, Caryl Churchill, David Edgar 

– Musicians Kate Tempest (big name), Scoobius Pip, Richard Ashcroft (formerly the Verve), Jarvis Cocker, Brian Eno, Robert Wyatt, Robin Rimbaud (aka Scanner), Roger Waters, Peggy Seeger, Dick Gaughan, Matthew Herbert

– Actors Rizwan Ahmed, Miriam Margolyes, Sam West, Anna Carteret, Harriet Walter DBE, Maxine Peake, Julie Christie, Maggie Steed, David Calder, Andy de la Tour, Timothy West

– Writers William Dalrymple, Aminatta Forna, Bonnie Greer, Mark Haddon, Hari Kunzru, Liz Lochhead (poet laureate in Scotland), Jimmy McGovern, China Mieville, Andrew O’Hagan, Laurie Penny, Michael Rosen, Gillian Slovo (former director of PEN International), Ahdaf Soueif, Marina Warner, Benjamin Zephaniah 

– Film/tv directors Mike Hodges (Get Carter), Peter Kosminsky (White Oleander), Jimmy McGovern, Michael Radford, Mike Leigh (recent BAFTA fellowship award winner), Ken Loach, Kim Longinotto, Penny Wolcock (documentary filmmaker), Julien Temple (Jubilee), Waris Hussein, Tariq Ali, Asif Kapadia, Carol Morley 

– Architects Peter Ahrends, Will Alsop, 

– Visual Arts Phyllida Barlow, John Berger, Mona Hatoum.

 Comedians Mark Thomas, Jeremy Hardy, Alexei Sayle

What would Harry Potter do?


Child Abuse – An Israeli Speciality

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There is no need to say anything other than that this film says everything you need to know about Israeli racism.  The idea that such behaviour would be tolerated if it was a Jewish child is too absurd even to contemplate.  The Jew who stabbed another Jew by mistake, he meant to stab an Arab, was granted anonymity by the court and remanded for psychological reports.  Palestinians don’t get psychological reports, just beatings and torture.

Tony Greenstein


Rights Expert: Harsh interrogation of 13-year-old Palestinian boy ‘may amount to torture’

Megan Hanna on November 13, 2015

Still of film showing Amhad Manasra's interrogation leaked by Ma'an (Source: Twitter)
A controversial video was leaked to Palestinian media on November 8th, revealing an aggressive Israeli security interrogation of 13-year old Ahmad Manasra, who was indicted on October 30th by Israel’s Jerusalem District Court for attempting to murder two Israelis near the Pisgat Zeev settlement in East Jerusalem.

The 10-minute video depicts an Israeli interrogator verbally abusing and shouting curses at the visibly distressed boy, rigorously questioning his motives and accusing him of murder.  The video then appears to show the young teen confessing to the crime under considerable duress.
Since the footage has gone viral there has been a strong public outrage, with rights-based groups condemning what appears to be a violation of the rights afforded to the treatment of minors in custody.

Brad Parker, attorney and international advocacy officer at Defence for Children – Palestine, spoke to Mondoweiss about the legal implications of the film. “The circumstances depicted in the video present a situation that may amount to torture” he explained. “When determining if certain acts constitute torture, the child’s age must be taken into account. Israeli interrogators are seen relying on verbal abuse, intimidation and threats to apparently inflict mental suffering for the purpose of obtaining a confession.”

Parker stated that the video provides evidence of a violation of international juvenile standards as dictated by the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, which Israel signed in 1991. According to Parker, “[the Convention] prohibits torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment. This prohibition is absolute, yet, ill treatment and torture of Palestinian children arrested by Israeli military and police is widespread and systematic.”

Alongside these fundamental rights which appear to have been neglected, international law states that a child cannot be interrogated without the presence of his parents or guardian. Tareq Barghouth, one of Manasra’s lawyers, claims that the boy has not been allowed contact with his family since the attack, and has been subjected to psychological abuse from the security forces. “They threatened that they will kill him, demolish his house, and imprison him,” Barghouth said. “They spit on him. One of the officials opened his Skype with his girlfriend, and she also began swearing at him over Skype.”
Another contentious aspect of Manasra’s treatment since arrest was the decision by the Israeli government to publicly release his photograph. The Israeli NGO Physicians for Human Rights denounced the move as inherently political saying, “the fact that it is a photo of a minor in custody who was photographed without his parents’ permission” is a violation of juvenile law and privacy laws… Even more disturbing, is that reportedly the instructions [to publish the photo] came directly from the office of the Health Minister [Yaakov Litzman] and that the picture itself was distributed by the Prime Minister’s Office.”

“What is happening to me?”

In the video of the interrogation, an officer sits behind a desk shouting at the boy in Arabic, “Why did you stab him? Why did you stab him?”

An anguished Manasra pleads and repeatedly hits his head with his hands, saying that he cannot remember and begs with the interrogator to believe him, saying “I don’t remember, not one thing. For God’s sake believe me! I woke up the next day at four. There was a blow to my head. I don’t remember! What is happening to me?”

Between the barrage of shouting and curses, Manasra can be heard saying “maybe I am going crazy”, and asks the officer to “take me to the doctor to check me”, all the while screaming and hitting his face with his hands.

The officer continuously yells “liar!”, and tells Manasra to “shut up”,saying that he is accused of killing “two Jews” and that he supported “the enemy in time of war”. The boy is clearly confused by the statement, and asks “what war? What do I have to do with a war”?
The interrogator proceeds to violently yell at Manasra, who eventually says, “everything you say is true, according to the video it is true. But I don’t remember… I only believe that it happened when I saw the footage.”

Despite admitting to the crime, Parker told Mondoweiss that the context of coercion negates the validity of the confession. “International law demands that any statement made as a result of torture or ill-treatment must be excluded as evidence in any proceeding” he explained; “ any confession or incriminating statements made by Ahmad as a result of torture must not be used as evidence against him.”

Before the release of the interrogation footage the case made headlines when Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas mistakenly stated that Israeli security forces had executed Ahmad Manasra after the stabbing attack.  During the incident, which occurred on October 12th, two Israel’s aged 13 and 21 were seriously injured and Manasra’s 15-year old cousin, Hassan, was shot dead by Israeli forces. A car knocked Mansara down as he tried to flee the scene.

A disturbing film shot by a passer by of the immediate aftermath of the attack also went viral, showing Mansara’s small body splayed on the sidewalk in a pool of blood, as onlookers yell at him “Die, son of a b***h die!”

According to local news source Ma’an, the court rejected the family’s pleas that Manasra be placed under house arrest. Instead, he will be detained in a closed facility in Galilee until his prosecution, with his next court date set for December 6th.

Under current Israeli legislation, Manasra cannot serve a prison sentence until he turns 14 in January, after which he could face years of incarceration. However this particular case has prompted the Israeli Justice Ministry to draft a bill a few days ago, in which children as young as 12 could be given prison sentences if convicted of manslaughter, murder or attempted murder. The bill will apply to Palestinian residents of Jerusalem, despite the fact they are not citizens of the state of Israel.
Sadly, it doesn’t seem as if Manasra will be the last of such cases involving Palestinian minors. 12-year old Ali Ihab Hassab Aliwas shot three times after stabbing an Israeli guard in Jerusalem yesterday, and is currently being held under Israeli police custody in Hadassah hospital.

Children detained by the Israeli military
Ahmad Manasra being led by Israeli authorities in a detention facility (Source: Twitter)
Arresting and detaining Palestinian children without a trial in the Israeli military courts is a common method employed by Israeli forces in an attempt to deter involvement in resistance or violence. According to the human rights association Addameer, approximately 700 Palestinian children under the age of 18 are arrested, interrogated and detained by the Israeli army every year. Indeed, the Israeli military raided a home in Hebronlast month, seeking to arrest a Palestinian boy accused of throwing stones only to discover he was 3-years old.

In a report released in July 2015, Human Rights Watch stated that “Israeli security forces have used unnecessary force to arrest or detain Palestinian children as young as 11”, including choking them, throwing stun grenades at them, beating them in custody and interrogating them without the presence of parents or lawyers.

When speaking of Israel’s systematic abuse of children, Parker stated that “ill-treatment and torture of Palestinian children in Israeli military detention is widespread with around 75 percent of kids arrested from the West Bank suffering some form of physical violence during arrest, transfer or interrogation. Despite repeated calls to end ill-treatment and torture of Palestinian children in Israeli detention, Israel has persistently failed to implement practical changes to stop violence against child detainees.”

To date 77 Palestinians have been killed since the beginning of last month, 13 of whom are  children killed by Israeli forces in what are being condemned by rights groups such as Amnesty International as “unlawful” killings which resemble “extra judicial execution”. The increased use of extreme methods harnessed by the Israeli military in reaction to the current spate of violence raises grave concerns over how Palestinian minors are treated, under a judicial apparatus notorious for the systematic ill-treatment of children.

Israel strip-searches children in new detention center


Palestinian schoolchildren walk past Israeli forces in occupied East Jerusalem in late October.    Mahfouz Abu Turk APA images
Israel has arrested so many Palestinian children since the start of October that is has opened a new detention center specifically for them. The center is part of Givon Prisonin Ramle, a city in present-day Israel.

Children from the occupied West Bank, including East Jerusalem, are being held there in conditions that violate their human rights.

A spokesperson for the Israel Prison Service told The Electronic Intifada that the newly opened facility at Givon prison is temporary and fulfills standards for detaining children.

But lawyers who have visited the imprisoned children there warn of overcrowding, poor hygiene and mistreatment.

A total of 56 Palestinian children are being held in Givon, 20 of whom are from the West Bank, according to the Palestinian prisoner advocacy group Addameer.

It is a violationof the Fourth Geneva Convention to transfer prisoners out of the occupied West Bank or Gaza into present-day Israel.

Lawyers with the Public Committee Against Torture in Israel and Defense for Children International-Palestine are also investigating the prison’s conditions.

Israel arrested177 Palestinian children in October, more than doubling the number of child prisoners already held, according to human rights groups.

However, many more children from East Jerusalem have been briefly detained and released on house arrest and other conditions since last month.

“Suffocating”

According to lawyers, the cells in Givon are moldy and very little food is provided to the inmates. In at least one instance, the guards cut the electricity for several hours and confiscated food the children had bought from the canteen.

On 1 November, the cells were raided and every child was shackled, stripped and searched inside the prison bathroom. During the raid, the guards physically and verbally abused the children while ransacking their cells.

Addameer is concerned that the children detained at Givon are supervised directly by the prison guards and are therefore vulnerable to abuse.

The group has received reports of physical violence against the children which may constitute torture under international law.

One Palestinian minor from East Jerusalem who was arrested in July was transferred to Givon in the middle of October.

His mother told The Electronic Intifada she only discovered he had been transferred when she tried to visit him at Hasharon, another prison inside Israel where Palestinian minors and women are usually jailed. The mother contacted the International Committee of the Red Cross to find out where her son was being held.

Lawyers representing the family have requested their identity be kept anonymous due to fears of retaliation from the Israeli authorities.

On 20 October, the mother traveled to Givon, where dozens of families waited in the rain to see their children. She said they arrived in the late morning and waited until after dark to be allowed in.
“It was terrible how they treated us,” she said, noting that they watched more buses of children being brought in as they waited.

Once they were allowed to enter the facility, the families had to divide among themselves the 30 minutes they were allotted to speak to their children on a phone through a plexiglass screen.
Her son, who has yet to be sentenced, told her that the conditions were significantly worse in Givon than in Hasharon. Children in Givon are receiving inadequate food and are not allowed to go outside for breaks.

“We are suffocating,” he told her.

“We don’t know how to feel and what to think,” she said. “The people who are making the laws are killing people these days.”

The boy’s father tried to visit less than two weeks later. He was told that his son and seven other boys had their visiting privileges revoked. He was not told why they were being punished.

“What will Israel gain after imprisoning my son other than more hatred and anger?” he asked.
Givon mainly houses people awaiting deportation and low-level criminals.

In 2012, Israel began imprisoningunaccompanied minors from Africa in Givon. The children had been seeking asylum in Israel.

Refugee rights groups protested the move at the time, citing a 2011 Israeli high court ruling against minors being held in prison.

In August that year, Israel’s public defenders reportedabysmal conditions at Givon. The cells, beds and yard were infested with cockroaches. The cells also had very little sunlight or ventilation.

8-year-olds detained

Scores of Palestinian minors in East Jerusalem have been detained for brief periods recently.
In order to accommodate the mass detentions, Israel converted the Oz police station in Jerusalem into an interrogation center.

According to Addameer, there is currently such a high rate of children being held for brief periods in Oz that the organization is unable to maintain accurate statistics on how many minors have been detained and released on house arrest.

“That’s the problem. There were so many arrests during October and the beginning of November, we couldn’t follow up on all the cases,” Rafat Sub Laban, an Addameer campaigner, said.

Children as young as 7 or 8 have reportedly been detained at Oz without the presence of their parents, a violation of the Israeli Youth Law that prohibitsthe interrogation and detention of children under the age of 12.

Several children profiled by Addameer had been picked up off the street and beaten during their arrest and interrogation at Oz.

In addition to being released on house arrest, one child was told that he was forbidden to speak to a list of 15 friends and relations.

Charlotte Silver is a journalist based in Oakland, California. Twitter: @CharESilver.

Racists, Fascists & Zionists Seek to Exploit the Paris Massacres

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An excellent column from one of the very few excellent Israeli columnists,  Gideon Levy, who is unsurprisingly a target of the Israeli far-Right.
people-hold-hands Bataclan
His message is a simple one.  There is no connection, as the Zionists are trying to make between the bloody murder in Paris by the barbarians of Isis and the children who wield knives in Hebron or Jerusalem because they see no other way of gaining their freedom.  The Paris murderers are fighting against any concept of freedom, as we are seeing with the mass graves being uncovered in Sinjar city.  Palestinian youth are fighting in the only way they know, to achieve freedom from the Israeli military state that dominates and rules over their lives.
Israel exploits the Paris massacre  -  Tel Aviv city hall lit up in French colours
Candles placed outside the Carillon cafe
Gideon Levy also lays into the idea that you can draw an equals sign between Hamas, Hezbollah, Isis and Al Qaeda.  Apart from the small fact that Hezbollah is a Shi’ite group, Hamas is fighting a national resistance campaign.  Yes they are all Islamic organisations but that is where the comparison ends.  For example both Hezbollah and Hamas condemned the Charlie Hebdo killings whereas al-Qaeda in Yemen, with whom Saudi Arabia is presently aligned, carried them out.
Fans stream out of football stadium where Germany-France were playing
The far Right and the Zionists will make common cause over the Paris bombings.  It’s all the fault of the Muslims.  Their recipe will be to wage war on Muslims throughout Europe.  There is nothing that Israel would love more than to export its war on the Palestinians to Europe even if it makes common cause with Europe’s fascists.
Tony Greenstein

Before the Israeli Right Rejoices Over Paris

The Israeli right will say: We told you so. That is how the Palestinians are, that is how the Muslims are - bloodthirsty animals. The conclusion: There is no partner. This is of course a propagandist house of cards.

Ha’aretz Gideon Levy Nov 15, 2015 2:50 AM

Just before the right in Israel begins to celebrate, we must tell them: There is no connection whatsoever between the child with a knife from Hebron and the French Muslim with a suicide bomb in Paris.
Palestinian demonstration in Paris - pro-Palestinian activity is heavily suppressed by French state
Just before the right in France and all of Europe starts to celebrate, we must tell them: Don’t you dance on the blood as well. The nationalism, hatred of foreigners, racism, deportation of refugees, isolationism and the war against Islam — your magic solutions will not solve anything. The rejoicing calls of “we told you so” from Israel and the European right are already being sounded loudly.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Marine Le Pen are once again those who are profiting the most from the terror. We must not fall into their trap.

The Israeli right will say: We told you so. That is how the Palestinians are, that is how the Arabs are, and that is how the Muslims are - bloodthirsty animals. The conclusion: There is no partner. We will forever live by our swords. Now Europe is experiencing what we have been experiencing for years. Now Europe will take steps toward a war on terror — the same steps which it condemned when we took them. Now Europe may leave us alone; after all we have a common enemy. Let’s see them labeling products now, let’s see it condemning the settlements.
Israelis exploit the French massacre
Our daring raids on the al-Ahli Hospital in Hebron and the primary school in Silwan in Jerusalem are part of the war of civilizations which West is fighting, and which Israel is so proud to belong to. Whoever does not invade al-Ahli is not fighting terror. Whoever does not shoot a young woman holding a knife at a checkpoint gets Paris. The law for Ahmed Manasra (the 13-year-old Palestinian boy who stabbed an Israeli boy) is the same law as that for Jihadi John. Hamas is the Islamic State organization and the same goes for Hezbollah, Mahmoud Abbas, (Islamic Movement leader)Sheikh Ra’ad Salah, Joint List Members of Knesset Ayman Odeh and Ahmad Tibi —and all of them are ISIS, all the Arabs.
This is of course a propagandist house of cards, which is completely unrelated to reality. The goal of the knife wielder from Hebron is completely different from that of the jihadist from Stade de France, and so is their worldview. Here the Palestinian is battling for his land and country, for his liberation from occupation, for self-determination and freedom — and there the game is destroying Europe and taking control of it. Here the main motive is national and political, and there it is religious fundamentalism.
Palestinian demonstration in Paris
But the truth is that the Israeli right is not completely wrong. In the end, its prophesy will be self-fulfilling. If Israel continues with its policies, the child stabber from Hebron will turn into the adult suicide bomber of ISIS. Already today he is looking with eager eyes at the success of his big brothers. His despair leaves him little other hope.

ISIS is still not here yet, but it is possible to count on Netanyahu and his ilk to bring them here. The occupation has already given birth to Hamas and the Islamic Jihad. A desperate West Bank and an imprisoned Gaza Strip are the appropriate fertile grounds for growing them. The storm troopers of the occupation and the assassins in the hospitals provide the particle accelerators for ushering in jihadists.
The European right is wrong too. After all, the tens of thousands of the Muslim refugees knocking on the gates of Europe are trying to flee for their lives, escaping the very terror of the jihadists who are now attacking Europe. They are fleeing from the people who earlier destroyed their homelands and are now perpetrating a massacre in the Bataclan Theater. Closing the doors in their faces, inflaming the hatred of foreigners in Europe, along with the continued Islamophobia and the rise of the extreme right, will only play into the hands of ISIS.

There are now quite a few Israelis who are rejoicing in their hearts (or on the social networks) in light of the events in Paris. In addition to the perverseness of rejoicing over the death of other human beings, this is also a celebration of the blind. The correct lesson from what happened in Paris is that there are no longer any local wars. The world cannot continue to shut its eyes in the face of what is happening in Syria, and also not in the face of the Israeli occupation. When the world pulls itself together from the shock, maybe it will also free itself from the paralysis and understand that it must harness itself to find a solution to these conflicts, both in war­­­­­­­­-torn Syria as well as in the occupied Palestinian territories. Then let's see the Israeli right.

Gideon Levy

Haaretz Correspondent

















Israel, the World’s Most Racist State says thank you to Hungary, Europe’s Most Racist State

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What a surprise.  Israel, the world’s most racist state thanks Hungary, Europe’s most racist state, for opposing the labelling of West Bank settlement produce by place of origin.
Victor Orban Hungary's Prime Minister
Naturally Netanyahu can overlook minor matter such as the rehabilitation of Admiral Horthy, Hungary’s Regent during World War II, who presided over the deportations of nearly 450,000 Jews to Auschwitz between May 15 and July 7th 1944. 

Tony Greenstein
One dictator Sis greeting another - Victor Orban Hungary's Prime Minister

World Jewish Congress pans Hungary for Holocaust memorial

Protest outside settlement


Settlers throwing stones at Palestinians
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu thanks Hungary for coming out against new European Union guidelines regulating the labeling of goods produced in Israeli settlements over the Green Line.
“Thank you for your decisive statement against the labeling of goods,” Netanyahu tells the Hungarian foreign minister, Péter Szijjártó, during a meeting at the Knesset.
Refugees Outside Hungary's Parliament
Szijjártó, who is also Hungary’s trade minister, had said earlier in the day, “We do not support that decision. It is an inefficient instrument. It is irrational and does not contribute to a solution [to the Palestinian-Israeli conflict], but causes damage.”

— Raphael Ahren contributed


Israel’s Racism Against Its Black Jewish Citizens

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Israeli Police Confront a Demonstration by Ethiopian Jews
If the primary fault line in Israel is between Israeli Jews and Palestinians, we should not overlook the racism within the Israeli Jewish population.  Ethiopian Jews and Black Hebrews also experience extreme discrimination and brutality at the hands of the state .  The attack below by the Border Police, who are known for their brutality, on a Black Israeli is typical.  As the article points out, a death squad of Border Police had killed an unarmed and defenceless Palestinian inside Hebron’s hospital the previous day.

Tony Greenstein

Israeli Border Police Brutally Assault BlackHebrew

by Richard Silverstein on November 14, 2015


An Israeli border Police officer brutally assaulted a Black Hebrew Israeli citizen at a security checkpoint in Eilat. The victim, Yair Israel and his wife Anat, were en route to a local hotel where he had planned a relaxing weekend celebrating his wife’s birthday.
Yair Israel’s natural foods business, Otentivee
Israel is a well-known businessman in Dimona, where he runs a natural foods boutique, Otentivee (“Authentic Natural”), whose products are known by vegetarians throughout the country.  He’s been interviewed on a number of Israeli TV shows where he’s showcased his passion for natural and organic products.

The brutal attack would’ve been just another anonymous, unseen incident of Israeli official racism had not, Oded Zamora, an Israeli native who has lived in Maryland for the past 14 years, been in the car following Israel at the checkpoint.
Yair Yisrael being choked during Border Police beating (Oded Zamora)
As he saw the attack unfold, Zamora bravely exited his own vehicle and asked officials why the attack was happening.  When no one responded he took out his cellphone and began videotaping.  He told the attacker that he was filming him. Unfortunately, this did nothing to abate the assault, which increased in ferocity.

The entire incident began with a policeman asking Yair to present his ID.  He did so.  Then the policeman asked for his wife’s ID.  Though he found this unusual, he then presented his wife’s ID.  At this point, a Border Policeman who was sitting inside the security booth came on the scene and began shouting angrily at Yair: “What’s your problem?”  Then the attack escalated.  The Border Policeman began punching him.  He tried forcing Yair’s car door open.  So the victim opened the door for him.  He then grabbed him and ejected him from the vehicle, continuing to brutally strike him.  He then dragged him behind the security booth where he beat him even more.

The entire scene unfolded in front of the victim’s wife, who was forced to see her own husband brutalized by a bully in uniform.  Both the victim and witness attest that the former did nothing to provoke the attack, that he continually asked in a civil manner why he was being assaulted, that he told the security forces then he was a citizen of Israel and had at a local business. None of this helped at all.

Eventually they handcuffed Israel, who repeatedly asked them why he was being arrested and received no answer, and took him to the local police station.  At the station, he was questioned but could not explain to them what he had done to provoke the attack.  He was taken to the investigations unit and after two or three hours released.

When a reporter asked him why he thought the incident had occurred he replied:

“I don’t know.  I only know there are many racists in Israel.  Each day I have similarly unpleasant experiences because of the color of my skin.  Everyone from our [Black Hebrew] community faces this.  I know that there are people in Israel who believe there is no value to a person and no equality possible for someone of a different skin color [than them].  It’s simply unbelievable what happens here.  These are things we face every day.”

After her husband was taken away from the checkpoint, Anat was told by the police to leave the scene. She told them she had no driver’s license. They told her that as far as they were concerned she could walk to Eilat.

The eyewitness, who remained at the scene, was asked by the police to leave the area.  He refused, telling them they should be ashamed and that the whole incident was on video.  He thought that might cause them to restrain themselves.  But it didn’t help.  Instead, they demanded that he give them his cell phone.  They lied telling him it was illegal to film them.  He refused again. They told him that if he did not do so they would open a criminal investigation against him

Zamora then ran to his car and called his sister who is a member of a local kibbutz in Eilat. He told her to drive urgently to the checkpoint. He said that if he was no longer there, she should drive immediately to the police station. When she arrived, Zamora asked his sister to drive Anat to the Kibbutz while he drove to the police station to be with Yair.

When asked by the reporter to explain why he understood Yair had been attacked, he replied:
“Because of the color of his skin.  I see no other reason this should happen to a young couple celebrating a birthday in Eilat.  Yair offered his ID.  He didn’t attack anyone.  He was inside his car the entire time.  I can’t even imagine how long it will take him to recover from this.”

When asked if he regretted intervening in the incident, Zamora added:

'No one wants to go through such a thing.  Maybe it will be a blemish upon me, but when you see policemen behaving with such brutality you must get involved.  I thought about Yair.  He had no one.  He was lying on the ground handcuffed.  His powerlessness obligated me to get involved.'

Oded Zamora is a true mensch.  He stood up to injustice without fear.  Some, but likely very few Israelis would’ve done the same.  So if there are any readers who are going to say that Zamora’s courage redeems redeems Israel or shows it to be a decent, liberal, humane society–think again.  He likely intervened because he’s been living in the U.S., where we are becoming less & less tolerant of police abuse and executions.  Even if that’s not the case, the individual righteousness of citizens cannot compensate for the overall evil that infects the official state apparatus.

This is not a one-off act of racism by an lone-wolf Israeli police bully. This is official racism and brutality. This is official sanctioned violence by the state against its own citizens. Though they happen to be citizens who are not White and therefore not worthy of the full rights of every other Israeli citizen.  Israel is a state seeped in racism and violence: not just against Palestinians (which is half to be expected) but against its own Palestinian and Black citizens.

I’ve often remarked here upon the special reputation for brutality and cruelty “enjoyed” by the Border Police.  They take torture to an entirely new level.  The assassination in a Hebron hospital a few days ago was perpetrated by a Border Police death squad, Yamas.

This must end.  There is only one way to do it: Israel must become a state of all its citizens.  Everyone must be treated the same.  No person, religion or ethnicity deserves superior treatment.  Separation or privilege based on these criteria must be rooted out.  I am not saying that religion should be rooted out, just that religions must be treated the same.  They must all receive respect and none treated better or differently the other.  And no religion may replace the state or supercede the state or compel the state to act politically to achieve a religious objective.  Religions must occupy a spiritual space, not a political one.

The Thugs Respond

Israeli Border Police spokesperson responded to the charges against his force by claiming that the level of force used in the incident was proportional and reasonable. He lied, claiming that Israel refused to identify himself and attacked the officers. He further claimed that while the victim was being arrested he continued to resist.  There is no evidence whatsoever to support his account and the video completely repudiates this version.  Further, it makes no sense whatsoever that an Israeli citizen at a checkpoint would refuse to identify himself.  Every Israeli understands security protocols and why they’re necessary.  No one refuses to participate.

With a straight face, the flack noted that because of this incident, the Border Police were asking all citizens to behave with restraint and to coöperate fully with security forces so that they could perform their duties.  No one can get Israeli border police to except any responsibility for its actions. It is above the law, because it is the law.

Further, the spokesperson claimed that Zamora had interfered with the arrest.  He also falsely claimed that the police asked him to accompany them to the station as a witness to the event and because the video was evidence.  When he refused, he too was detained and brought to the station.

Yair further claimed that the police lied when they told the media he’d been released with conditions placed upon him.  He was released without anyone telling him anything about any conditions.  He told the reporter that he would continue to fight against this injustice:

“I am the second generation born in this country.  And I must continue to fight for change because there are new generations behind me.  I must not give up because the generation before me suffered from the same things, but had no power to change anything.  God gave me the strength to fight this so that it won’t happen again.

…I want people to know the good things about our community.  To give us respect.  Though we are a community that prefers to remain quiet, we can’t ignore these things anymore.”

For yet another example of the grievous suffering inflicted on the Black Hebrew community, this time by the IDF, read of the suspected murder of Toveet Radcliffe, a young woman serving in the army.  It claimed she committed suicide by shooting herself with her own rifle.

H/t to David Sheen and Ofer Neiman.


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