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BDS
activities are moving into a new critical stage, with apostasy,
Internet hacking, regattas, and an ever more aggressive Israel and its
acolytes upping the perilous ante, reports Eric Walberg
The
Third Annual BDS Conference opened 17 December at Hebron’s Children’s
Happiness Centre, “to expand Palestinian civil society’s active
implementation of BDS that is deeply rooted in the Palestinian
struggle.” European BNC coordinator Michael Deas affirmed, “BDS is now
the main framework for solidarity. We are very close to closing the
European market to Israel.”
A boycott bombshell
in January was dropped by an 11th-grade American Jewish teenager, Jesse
Lieberfeld, who won Dietrich College’s 2012 Martin
Luther King, Jr
Writing Award for his essay about his moral awakening when he realised
his American Jewish culture was unavoidably identified with supporting
Israel.
“I once belonged to a wonderful religion,” says
young Jesse. “I routinely heard about unexplained mass killings,
attacks on medical bases, and other alarmingly violent actions for which
I could see no possible reason. ‘Genocide’ almost seemed the more
appropriate term... Whenever I brought up the subject, I was always
given the answer that there were faults on both sides... I felt
horrified at the realisation that I was by nature on the side of the
oppressors. I was grouped with the racial supremacists.” Finally, at the
synagogue, he asked, “I want to support Israel. But how can I when it
lets its army commit so many killings?” and was told by the rabbi, “It
is a terrible thing, isn’t it? But there’s nothing we can do. It’s just a
fact of life.” “I thanked him
and walked out shortly afterward. I never went back.” When American
youth like Jesse are forced to give up being Jewish because of Israeli
crimes, it cannot be long before Israel crumbles under the weight of its
accumulated crimes.
2011 witnessed the rise of
Internet attacks on Israeli government sites by public-spirited BDSers
determined to enforce a kind of “cyber boycott”. While the Saudi
government remains aloof from BDS support, an enterprising Saudi hacker
disrupted several Israeli websites in January, prompting Israeli hacker
Yoni (most likely a spin-off from the Israeli military's IDF-TEAM, which
brought down Saudi and Abu Dhabi financial exchange websites last year)
to threaten war, including “mass credit card exposures, and
denial-of-service attacks”.
“Yoni” piously told Ynet,
“We do not operate against any specific nationality, and any person who
operates against the group’s
principles will be harmed, regardless of religion, creed or gender. In
addition, I wish to note that the group regrets harm done to innocents
and tries to avoid it as much as it possible.” Imagine if Israel adhered
to such high standards in its relations with its neighbours — it would
not need to hack and steal credit card information from anyone.
Another such anti-BDS feint is by the pro-Israeli Internet NGO Monitor, DPWatchDog
and Israel’s Reut Institute, which called on Israeli government
agencies to “sabotage” and “attack” the Palestine solidarity movement,
and has claimed credit for “price tag” attacks on The Electronic Intifada
by Dutch Foreign Minister Uri Rosenthal, the Palestine Return Centre,
the persecution of the Olympia Food Co-op, the Berkeley Daily Planet and
the “Irvine 11”. In “2011: The Year We Punched Back on the Assault on
Israel’s legitimacy,” Reut lauds the
emergence of
“our network” and gives credit to the Israeli government and “the
Jewish world’s mobilisation against the political assault on Israel".
This
conflation of “Jewish” and “Israeli” is the Israel-firsters' trump
card, perversely stoking anti-Jewish sentiment where none exists, the
so-called “new anti-Semitism”, a directly result of Israeli crimes.
“Price tagging” is usually associated with Israeli settler terrorism,
vandalism, tree-felling, mosque burnings and murder. A particular
zealous advocate, Andrew Adler, suggested in the Atlanta Jewish Times
in January that US President Barack Obama could be on the hit list.
That the Reut Institute associates itself with such criminal activity is
yet another sign of Israel’s drift towards outright pariah status, and
fuel for the anger of the Jesse Lieberfelds “regardless of religion,
creed or gender”.
Boycott activities are not just confined
to
Israeli products abroad or visits by Westerners to Israel, but are now
taking place regularly on land, at sea and in the air, as activists
surround Israel and invent ever new ways to break its siege of the
Occupied Territories.
The Global March to Jerusalem held a
conference in Beirut in January confirming 30 March, the 36th
anniversary of Palestinian Land Day, as the date for their land action:
“From all continents we will converge and gather along the Palestinian
borders with Jordan, Egypt, Syria and Lebanon in a peaceful march
towards Palestine.”
Plans for “Sailing for Freedom” by
French and other European activists are moving ahead, aiming for a
September yachting regatta in the Mediterranean, starting in Marseilles
and proceeding to Tunisia, Egypt and Gaza. Other flotilla organisers
have been discussing a new strategy of sending isolated vessels from
various ports instead of high-profile flotillas, with the intent of
actually breaking the siege, as opposed to merely attracting world
attention to Israel (and Greek and US) sabotaging of flotillas.
In
April 2012 a Flytilla is scheduled to arrive at Ben Gurion Airport, to
“again challenge the Israeli policy of isolating the West Bank”.
“Welcome to Palestine” is a French-Belgian initiative, modeled on the
Flytilla last July, when 500 people prepared to fly to Tel Aviv. Despite
the nightmare that activists experienced both in European airports and
in Ben Gurion Airport, 125 actually arrived, and this year, activists
are determined to increase their numbers and continue to poke the
Israeli watchdog.
“The Israelis have constructed
enormous prisons for Palestinians. But prisoners have a right to
visits,” says Adri Nieuwhof. The idea has spread to the UK, where towns
are sponsoring people to risk Israeli wrath. European airlines are now
more concerned with their image in the West
than with Israeli authorities, and organisers predict that there will
be less collusion to pre-screen flights arriving in Tel Aviv from
Europe.
These particularly plucky activists continue
the tradition begun in 2011 of a peaceful blitzkreig of Israel from all
sides, risking life and limb, enforcing a kind of physical “citizens
boycott” of Israel, complementing the spiritual one by the young Jesses.
Their co-activists on the “homefront” are now combining the physical
and spiritual by the now annual protest during the Israel lobby AIPAC’s
annual conference in Washington DC. This year it is called OCCUPY AIPAC,
scheduled for 2-6 March. Kalle Lasn, editor of Adbusters,
declared: “The time has come for the Occupy Movement to demand an end to
the Occupation of Palestine.” OCCUPY AIPAC will provide a sneak preview
of “Roadmap to Apartheid” narrated by Alice Walker
(roadmaptoapartheid.org).
Legal actions against
BDSers continue to plague activists. But there are principled judges.
Twelve French activists from Boycott 68 were acquitted 15 December on
charges of “inciting discrimination and racial hatred” for calling on
French shoppers at Carrefour supermarkets to boycott Israeli goods. The
court judgment is expected to put the kibosh on further persecution of
activists.
UK’s National Union of Students endorsed campaigns targeting divestment
in Eden Springs and Veolia on 6 January. Veolia suffered considerably
from a robust BDS campaign across Europe last year for its light-rail
project in Jerusalem, but is defiant in expanding its activities in
Israel without regard to their legality. Subsidiaries of Veolia own and
operate Tovlan landfill which processes Israeli waste in the occupied
Jordan Valley. To sweeten the tons of garbage it
dumps illegally on Palestinian
land, Veolia recently offered three containers for free waste
collection to Palestinians in Jiftlik. Comments Omar Barghouti, “As
Desmond Tutu said, we do not need anyone to polish our chains; we want
to break them altogether. This is beyond humiliating; it is racist and
criminal. Derail Veolia!”
Sanctions -- and their
removal, in the case of the Palestinians -- require foreign governments
to stare down the powerful world Zionist lobby. Few states dare to do
this, but there are more and more cracks in the walls that Israel puts
up. Palestinian Prime Minister Ismael Haniya launched a historic tour of
Egypt, Tunisia, Sudan, Turkey, Qatar and Bahrain in January, welcomed
throughout the region as a David to the Israeli Goliath.
Three
Hamas politicians also left Gaza via Egypt to attend a meeting of the
Inter-Parliamentary Union in Switzerland in January, the first time
since Hamas was democratically elected in 2006.
Switzerland does
not belong to the European Union, which put Hamas on its list of
terrorist organisations to please Israel.
“We also met
with the Red Cross in Geneva, the vice-mayor of Geneva and with Islamic
organisations in different cantons,” Mushir Al-Masri said. A meeting at
the University of Geneva to commemorate the anniversary of Operation
Cast Lead, Israel’s attack on Gaza in December 2008, was attended by
500. “All persons who were complicit in the war crimes committed in Gaza
should be taken to court,” Al-Masri told the packed hall. Socialist MP
Carlo Sommaruga told the audience, “I was an activist against the racist
apartheid regime in South Africa. Every person has a responsibility.
Everyone can participate in the BDS movement.”
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