BDS update: Erdogan ‘Why no UN sanctions for Israel?’
With
the
new campaign by Palestine to gain the world’s official recognition 63
years after the fact, BDS activities in Europe and North America -- the
main holdouts -- have gained new momentum, reports Eric Walberg
The Boycott, Divests and Sanctions (BDS) movement is growing relentless. On the boycott front, Natacha Atlas, who won a 2007 BBC Music award for her fusion of Arabic and Western styles, cancelled a planned concert in Israel: “I had an idea that performing in Israel would have been a unique opportunity to encourage and support my fans’ opposition to the current government’s actions and policies, but after much deliberation I now see that it would be more effective a statement to not go to Israel until this systemised apartheid is abolished once and or all.”Atlas, who grew up in Belgium, is of Egyptian, Moroccan and Palestinian ancestry and has Jewish roots. She was appointed a Goodwill Ambassador for the United Nations Conference Against Racism in 2001, which was boycotted by the United States and Israel, for raising issues about US treatment of African Americans and Israel’s treatment of Palestinians.
The
flip
side of cultural boycotts of Israel is to prevent Israeli cultural
figures from presenting a false image of Israel abroad. Idan Raichel,
“Israel’s most popular dread-locked musician” according to the Israeli
Ministry of Foreign Affairs, prominent in Masa (Journey) Israel tours to
recruit young Jews from American and Europe to Israel, is more than just
a
musician, seeing
Israel’s cultural icons as “ambassadors of Israel in the world, cultural
ambassadors, hasbara ambassadors, also in regards to the political
conflict”.
Raichel’s hasbara message prompted American
Jews to protest a recent Masa “journey” across the US, using the
Internet to coordinate leafletting at the concert tour sites. His recent
album “Open Door” prompted signs at the demos entitled “Does ‘Open Door’
include Palestinians?” and “Don’t entertain apartheid.” “Idan Raichel
can’t support apartheid,” countered one concert-goer, “He sleeps
with a black woman!” Raichel is part of the Brand Israel campaign, which
aims to bring arts to the world in order to, in the words of an Israeli
foreign ministry official, “show Israel’s prettier face, so we are not
thought of purely in the context of war”.
A Finnish campaign is
under way to cancel a new deal to purchase Israeli drones. Like
Canada, the US, Turkey and Russia, Finland has been attracted by Israeli
know-how in lethal weapons. The Finnish Defence Ministry recently
signed an agreement on drone purchases, in defiance of EU regulations.
This prompted Foreign Minister Erkki Tuomioja to break ranks with his
colleagues and declare, in reference to Israel, that “No apartheid
state is justified or sustainable.” Earlier while in opposition,
Tuomioja himself signed a petition calling for an end to the arms trade
with Israel. As foreign minister, Tuomioja could demand the suspension
of EU-Israel Association Agreement, which gives Israel special trade
access to EU markets, but on condition that Israel respects human
rights.
The EU’s “common foreign policy” has been a bitter
disappointment, especially with respect to Israel, as consensus prevents
principled nations within the EU from acting, and attempts to enforce EU
regulations are easily buried in bureaucratese. For instance, the
Seventh Framework Programme (FP7) provides research funds for
universities and companies from Israel as a result of the Association
Agreement. Despite Israel´s consistent violation of the Agreement´s
human rights clause, Israeli companies such as Ahava, “academic”
institutions such as Technion, and worse, Elbit Systems
and
Israeli Aerospace Industries receive European funding through FP7 on an
equal footing with EU member states.
EU Scientific Commissioner Máire Geoghegan-Quinn insisted that there was no reason to exclude Israel’s Motorola company from EU-related activities since she did not have “any information about any radar systems Motorola Israel might or might not have installed in the West Bank”. Geoghegan-Quinn is not reading her inbox, where she would have found reports to the European Commission by the Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel and “Stop the Wall” documenting Motorola’s work in Israeli settlements in the West Bank.
An ambitious boycott-divestment
effort by the newly launched KARAMA (Keep Alstom
Rail And Metro Away) and the ongoing “Derail Veolia and Alstom”
campaign, celebrated an important victory. Alstom lost the bid for the
second phase of the Saudi Haramain Railway project linking Mecca with
Medina, worth $10 billion, due to its involvement in Israel’s Jerusalem
Light Rail (JLR) project. Alstom also suffered when the Dutch ASN Bank
and the Swedish national pension fund AP7 excluded it from their
investment portfolios. Veolia has lost more than $12 billion worth of
contracts following boycott activism in Sweden, the UK, Ireland and
elsewhere.
A national conference of Students for Justice in
Palestine (SJP) took place from 14-16 October at New York’s Columbia
University, bringing together 400 American student activists from a
hundred campuses. SJP activists have made famous their mock checkpoints,
walls, and die-ins on campus, to bring home the reality of Israeli
persecution of Palestinians.
Delegates brainstormed
about divestment campaigns and how to counter the power of AIPAC.
Codepink’s Medea Benjamin, who gained world celebrity status for
interrupting Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu’s speech to Congress in
May, explained how to lodge a complaint with the Office of Congressional
Ethics against the American Israel Education Foundation Congressional
trips to Israel, which violate Congressional Ethics Rules.
Columbia
University
grad student Dina Omar said the conference helped create a “solid
network and apparatus to help protect students from being systemically
targeted by institutional power.” A week before the conference, the
Anti-Defamation League (ADL) reported on the “growing strength” of SJP.
Ironically, it was a 2010 ADL statement calling SJP one of the top 10
“anti-Israel” groups in the US that pushed 67 chapters
to unite. Max Ajl said: “The timing was key – everywhere there was the
buzz that we are part of a broader
mobilisation, the Occupy Wall
Street movement. There is now both the opportunity and the incentive to
link these struggles.”
Interestingly, there is division in the
anti-BDS ranks over how hard to crack down on BDSers by claiming that
Jewish students might be made “uncomfortable”. While the ADL lauded the
US Department of Education’s 2010 decision to expand the 1964 Civil
Rights Act to include “anti-Israel and anti-Zionist sentiment that
crosses the line into anti-Semitism”, the Jewish Council for Public
Affairs (JCPA) cautions Jewish groups against suppressing free speech by
invoking civil rights laws. “Lawsuits and threats of legal action”
should only be used “for cases which evidence a systematic climate of
fear and intimidation coupled with a failure of the university
administration to respond with reasonable corrective measures.”
Ali Abunimah, co-founder of Electronic
Intifada and author of One Country: A Bold Proposal to End the Israeli-Palestinian,
argues that the ADL strategy is “inherently anti-Semitic because it
assumes incorrectly and ahistorically that all criticism of Israel
equals criticism of Jews”, and thus condemns all Jews for the racism
practiced by Israel. “It seems that at least some in the pro-Israel
community fear that this aggressive campaign of censorship and
intimidation may do more to cast Israel’s defenders as thugs, than to
improve Israel’s image on campuses.”
In interview with Time, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan questioned why sanctions
are promoted by the US when dealing with Iran and Sudan, but are taboo
with regards to Israel. Sanctions imposed by the United Nations on
Israel would have resolved the issue of Mideast peace long ago, he said.
“Until today, the UN Security Council has issued more than 89
resolutions on prospective sanctions related to Israel, but they’ve
never been executed.” The reason the international community had stood
by without sanctioning Israel was that the Quartet – which includes
Russia, the United States, the European Union, and the UN – was not
genuinely interested in resolving the Mideast conflict or “they would
have imposed certain issues on Israel.”