From Mondoweiss - 18 March 2016
Israel’s legal warfare on BDS fosters repression and McCarthyism across the world
A BDS logo
The global movement supporting the Palestinian people’s right to freedom, justice and equality has taken impressive steps into the political mainstream in recent years. Efforts by the Palestinian-led Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement to hold Israel accountable for its serious violations of international law and to end international complicity in these violations are more widely supported and impactful than ever before.
Israel’s
current government, its most racist ever, has dropped all pretences of
“enlightenment” and “democracy”. This has helped to expose Israel’s regime of occupation, settler-colonialism and
apartheid to world public opinion like never before. In this context,
and given the fast spread of BDS in recent years, Israel
has tried hard but failed to slow down its gradually intensifying international
isolation in the academic, cultural, sports and, to a lesser extent, economic
sphere.
As a result, Israel,
its lobby groups and its right-wing supporters have launched an unprecedented,
well-funded global campaign to silence Palestinian narratives and criminalize
BDS advocacy, especially in western countries. Israeli-induced attacks on free
speech and civil rights in Europe, the US and Canada, among others, are
fostering an ominous environment of bullying, intimidation and repression that
has all the hallmarks of the era of McCarthyism in the US and the worst days of
the apartheid regime in South Africa.
In a desperate attempt to suppress BDS from above, after
losing many battles for the hearts and minds at the grassroots level, Israel
and its pressure groups, including anti-Palestinian billionaires, are
pressuring governments, legislatures and officials in the west to implement
patently anti-democratic measures that threaten civil liberties at large. This
should deeply concern not just activists supporting Palestinian rights, but all
those who value civil liberties as well as progressive movements struggling for
racial, gender, social, economic, indigenous and environmental justice.
The authoritarian measures adopted against BDS so far include
the prosecution of BDS activists in France, like the recent arrest of an activist for wearing a BDS
t-shirt; proposals to exclude organisations that support BDS in the US from
public funding or contracts; the Canadian parliament’s condemnation of BDS and
threats against Palestine solidarity groups; and the British government’s
intimidation of local councils that have voted to support BDS measures, among
other attacks on local democracy in the UK (more details on all these below).
Glenn Greenwald has described this well-orchestrated
series of draconian measures as the “greatest threat to free speech in the
West”. Yet Israel’s
exceptionalism in some mainstream quarters in the west remains intact.
South African Archbishop Emeritus Desmond
Tutu has once likened this singling out of Israel’s
regime for unconditional military, political and financial support, not to
mention protection from accountability, by the US and other western governments
to placing Israel “on a pedestal” above every other state. Many people are
afraid to criticize Israel’s
policies, Tutu argues, because of the exceptionally intimidating methods used
by its lobby.
BDS is an inclusive, anti-racist movement that is anchored in
the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and is opposed on principle to all
forms of racism and discrimination, including anti-Semitism and Islamophobia.
The BDS movement is advocating for Israel
to be taken off “the pedestal” and held to account like other states committing
similar crimes.
It is clear that Israel has been lobbying for and is directly behind
these deeply worrying anti-democratic attacks that are intended to criminalize
the advocacy of Palestinian rights. But they are also part of a growing trend
in western countries of eroding civil liberties in the name of ‘security’, and
of governments and unaccountable elites concentrating power in their hands and
undermining democratic principles.
The Palestinian BDS National Committee (BNC), the broadest
coalition in Palestinian society that is leading the global BDS movement,
stands in full solidarity with BDS activists in France
and elsewhere who are facing witch-hunts and persecution for their principled
advocacy of Palestinian human rights.
While they may succeed in chilling freedom of expression at
first, anti-democratic legislation and legal bullying cannot possibly hide or
make more palatable Israel’s
crimes against the indigenous Palestinian people.
Ultimately, a fast increasing number of progressives and liberals around the world are learning about and condemning Israel’s ongoing siege of the occupied Gaza Strip, its incessant theft of Palestinian lands and resources, and its ongoing ethnic cleansing of entire Palestinian communities, especially in and around the Jordan Valley, East Jerusalem and the Naqab (Negev).
Ultimately, a fast increasing number of progressives and liberals around the world are learning about and condemning Israel’s ongoing siege of the occupied Gaza Strip, its incessant theft of Palestinian lands and resources, and its ongoing ethnic cleansing of entire Palestinian communities, especially in and around the Jordan Valley, East Jerusalem and the Naqab (Negev).
No Israeli propaganda or lawfare can whitewash its
incarceration of millions of Palestinians in racially segregated ghettos, surrounded
by walls, military watchtowers and checkpoints, its system of apartheid, or its
denial of the UN-stipulated right of Palestinian refugees to return to their
homes of origin.
We are encouraged by the Swedish foreign ministry’s statement
re-affirming basic democratic principles by stating that BDS “is a civil society movement” and
that “governments should not interfere in civil society organization views”. Sweden
is now the first western country to openly break away from Israel’s
incessant bullying and has taken a courageous step that other governments
should follow.
We urge civil liberties groups, human rights organizations,
people of conscience and public figures to join us in condemning and opposing
government-led attacks on free speech and civil liberties that are being
implemented in order to undermine civil society’s human rights advocacy
initiatives on behalf of the Palestinian people.
We reiterate the call of the Palestinian Human Rights Organizations Council on
governments to respect and protect the civil and political rights of their
citizens and to meet their legal obligations in order to bring Israel’s
violations to an end, instead of colluding with Israel
and muzzling their own citizens in order to shield it from criticism and
accountability.
We urge human rights organisations and other civil society
entities worldwide, irrespective of their own views of BDS, to adopt the
principled position of defending the right of people and
organizations to engage in BDS campaigns.
BDS is inspired and inspiring. It is a movement that is
inspired by our people’s long heritage of non-violent popular resistance, the
South African anti-apartheid movement and the US Civil Rights movement, among
others. It is in turn inspiring a whole generation of Palestinian and
international activists, academics, artists, feminists, racial and social
justice movements, LGBTQ advocates, and others, to speak truth to power in the
pursuit of our respective inalienable rights. United, we shall overcome.
Palestinian BDS National Committee Secretariat
17 March 2016
17 March 2016
France
In 2010, then justice minister Michèle Alliot-Marie issued an
instruction to state authorities that “Article 24,
line 8 of the 1881 law on the press allows the punishment of citizens or
organizations who call for the boycott of goods from a country whose policies
they criticise” on the grounds that such a call constitutes discrimination.
Since then, more than 30 activists have faced criminal charges over their
participation in nonviolent BDS advocacy.
In October 2015, the Court of Cassation, France’s
highest appeals court, issued a ruling stating that the call to boycott Israeli products on
the basis of their “origin” is illegal. BDS calls for the boycott of Israeli
products on the basis of complicity, not identity. Israeli companies are complicit
in violating international law, and trade with Israel
while it maintains its system of oppression against the Palestinians, as was
the case with apartheid South Africa,
is a form of support for its regime’s human rights violations.
Regardless, nearly all forms of BDS activism is France
are focused on activities other than calling for a boycott of Israeli products
and cannot in any way be considered illegal.
Using a false and arbitrary interpretation of the Court of
Cassation ruling to claim that all activities in support of BDS are illegal,
there have since have been a number of attempts by the police to prevent
demonstrations in support of BDS from taking place. In early March, a
solidarity activist was arrested simply for wearing a tshirt supportive of BDS, as was
reported.
Prime Minister Manuel Valls recently stated that he would speak with the Ministry of
Interior to discuss what further measures could be taken to repress BDS
activism.
The Paris city
council has passed a resolution condemning the BDS movement which also uses a
false interpretation of the Court of Cassation ruling.
Despite all of this state-backed repression, the BDS movement
in France
continues to mobilise wide support, including through street demonstrations,
for the end of international complicity with Israeli apartheid and settler
colonialism.
US
According to the new Right to Boycott
website, anti-BDS bills or resolutions have been introduced in 21 different
states and in the US Congress.
On July 23, 2015,
Illinois Governor Bruce Rauner signed the country’s first explicitly anti-BDS
state law. This new law requires the creation of a state-run “blacklist” of
foreign companies that heed calls for boycotting Israel
and compels the state’s pension fund to divest from those companies.
The Combating BDS Act of 2016 introduced into the US Congress
seeks to authorize state and local governments to divest assets from and
prohibit investment in any entity that “engages in a commerce or
investment-related boycott, divestment or sanctions activity targeting Israel.”
Bills introduced in Congress, New York, Illinois, and
Maryland sought to defund or reduce government funding to colleges and
universities that fund or subsidize activities and participation in groups,
including the American Studies Association, that endorse academic boycotts of
Israel.
In June 2015, President Obama signed the Trade Promotion
Authority (TPA) into law. This broad free trade law included provisions
opposing BDS and making it a principle trade objective during negotiations with
the European Union for the United States to discourage “politically-motivated
actions to boycott, divest from, or sanction” Israel and “Israeli-controlled
territories”.
In reassuring BDS activists across the US,
the legal advocacy group Palestine Legal affirms, “Boycotts have long played a
significant role in U.S.
history, and the Supreme Court has held that boycotts to effect political,
social, and economic change are protected by the First Amendment of the Constitution. The
call for a boycott of Israel
is based on Israel’s
human rights violations, and is intended to effect social and political change.
The Constitution is the ‘law of the land,’ so federal, state, and local laws
cannot take away your constitutional rights.”
UK
In October 2015, a governing Conservative party press release
announced that the government would take steps to “prevent town hall boycotts”
and prevent local councils and other public bodies from supporting the BDS
movement or measures aimed at companies that participate in Israeli violations
of international law.
The UK
government press release announcing the measures included a number of smears against
the BDS movement, falsely claiming that it calls for a boycott on the basis of
ethnic identity. Justice Minister Michael Gove made similar smearsduring a recent speech.
The UK
government’s measures have advanced through a policy note on public
procurement and proposed changes to local government pension scheme
regulations.
Public procurement: On 17 February 2016, the Cabinet Office published a
Procurement Policy Note (PPN)1 that restates existing legal obligations
regarding public sector procurement processes. It uses World Trade Organisation
(WTO) rules to argue that public bodies cannot refuse to deal with a company
because of its “country of origin”. However, the WTO Public Procurement
agreement does allow for any measure enacted in order to “protect public
morals”.
The government document is clearly designed to have a
chilling effect and to intimidate councils into falsely thinking that they are
no longer allowed to exclude companies that violate human rights from tender
exercises. However, the document does not introduce new legal obligations or
requirements for public bodies. Nor does the policy guidance note prevent local
councils from excluding companies from tendering processes due to their role in
human rights violations, confirmed to be perfectly legal by the previous
government.
Local government pensions: On 25 November 2015, the
government launched a consultation regarding new regulations for how local
government invest pension funds. This includes a proposal to give the Secretary
of State veto power over local authority investment decisions and states that
the government will publish additional guidance making clear that investment
decisions “should not pursue policies which run contrary to UK foreign policy”.
That guidance has not yet been published.
These steps fatally undermine the government’s stated
commitment to transfer power to local government and communities. They also
represent a serious attack on local democracy and civil rights.
Canada
The Canadian parliament, led by Prime Minister Justin
Trudeau’s party, recently voted to condemn the global BDS campaign. The motion was
put forward by the opposition Conservative Party but backed by most members of
Trudeau’s governing Liberals.
The motion “calls upon the government to condemn any and all
attempts by Canadian groups or individuals to promote the boycott, divestment
and sanctions movement, which it describes as promoting the ‘demonization and
delegitimization’ of Israel.”
This motion is the latest in a string of government-backed
attacks on the BDS movement and infringements on free speech that have also
seen government politicians condemning campus activism and smearing BDS as “anti-Semitic”
and the signing of a cooperation agreement with Israel that
included a specific commitment to fight the BDS movement.
About Palestinian BDS National Committee
The BDS National Committee (BNC) is the Palestinian coordinating body for the BDS campaign worldwide. For more information, visit www.bdsmovement.net/BNC.Other posts by Palestinian BDS National Committee.
2 Responses
Ossinev
Here in the UK
can`t wait for the first challenge to government policy and the resultant
publicity whatever the legal or “quasi legal” outcome. Next step individuals
writing to their MPs querying the policy/decision. Following step use of the UK
Government petition system to request that the policy be reversed.etc. All =
publicity and raising of awareness of the issues and the situation in the
Stolen and Blockaded Territories.
And those cuddly Zionists do not repeat do not like any form of awareness or
publicity or any form of direct light being shone on their nasty little Fascist
cult colony. So what will be their next tactic ?.Don`t think they have got one
really – looking forward to the denouement of their pathetic knee jerk anti BDS
campaign. They really are up s..t creek without a paddle on this one.
BOYCOTT UGLY APARTHEID ISRAEL
SUPPORT BDS
TELL YOUR FAMILY AND FRIENDS ABOUT BDS
WRITE TO YOUR MP TO COMPLAIN ABOUT ATTEMPTS TO DELIGITIMISE BDS
SUPPORT BDS
TELL YOUR FAMILY AND FRIENDS ABOUT BDS
WRITE TO YOUR MP TO COMPLAIN ABOUT ATTEMPTS TO DELIGITIMISE BDS
xanadou
Nobody likes a bully. The growing revulsion at
seeing the zios’ victims brutalised or reading about Palestinian babies burned
and bombed, children brutalised by israeli law enforcement, cold-blooded
killings of young men and women and the hopeless despair of generation after
generation despairing of life in a concentration camp called
israel-occupied-Palestine may not compel the cowardly politicians into action,
but the once-overwhelming uncritical sympathy for israel is waning fast,
especially among the youngest generation for whom the Jewish holocaust pales in
comparison to the horror practised by the US and its Euro cohorts in present
day ME against Muslims.
Sic transit gloria mundi…
Sic transit gloria mundi…
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