Dan MacFadden
McGill Daily (via globalresearch.ca)
24 February 2016
Palestinians in the West Bank – one of two self-governing Palestinian
territories as per the Oslo Accords of 1993 – live under Israeli
military occupation, or are confined to small islands of land under
limited self-control. The Gaza Strip, the other Palestinian territory,
home to 1.8 million people in one of the most densely populated areas in the world, suffers the consequences of Israel’s blockade and over a decade of periodic wars with Israel. Israeli settlements
in these territories, including East Jerusalem, are considered illegal
under international law, especially the Fourth Geneva Convention, though
Israel disputes this.
McGill Daily (via globalresearch.ca)
24 February 2016
Six years before the fall of the South African apartheid, an editorial by The Daily (“South Africa Love it and Leave it,”
September 12, 1985, Editorial, page 4) noted optimistically, “Now, even
the most conservative authorities are recognizing that revolution is
inevitable. Now, they are divesting not on principle, but out of
self-interest.” McGill would later, in November 18, 1985,
join dozens of other North American universities in divesting its
holdings from South Africa, also becoming the first Canadian university
to do so – something that played an important role in taking down
legislated apartheid in the country.
Thirty years later, the end of
Israeli apartheid appears distant on the horizon as it has been ever
since the occupation of Palestinian territories by Israel in 1967. The
use of the term “apartheid” is a parallel drawn by human rights
organizations and activists between the past racial segregation of South
Africa and the Israeli concept of Hafrada (“separation”), whereby
Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip are literally walled off
via the Israeli West Bank barrier and the Gaza barrier.
Meanwhile, Israel expands its domination
over all the land between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean,
driven by the most right-wing government in the country’s history. While
many Palestinians continue to resist this situation with remarkable
steadfastness, no conservative authorities are making the claim today
that a “revolution is inevitable” in Palestine, or are divesting from
Israeli corporations out of self-interest, let alone on principle.
Illustration by Sarah Meghan Mah
Growing Influence of BDS
But the growing influence of Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions
(BDS) campaigns have the potential to impose a cost on the ordinary
operations of Israeli apartheid. The BDS Movement was launched in 2005
by a call from 171 Palestinian Civil Society organizations
and, to quote the call, was “inspired by the struggle of South Africans
against apartheid.” It specifically called on “people of conscience all
over the world to impose broad boycotts and implement divestment
initiatives against Israel [...] until [it] meets its obligation to
recognize the Palestinian people’s inalienable right to
self-determination and fully complies with the precepts of international
law.”
The dominant trend for BDS campaigns has
included passing divestment resolutions that target Israeli and
multinational corporations that are complicit in the violations of the
rights of Palestinians. Such campaigns don’t strictly adhere to the 2005
call, which supports “boycott, divestment and sanctions campaigns
against Israel,” rather than multinational companies profiting from the
occupation. However, such campaigns are generally supported or initiated
by the Palestinian BDS National Committee
(BNC) – the organization in Palestine responsible for directing BDS
campaigns worldwide – and have successfully compelled companies to
withdraw their services from the occupation and settlement expansion.
The creation last week [on February 4th] of the McGill BDS Action Network,
or simply McGill BDS, is a part of the spread of these campaigns, and
the network’s first goal is to pressure the University to divest from
companies profiting from the occupation of the West Bank and Gaza.
Documents from McGill’s Office of Investments show that the University holds investments in at least four companies
that profit from activities in the occupied territories: G4S, L-3
Communications, Mizrahi-Tefahot Bank, and RE/ MAX. The money invested in
these companies constitutes a small portion of the McGill investment
portfolio – less than 1 per cent of the University’s total investments –
making divestment a reasonable possibility, fiscally speaking.
The McGill Board of Governors’ Committee
to Advise on Matters of Social Responsibility (CAMSR)’s terms of
reference make explicit their stance toward investing in companies like
these that arguably do cause social injury . CAMSR defines “social injury”
as “the grave injurious impact which the activities of a company is
found to have on consumers, employees, or other persons, or on the
natural environment. Such activities include those which violate, or
frustrate the enforcement of rules of domestic
or international law intended to protect individuals against
deprivation of health, safety, or basic freedoms, or to protect the
natural environment.” One can argue that many of Israel’s actions in the
occupied territories and within its own territory constitute serious
violations of human rights and international law, and the complicity of
these companies in such activities gives reason to believe CAMSR can be
persuaded to divest.
Support for the Prison System
The British private security systems
corporation G4S has become the target of BDS campaigns in Europe and
around the world especially after 13 Palestinian organizations made a statement
call for action against the company in the midst of hunger strikes by
Palestinian political prisoners in 2012, mostly due to its service to
the Israeli Prison Service (IPS).
According to Who Profits, a research centre that details commercial involvement in the Israeli occupation, the company has
“provided a perimeter defense system for the walls of the Ofer facility
[in the West Bank] and installed a central command room inside, from
which the entire facility could be monitored.” Who Profits also states
that the company also “provided the entire security system for the
Ketziot Prison, a central command room in the Megiddo Prison and
security systems in the Damon Prison,” all of which are located in
Israel and have Palestinian detainees. G4S systems have also been
installed at the Jerusalem and Kishon interrogation and detention
centres.
Israeli prison facilities often hold Palestinians under administrative detention – that is, detention without charge or trial, which can last for periods of several months, sometimes years. By comparison, according to the Associations for Civil Rights in Israel,
Israelis living in Jewish-only settlements throughout the West Bank are
judged under an ordinary criminal court system and live as
right-bearing citizens under Israeli law and the Israeli court system.
The difference in these legal systems was even recently acknowledged by
the American Ambassador to Israel, who rightly stated
that “it seems Israel has two standards of adherence to rule of law in
the West Bank – one for Israelis and one for Palestinians.”
Palestinian political prisoners are tortured at Israeli prison facilities. A 2013 UN report
wrote that even “Palestinian children arrested by [Israeli] military
and police are systematically subject to degrading treatment, and often
to acts of torture.”
Under intense pressure from European BDS groups, G4S stated
in 2011 that “when certain contracts expired [they] would not renew
them,” and reaffirmed this in June 2014. The ongoing campaign has had
success with interrupting the usual operations of the IPS, and bringing
awareness to the illegitimacy of administrative detention and the
treatment of Palestinian political prisoners. BDS campaigns against G4S
will continue, however, following a call from the BNC to escalate
efforts against the company until it cancels all the contracts the
company has with Israel.
Support for the Military Occupation
G4S and L-3 both provide goods to the
Israeli Defense Forces (IDF), enabling violence against Palestinians.
Research by Who Profits on both companies shows that they provide
equipment to military checkpoints in the West Bank and to the Erez
(border) Crossing at the Gaza Strip, which is controlled by the IDF in
order to limit the flow of goods and people into the Strip. L-3′s
subsidiary L-3 Combat Propulsion Systems also signed a multi-year contract with the Israeli Ministry of Defense for the “production and remanufacture of diesel engines for tank and armed personnel carriers.” According to a November 2007 news release by L-3, the company’s subsidiary L-3
drone manufacturer Elbit Systems “built on their respective knowledge to offer the state-of-the art Hermes 900 UAS [Unmanned Aerial System],” which was used for the first time
in Operation Protective Edge, the 2014 military campaign launched by
Israel, resulting in the wounding and death of thousands of people, many
of whom were Gazans.
Israel’s periodic military assaults
against Gaza are another method of imposing control over the Strip, the
most recent of which was Operation Protective Edge. Israel deployed
battle tanks and UASs on a large scale in this assault, including the
Elbit Hermes 900. Elbit Systems and the IDF are secretive about the
details of how their drones operate, although advertisements
for the Hermes 900 boast that the drone’s multi-payload capacities help
to close “the sensor-to-shooter cycle, quicker than ever before.”
Further, the matrix of military
checkpoints in place throughout the West Bank restricts the free
movement of Palestinians between cities. Who Profits reported that G4S provided these checkpoints with luggage scanning equipment, metal detectors, and services, while L-3 provided them with SafeView magnetometric scanners and ProVision personal screening machines
used to detect concealed objects on individuals. Any Palestinian from
Ramallah wishing to visit their relatives in Jerusalem, for instance,
will be one of hundreds or thousands of people herded through the Qalandia checkpoint
each day. There, they may be detained and searched alongside other
Palestinians of all ages – and possibly scanned with equipment from L-3
and G4S – delaying the short journey by several hours.
According to Who Profits, the IDF uses
the same scanners at the Erez Crossing into the Gaza Strip. While
scanners provided by G4S and L-3 are used for screening people entering
Gaza, and not economic goods, it is still relevant to note that Israeli
control over Erez and all other crossings into the territory is
maintained in order to enforce the blockade of goods into Gaza, strangling the Gazan economy and maintaining Israeli control over most aspects of daily life for the 1.8 million people living there.
Support for the Settlements
The remaining two companies, RE/MAX and
Mizrahi-Tefahot Bank, profit from settlement activity in the West Bank.
The settlements that are built on occupied Palestinian territories could
be considered illegal under article 49 of the Fourth Geneva Convention.
According to this article, so long as the territories remain occupied,
“the Occupied Power shall not deport or transfer parts of its own
civilian population into the territory it occupies.”
A Human Rights Watch (HRW) report
from January 19 notes that “in November 2015, for example, [RE/MAX]
listed 80 properties in 18 settlements on its Israeli website,” and
operates an office in Ma’aleh Adumim, one of the largest settlements in
the West Bank. By selling real estate in these territories, usually to
settlers coming from Canada and the U.S. or from within Israel’s
internationally recognized borders, the company facilitates the transfer
of Israelis into the West Bank. UN Special Rapporteur on the Situation
of Human Rights in the Palestinian Territories Occupied since 1967
Richard Falk, in a report
for the UN General Assembly, said that the company “assist[s] in the
growth of settlements [...] by selling settlement properties.”
Mizrahi-Tefahot, the fourth-largest commercial bank in Israel, operates branches in the settlements of Karnei Shomron, Alon Shvut, and Ramat Eshkol.
More significantly, it provides mortgages to homebuyers in settlements,
and finances settlement construction. Their mortgage services to these
homebuyers, like RE/MAX’s real estate sales, enable settlement growth
and expansion. Settlement construction is financed by “accompaniment
agreements” made between construction companies and Israeli banks, in
which the banks “provide the loan for the construction and protect
buyers during the construction phase,” according to the HRW report.
According to Who Profits, one such agreement was signed with
Mizrahi-Tefahot and Israeli construction company Kotler-Adika to develop
a housing project in Ma’aleh Adumim. Furthermore, it is also alleged
that the bank has financed the building of several hundred housing units in other settlements.
For these reasons, RE/MAX and Mizrahi-Tefahot have become targets for BDS. The United Methodist Church in the U.S. blocked Mizrahi-Tefahot from its investment fund last month, and Luxembourg’s state pension fund divested in 2014, while a campaign led by U.S. anti-war group Codepink is encouraging people to boycott RE/MAX.
The Rationale for BDS
Divestment from these companies could
have meaningful outcomes for Palestinians. RE/MAX and Mizrahi-Tefahot
are significant candidates for divestment not simply because of their
services and operations in Israeli settlements, but because they play a
crucial role in helping transfer Israeli citizens into occupied
territory. BDS initiatives targeted against these companies and others
like them have the potential to restrict further Israeli colonization of
the remaining fragments of land belonging to Palestinians.
Campaigns aimed at companies servicing
Israel’s military or prisons, like L-3 and G4S, also serve their own
purpose. Although such initiatives have yet to result in Israel losing
contracts with the defense industry, successful campaigns have the
potential to impose a real economic cost on the occupation. Furthermore,
the anxiety in Israel generated by the prospect of BDS campaigns
against the Israeli military infrastructure could limit state violence
against Palestinians. For instance, in the fall of 2015, the Israeli repression of a growing revolt by young Palestinians elicited protests and actions around the world under the banner #SolidarityWaveBDS.
Actions like these – especially if they’re targeted at military
infrastructure – might compel IDF soldiers to exercise some caution in
their operations, perhaps by avoiding use of live ammunition on
demonstrators, in order to prevent the possibility of provoking greater
international support for BDS.
The BDS movement obviously won’t lead to
Palestine’s emancipation. But the efforts of BDS organizers, if guided
properly, might prove important in supporting resistance to further
colonization and oppression in Palestine. There is a willingness amongst
many non-Palestinian organizers to ask the difficult question of how to
properly exercise solidarity with these struggles. Lending support to
BDS campaigns is by and large the best way to do this, as it allows
non-Palestinians to work alongside Palestinians, using the resources
available to those abroad, in countries such as Canada and the U.S., to
impose pressure on Israel, while working within the framework outlined
in the initial call for BDS. In this way, efforts abroad can supplement
Palestinian struggles for self-determination without infringing on them.
Dan MacFadden is a pseudonym for an activist with the McGill BDS campaign. This article first published by the The McGill Daily.
Source: http://www.globalresearch.ca/canada-toward-boycott-divestment-and-sanctions-bds-against-israeli-apartheid-mcgill-university/5510035
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