Donia Al-Watan
Al-Watan Voice
20 March 2016
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.
Al-Watan Voice
20 March 2016

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).
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.
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.

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.

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).
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.
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.
Source:http://www.globalresearch.ca/israels-legal-warfare-on-bds-fosters-repression-and-mccarthyism-across-the-world/5515503
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