15 July 2011
Israel's New Boycott Law: The end of Free Speech and Democracy In
Israel?
Date: Fri, 15 Jul 2011 11:14:32 -0400 (EDT)
From: Tikkun <magazine[at]tikkun.org>
Subject: Israel's New Boycott Law: The end of Free Speech and Democracy In
Israel?
[Selections from an essay sent to Tikkun this morning from Uri Avnery, leader
of the Israeli peace movement Gush Shalom. Tikkun's comment: It has long
been argued by the peace and justice movements in the West that you cannot
deny democratic rights to one section of the population without eventually
denying those rights to everyone. The key to the withering away of democracy
in Israel is the Occupation, and the restrictions placed on Palestinians
is now becoming the psychological and ideological foundation for denying
democratic rights to Israelis.]
THE FUTURE indeed, the present of Israeli democracy is shrouded in
doubt.
by Uri Avnery
It is a miracle, because it did not grow slowly over generations, like
Anglo-Saxon democracy. There was no democracy in the Jewish shtetl. Neither
is there anything like it in Jewish religious tradition. But the Zionist
Founding Fathers, mostly West and Central European Jews, aspired to the highest
social ideals of their time.
I have always warned that our democracy has very shallow and tender roots,
and needs our constant care. Where did the Jews who founded Israel, and who
came here thereafter, grow up?
Under the dictatorship of the British High Commissioner, the Russian Czar,
the Dictatorship of the Proletariat, the king of Morocco, Pilsudsky s Poland
and similar regimes. Those of us who came from democratic countries like
Weimar Germany or the US were a tiny minority.
Yet the founders of Israel succeeded in establishing a vibrant democracy
that at least until 1967 was in no way inferior, and in some ways superior,
to the British or American models.
We were proud of it, and the world admired it. The appellation the Only Democracy
in the Middle East was not a hollow propaganda slogan.
Some claim that with the occupation of the Palestinian territories, which
have lived since 1967 under a harsh military regime without the slightest
trace of democracy and human rights, this situation already came to an end.
Whatever one thinks about that, in fact Israel in its pre-1967 borders maintained
a reasonable record until recently. For the ordinary citizen, democracy was
still a fact of life. Even Arab citizens enjoyed democratic rights far superior
to anything in the Arab world.
This week, all this was put in doubt. Some say that this doubt has now been
dispersed, and that a stark reality is being exposed.
American Jews boycotted the cars of the infamous anti-Semite Henry Ford.
Jews in many countries took part in a boycott of German goods immediately
after the Nazis came to power in 1933.
The Chinese boycotted Japan after the invasion of their country.
The US boycotted the Olympic Games in Moscow. People of conscience all over
the world boycotted the products and the athletes of Apartheid South Africa
and helped to bring it to its knees.
All these campaigns used a basic democratic right: every person is entitled
to refuse to buy from people he detests. Everyone can refuse to support with
his money causes which contradict his innermost moral convictions.
It is this right that has been put to the test in Israel this week.
IN 1997, Gush Shalom declared a boycott of the products of the settlements
in the occupied Palestinian territories. We believe that these settlements,
which are being set up with the express purpose of preventing the establishment
of a Palestinian state, are endangering the future of Israel.
The press conference, in which we announced this step, was not attended by
a single Israeli journalist. But the boycott gathered momentum. Hundreds
of thousands of Israelis do not buy settlement products. The European Union,
which has a trade agreement that practically treats Israel as a member of
the union, was induced to enforce the clause that excludes products of the
settlements from these privileges.
There are now hundreds of factories in the settlements. They were literally
compelled, or seduced, to go there, because the (stolen) land there is far
cheaper than in Israel proper. They enjoy generous government subsidies and
tax exemptions, and they can exploit Palestinian workers for ridiculous wages.
The Palestinians have no other way of supporting their families than to toil
for their oppressors.
Our boycott was designed, among other things, to counter these advantages.
And indeed, several big enterprises have already given in and moved out,
under pressure from foreign investors and buyers.
Alarmed, the settlers instructed their lackeys in the Knesset to draft a
law that would counter this boycott.
Last Monday, the Boycott Law was enacted, setting off an unprecedented storm
in the country. Already Tuesday morning, Gush Shalom submitted to the Supreme
Court a 22 page application to annul this law.
THE BOYCOTT LAW is a very clever piece of work.
First of all, the law is disguised as a means to fight the de-legitimization
of the State of Israel throughout the world. The law bans all calls for the
boycott of the State of Israel, including the areas under Israeli control
. Since there are not a dozen Israelis who call for the boycott of the state,
it is clear that the real and sole purpose is to outlaw the boycott of the
settlements.
In its initial draft, the law made this a criminal offense. That would have
suited us fine: we were quite willing to go to prison for this cause. But
the law, in its final form, imposes sanctions that are another thing.
According to the law, any settler who feels that he has been harmed by the
boycott can demand unlimited compensation from any person or organization
calling for the boycott without having to prove any actual damage. This means
that each of the 300,000 settlers can claim millions from every single peace
activist associated with the call for boycott, thus destroying the peace
movement altogether.
AS WE point out in our application to the Supreme Court, the law is clearly
unconstitutional. True, Israel has no formal constitution, but several basic
laws are considered by the Supreme Court to function effectively as such.
First, the law clearly contravenes the basic right to freedom of expression.
A call for a boycott is a legitimate political action, much as a street
demonstration, a manifesto or a mass petition.
Second, the law contravenes the principle of equality. The law does not apply
to any other boycott that is now being implemented in Israel: from the religious
boycott of stores that sell non-kosher meat (posters calling for this cover
the walls of the religious quarters in Jerusalem and elsewhere), to the recent
very successful call to boycott the producers of cottage cheese because of
their high price. The call of right-wing groups to boycott artists who have
not served in the army will be legal, the declaration by left-wing artists
that they will not appear in the settlements will be illegal.
Since these and other provisions of the law clearly violate the Basic Laws,
the Legal Advisor of the Knesset, in a highly unusual step, published his
opinion that the law is unconstitutional and undermines the core of democracy
. Even the supreme governmental legal authority, the legal advisor of the
government , has published a statement saying that the law in on the border
of unconstitutionality. Being mortally afraid of the settlers, he added that
he will defend it in court nevertheless. The opportunity for this is not
far off: the Supreme Court has given him 60 days to respond to our petition.
A SMALL group of minor parliamentarians is terrorizing the Knesset majority
and can pass any law at all. The power of the settlers is immense, and moderate
right-wing members are rightly afraid that, if they are not radical enough,
they will not be re-elected by the Likud Central Council, which selects the
candidates for the party list. This creates a dynamic of competition: who
can appear the most radical.
No wonder that one anti-democratic law follows another: a law that practically
bars Arab citizens from living in localities of less than 400 families. A
law that takes away the pension rights of former Knesset members who do not
show up for police investigations (like Azmi Bishara--the Israeli Arab who
was the candidate for Prime Minister and then withdrew at the last minute
to help Arabs vote for Ehud Barak; later accused of treason for meeting with
Syrian Arabs. He was a regular contributor to Tikkun magazine.)
A law that abolishes the citizenship of people convicted of assisting terrorism
. A law that obliges NGOs to disclose donations by foreign governmental
institutions. A law that gives preference for civil service positions to
people who have served in the army (thus automatically excluding almost all
Arab citizens).
A law that outlaws any commemoration of the 1948 Naqba (the expulsion of
Arab inhabitants from areas conquered by Israel).
An extension of the law that prohibits (almost exclusively) Arab citizens,
who marry spouses from the Palestinian territories, to live with them in
Israel.
Soon to be enacted is a bill that forbids NGOs to accept donations of more
than 5000 dollars from abroad, a bill that will impose an income tax of 45%
on any NGO that is not specifically exempted by the government, a bill to
compel universities to sing the national anthem on every possible occasion,
the appointment of a Parliamentary Commission of Inquiry to investigate the
financial resources of left-wing [sic] organizations.
Looming over everything else is the explicit threat of right-wing factions
to attack the hated liberal Supreme Court directly, shear it of its ability
to overrule unconstitutional laws and control the appointment of the Supreme
Court judges.
FIFTY-ONE YEARS ago, on the eve of the Eichmann trial, I wrote a book about
Nazi Germany. In the last chapter, I asked: Can It Happen Here?
My answer still stands: yes, it can.
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From Ha'aretz Friday, July 15, 2011
4,500 Israelis and Arabs march in Jerusalem to support Palestinian
independence
Police intervene to separate marchers and right-wing counter-protesters,
despite organizers' claim march went peacefully.
By Nir Hasson Tags: Palestinians Palestinian state Middle East peace
Over 4500 Palestinians and Israelis took part in the "March for Independence"
Friday, calling for the recognition of a Palestinian state.
Although the organizers of the march issued a statement saying the march
was carried out peacefully, police had to intervene and separate right-wing
and left-wing activists.
Jerusalem 'March for Independence', July 15, 2011
Photo by: Daniel Bar On
The event was coordinated with the police, and organizers had pledged to
prevent any violence from breaking out, despite the expected right-wing
counter-protests.
Participants in the march held signs quoting South African leader and
anti-apartheid activist Nelson Mandela saying "only free men can negotiate",
while others bore slogans calling for support of Palestinian independence.
Several MKs participated in the march, including Zehava Galon of Meretz and
Dov Hanin of Hadash. Other prominent public figures took part as well, such
as former Speaker of the Knesset Avraham Burg and former Attorney General
Michael Ben Yair.
The march took a symbolic route, following the green line that used to divide
East and West Jerusalem before the Six Day War in 1967. It began at Jaffa
Gate and ended at the Sheikh Jarrah neighborhood, the opposite route taken
by right-wing activists during Jerusalem Day last month.
"After years of Israel speaking about peace and building settlements,
checkpoints, walls and outposts, the young generations from both sides are
starting to understand that they are being duped," said Hillel Ben Sasson
from the Sheikh Jarrah Solidarity Movement said on Thursday.
Ben Sasson added that "in Jerusalem of all places, the heart of the conflict,
Israelis and Palestinians will march together calling for independence and
for an end to the running amok of the Netanyahu government, which is leading
us to a political abyss."
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