Israel practices apartheid and colonialism in
Palestine, a study by HSRC
Study: Israel practices apartheid and colonialism in Palestine
Date: 01 / 06 / 2009 Time: 19:18
Bethlehem -
Ma'an -
The Human Sciences Research Council of South Africa (HSRC) released a
study on Monday indicating that the Israeli occupation government is
practicing both colonialism and apartheid in the occupied Palestinian
territories.
The interim report, which will form part of a
discussion at an upcoming HSRC conference on the subject, titled
Re-envisioning Israel/Palestine, on 13 and 14 June in Cape Town, serves
as a document to be finalised later this year, according to a statement.
The study's team found that Israel's policy and practices
violate the prohibition on colonialism which the international community
developed in the 1960s in response to the great decolonisation struggles
in Africa and Asia. "Israel's policy is demonstrably to fragment the
West Bank and annex part of it permanently to Israel, which is the
hallmark of colonialism," the study concluded.
The Israeli
occupation government has appropriated land and water in the
territories, merged the Palestinian economy with Israel's economy, and
imposed a system of domination over Palestinians to ensure their
subjugation to these measures, the report noted.
"Through these
measures, Israel has denied the indigenous population the right to
self-determination and indicated clear intention to assume sovereignty
over portions of its land and natural resources. Permanent annexation of
territory in this fashion is the hallmark of colonialism," the published
summary went on to say.
Regarding apartheid, the team found that
Israel's laws and policies in Palestine fit the definition of apartheid
in the International Convention on the Suppression and Punishment of the
Crime of Apartheid.
Israeli law conveys privileges to Jewish
settlers and disadvantages Palestinians in the same territory on the
basis of their respective identities, which function in this case as
racialised identities in the sense provided by international law.
Israel's practices are corollary to five of the six 'inhuman acts'
listed by the Convention, according to the report.
"A policy of
apartheid is especially indicated by Israel's demarcation of geographic
‘reserves' in the West Bank, to which Palestinian residence is confined
and which Palestinians cannot leave without a permit," the study's
authors alleged.
The system is "very similar" to the policy of
‘Grand Apartheid' in apartheid South Africa, in which black South
Africans were confined to black homelands delineated by the South
African government, while white South Africans enjoyed freedom of
movement and full civil rights in the rest of the country, it said.
The HSRC commissioned an international team of scholars and
practitioners of international public law from South Africa, the United
Kingdom, Israel and the West Bank to conduct the study.
The
resulting 300-page draft, titled Occupation, Colonialism, Apartheid?: A
re-assessment of Israel's practices in the occupied Palestinian
territories under international law, represents 15 months of research
and constitutes an exhaustive review of Israel's practices in Palestine
according to definitions of colonialism and apartheid provided by
international law.
The project was suggested originally by the
January 2007 report by eminent South African jurist John Dugard, in his
capacity as Special Rapporteur to the United Nations Human Rights
Council, when he indicated that Israeli practices had assumed
characteristics of colonialism and apartheid
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