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Westminster still in awe of
Israel's gang of amoral thugs
By Stuart Littlewood
Redress, February 13, 2008
Stuart Littlewood describes how, in a British Parliament debate about
Gaza, ministers, including at least one former chairman of the “Labour
Friends of Israel” lobby group, dodged difficult questions about UK
support of Israel and stonewalled criticism of Israeli crimes.
Last week there was a debate on Gaza in the UK Parliament. Very few
people turned up.
MP Jeremy Corbyn reminded everyone that 36 of the 39 Hamas Palestinian
Legislative Council members the Israelis abducted in 2006 were still
detained and some hadn't even been charged.
We cannot stand by and allow elected members of a fellow parliament to
be arrested and held without charge or trial in Israeli prisons… More
Palestinian legislators are in prison than legislators from all the
other parliaments in the rest of the world put together. I hope that the
minister will tell us that serious pressure has been put on Israel to
release those parliamentarians.
He also raised questions on settlements, the blockade of Gaza and the
West's refusal to talk to Hamas. The minister with responsibility for
the Middle East, Dr Kim Howells (a former chairman of Labour Friends of
Israel), replied: "The government recognizes the impact and scale of the
problems and the need to address all of them." He then dismissed Hamas
as "a rejectionist Palestinian group" and tried to equate Gaza's
home-made rocket launchings with Israel's crippling siege and high-tech
military onslaughts that have killed 169 (at the time of writing) people
and maimed hundreds more since the Annapolis “peace” meeting.
"The United Kingdom urges restraint on all parties," was as firm as the
minister got.
As for Hamas, a political dialogue was impossible as long as one party
was dedicated to violence and the destruction of the other. "The bedrock
of our approach is to give every support to those who are committed to
peaceful progress."
What of the 90 chronically sick hospital patients who have died in agony
for lack of drugs, equipment spares and proper nutrition, and over 300
more who face a similar fate unless the blockade is lifted? Well,
desperate Gazans will be relieved to know that, according to Howells,
"the United Kingdom remains committed to supporting Palestinians in
Gaza".
Douglas Alexander, Secretary of state for International Development,
also fielded questions. Asked what assistance his department was
providing to the people of Gaza, he said: "I and the foreign secretary
have made repeated pleas to the Israeli, government to recognize their
obligations and ensure that the crossings are open for humanitarian
supplies."
Sir Gerald Kaufman asked:
Is it not a fact that only international action can bring to an end the
humanitarian disaster caused by collective punishment imposed by the
gang of amoral thugs who comprise the Israeli government and violate not
only international law but the historic Jewish conscience?
Sir Gerald is one of many well-regarded Jews who are dismayed and
disgusted with the Israeli government.
"The British Government have been unequivocal in stating that Israel
should abide by its commitment under the Fourth Geneva Convention," came
the reply.
Another MP, Michael Moore, said:
We are appalled by the scale of the humanitarian disaster in Gaza, but
does the secretary of state agree that we have reached an extraordinary
state of affairs when a UN representative can say: “Gaza is on the
threshold of becoming the first territory to be intentionally reduced to
a state of abject destitution, with the acquiescence of the
international community? Does the secretary of state think that the
scale of the Israeli response is disproportionate?
Alexander twittered about "active diplomatic efforts". In December he
had discussed the Israeli government's "defence posture and humanitarian
obligations" with Ehud Barak. Foreign Secretary David Miliband had
raised those matters directly with minister Livni.
Let's blame it on the rockets
Then David Winnick asked:
Cannot the Western powers ‑ certainly this country, and I would hope the
US ‑ be much firmer with Israel and say that its actions cause dismay
throughout the civilized world? How would Israeli citizens like to be
subject to what the citizens of Gaza are subjected to by Israeli
occupation?
This had Alexander ducking and weaving. It was time to play the Israel
lobby's trump card ‑ Qassams! "Ultimately, both the Palestinians and the
people of Israel have legitimate security concerns, but that is no
reason why humanitarian supplies should not reach Gaza, nor why rockets
should be fired on the Israeli population," he said. "It is imperative
that all sides recognize their responsibilities."
Miliband and Alexander later made a joint statement:
We continue to be deeply concerned by the growing humanitarian impact of
restrictions by the government of Israel on industrial diesel supplies
to Gaza. We welcome Israel's recent decision to increase the supply of
industrial diesel and continue to urge them to lift all restrictions on
fuel with immediate effect.
We utterly condemn the rocket attacks from Gaza into Israel. We support
all efforts to stop these attacks consistent with obligations under
international law.
Commitments to Geneva Conventions, obligations under international law ‑
none of them amount to a row of beans. It's time the grey suits in
London and the rest of the west understood that, if they want the law to
mean anything, they must enforce it.
Righteous condemnation of the rockets is “de rigueur” of course, though
only a smokescreen. As Al-Jazeera reports, many in the occupied
territories see that Annapolis was nothing more than an international
fascade behind which a new phase of fiercer US-backed Israeli aggression
could be ushered in. Gaza's Qassams are a wonderful excuse for stepping
up military action in pursuit of Israel's unlawful ambitions. In
addition to the mounting atrocities in Gaza, Israel has been conducting
20-30 incursions a week into the West Bank, rounding up and killing
members of assorted Palestinians groups with impunity. It might spoil
the Israeli occupation forces’ fun if the home-made rockets were to
stop. They'd have to invent another excuse for their depravity.
What moral reason is there for supporting Israel?
Sir Gerald's "gang of amoral thugs" are not the only villains. Israel's
Chief Rabbi Yona Metzger advocates ethnic cleansing of Palestinians and
says Muslims should recognize that "our land is the Holy Land and
Jerusalem belongs to us". Metzger, reports Haaretz, wants Britain, the
European Union and the United States to help construct a Palestinian
state in Egypt's Sinai Desert. "They will have a nice country, and we,
the Jews, shall have our country and we shall live in peace."
However, Neturei Karta, an international group of non-Zionist Orthodox
Jews, have issued a strongly worded press release that brands Metzger a
Zionist stooge. "Any moral person would much prefer to see the Zionist
warmongers, including Metzger, removed from the Holy Land."
Neturei Karta argues that the state of “Israel” is illegitimate
according to Torah teachings, and the establishment of a Jewish state is
forbidden until Jews are released from exile by God Himself, without any
human intervention, at which time all nations of the world will live
together in peace. "Therefore, to oppress the Palestinian people, harm
them, steal their land, expel them, etc. is totally forbidden according
to our Holy Torah."
It is a mistake, they say, to believe that you have to support Zionism
in order to show friendship to the Jewish people. "True friendship can
be demonstrated by saving all the peoples of the Middle East, including
Jews, from the bloodthirsty machinations of the dangerous state of
“Israel” and by dismantling the Zionist regime entirely."
When Torah experts say the regime's conduct is incompatible with the
moral teachings and ideals of Judaism, I'm not surprised. It doesn't sit
well with Christianity either.
How can pro-Israel MPs and ministers possibly ignore the fact that the
Israeli government is waging war against the Holy Land's Christian
communities, whom it terrorizes along with their Muslim neighbours, and
is using pernicious administrative controls to disrupt the life and work
of the church? Many Christians here are deeply angered by such
criminality, and it's very odd that our elected representatives, who are
mostly Christian themselves, don't feel similarly outraged on behalf of
members of the church family who are so cruelly abused under Israeli
occupation.
Why there should be any support at all for Israel at the heart of
British government is one of the greatest political mysteries of our
time. We share no beliefs or values and we shouldn't even think about
sharing foreign policy. Can it be that supposedly bright people with
vast sources of information at their fingertips are still ignorant of
Israel's apartheid practices, its wholesale land thefts, its careless
slaughter of children and the slow genocide it inflicts on defenceless
civilians, the break-your-door-down-in-the-middle-of-the-night snatch
squads, the house demolitions, the torture and assassinations? Were
those same bright people also unaware of the lies that persuaded them to
commit our country to fight Israel's war with Iraq? I don't think so,
which leaves only one other explanation.
Of course, it's not just a Western weakness. Arab governments have
“taken the dollar”. It's a cosy money-go-round that oils the wheels of
the self-serving political élite and their puppet-masters as they
trample the millions they have condemned to a life of misery.
*Stuart Littlewood is a British
businessman-turned-writer. He recently published a book entitled Radio
Free Palestine about the plight of the Palestinians under occupation.
See details on
http://www.radiofreepalestine.co.uk/.
http://www.redress.cc/global/slittlewood20080207
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