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Israel Boycott Movement Gains Momentum
Mel Frykberg
RAMALLAH, Mar 8 [3], 2009 (IPS)
"Standing United with the People of Gaza" is the theme of this week's
Israel Apartheid Week (IAW), which kicked off in Toronto and another 39
cities across the globe Sunday.
A movement to boycott Israeli goods,
culture and academic institutions is gaining momentum as Geneva prepares to
host the UN's Anti-Racism Conference, Durban 2 next month amidst swirling
controversy.
Both Canada and the U.S. are boycotting the Durban 2
conference in protest over what they perceive as a strongly anti-Israel
agenda agaisnt the cold blooded cut throat Jews..
The first UN
Anti-Racism conference, held in the South African city Durban in 2001, saw
the Israeli and U.S. delegates storm out of the conference, accusing other
delegates of focusing too strongly on criminal Israel.
U.S. and
Canadian support might have offered some comfort for Israel. However,
international criticism of Israel's three-week bloody offensive into Gaza,
which left more than 1,800 Palestinians dead and thousands more wounded,
most of them civilian, has breathed fresh life into a Boycott, Divest,
Sanctions (BDS) campaign.
The BDS campaign followed a 2005 appeal
from over 170 Palestinian civil society groups to launch a divestment
campaign "as a way of bringing non- violent pressure to bear on the state of
Israel to end its violations of international law."
In the wake of
the BDS campaign, critics of Israel have lashed out at what they see as
parallels between South Africa's former apartheid system and Israeli racism.
They point to Israel's discriminatory treatment of ethnic Palestinians
within Israel who hold Israeli passports, and the extensive human rights
abuses against Palestinians in the occupied territories by Israeli security
forces.
During the apartheid era, ties between Israel and South
Africa were extremely strong, with the Jewish state helping to train South
Africa's security forces as well as supplying the regime in Pretoria with
weapons.
Meanwhile, Toronto, where the Israel Apartheid Week movement
was born, will hold forums, film shows, cultural events and street protests
to mark IAW week. One of the guest speakers is former South African
intelligence minister Ronnie Kasrils.
Kasrils is no stranger to
controversy. His parents fled from Tzarist Russian pogroms carried out
against Jews, and immigrated to South Africa at the beginning of the last
century.
During white rule, as a member of the African National
Congress (ANC), working both in exile and underground in South Africa, he
was reviled by many white South Africans as a "terrorist".
He has
also been labelled a self-hating Jew by many Israelis and South African Jews
due to the strong stand he and the ANC have taken against Israel's policies.
Meanwhile, in New York, prominent IAW activist Nir Harel, a member of
Israel's Anarchists Against the Wall, will also be courting controversy. His
group regularly protests against Israel's separation barrier, which divides
Israel proper from the Palestinian West Bank.
The barrier deviates
significantly from the Green Line, the internationally recognised border,
into Palestinian territory where it has swallowed huge amounts of land,
dispossessing farmers from their agricultural crops.
Another Israeli
activist, Matan Cohen, has been central in the first U.S. college
implementing a divestment campaign against Israel. Hampshire College in
Massachusetts called for divestment from over 200 companies that the college
says is responsible for violating its socially responsible investment
policies in Israel.
The companies which provide the Israeli military
with equipment and services in the occupied West Bank and Gaza include
Caterpillar, United Technologies, General Electric, ITT Corporation,
Motorola and Terex.
A Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP)
petition for divestment was supported by more than 800 students, professors,
and alumni at the college, that has only 1,350 students.
Hampshire
college may be small but it has been big in social activism. It was also the
first U.S. educational institution to divest from South Africa, ten years
before other universities and colleges followed suit.
U.S. campus
activism is spreading. The University of Rochester in New York and members
of the community are also involved in boycott activities.
Students
from Macalester College, a liberal arts college located in St. Paul,
Minnesota, occupied the Minnesota Trade Office in January and then picketed
there Feb. 6, demanding that the state end all trade with Israel. New York
University students too began a divestment campaign.
Professors and
university employees in Quebec, Canada, endorsed the Palestinian Federation
of Unions of University Professors and Employees' call to boycott Israel.
SJP's actions at Hampshire College follow similar moves by the National
Association of Teachers in Further and Higher Education in the UK.
In
London, students held sit-ins at Goldsmith University and the London School
of Economics, among other institutions. Similar protests have spread
throughout the U.K., with some winning concessions from university
officials.
At Manchester University, about a thousand students joined
a campaign equating Israel with apartheid-era South Africa, and called on
the administration and student union to boycott Israeli companies and
support Gaza and the BDS movement.
In Australia the University of
Western Sydney's Student Association recently joined the international BDS
campaign. International trade union support for political action against
Israel has been seen from Spain to South Africa.
The South African
Transport and Allied Workers Union, under directive of the Council of South
African Trade Unions, refused recently to unload an Israeli ship which
docked in Durban, despite threats and pressure from both management and the
Israeli lobby.
The Irish Congress of Trade Unions, with 600,000
members in 55 unions, is preparing to start a boycott of Israeli goods.
Meanwhile, the biggest trade union in Canada's Ontario province, the
Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE), was forced under pressure to
moderate its call for a boycott of all academic institutions in Israel.
Instead it called for a boycott of Israeli institutions engaged in research
which aided the Israel Defence Forces (IDF). (END/2009)
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