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 New Report Finds Europe Shielding Israel Under 
		Guise of Combating Anti-Semitism  By Nasim Ahmed Palestine Information 
		Center, June 21, 2023  |  | 
		
		
			
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				| Palestinians scrutinized at a checkpoint by the Israeli 
				apartheid wall |  | 
		
		 
		The chilling repercussions of the highly controversial International 
		Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) definition of anti-Semitism have 
		been revealed in a recent report by the European Legal Support Centre 
		(ELSC). Titled "Suppressing 
		Palestinian Rights Advocacy through the IHRA Working Definition of 
		Anti-Semitism", the report by the independent 
		Dutch-based organization uncovered shocking examples of the IHRA's 
		weaponization against critics of Israel and the suppression of free 
		speech under the guise of combatting anti-Semitism.
Using dozens 
		of case studies from across Europe, ELSC showed that the endorsement, 
		adoption and implementation of the IHRA in the European Union, its 
		member states and the UK, has led to widespread restrictions of the 
		right of assembly and freedom of expression. Despite strong opposition 
		and warning against its adoption by Jewish groups, experts on 
		anti-Semitism, academics and activists, the controversial definition has 
		been implemented by public and private bodies as if the IHRA is legally 
		binding. Despite qualification by advocates of the IHRA that it is 
		"non-legally binding", a definition of anti-Semitism which conflates 
		criticism of Israel with anti-Jewish racism has been placed at the 
		center of regulatory frameworks across Europe.
Some of the 
		shocking findings include the following: Advocates of Palestinian rights 
		who are targeted using the IHRA suffer a range of unjust and harmful 
		consequences, including loss of employment and reputational damage; 
		advocates of Israel routinely weaponize the IHRA to intimidate and 
		silence people defending Palestinian rights; allegations of 
		anti-Semitism that invoke the IHRA within the documented cases uncovered 
		by the ELSC found that they are overwhelmingly used to target 
		Palestinians and Jewish people opposed to Israel's brutal occupation.
		
In one of the many remarkable findings, ELSC discovered that, not 
		only was there a failure to carry out a risk assessment prior to IHRA's 
		adoption, the EU appeared to lie about the checks it had conducted. When 
		asked if the Commission had conducted a risk assessment of the 
		implications of the IHRA on fundamental rights, the EU Commissioner on 
		anti-Semitism, Katharina von Schnurbein, affirmed that an assessment of 
		the consequences had indeed been carried out. "Yes, we assessed", said 
		Schnurbein in a tweet on 23 November 2022, in response to critics who 
		accused the Commission of failing to carry out basic due diligence.
		
However, responding on 9 December 2022 to a Freedom of Information 
		request, the European Commission acknowledged it "has not conducted 'any 
		fundamental rights assessment or scrutiny (…) into the human rights 
		implications of its endorsement and/or promotion of the IHRA Working 
		Definition of Anti-Semitism." Details of the misleading information by 
		the Commissioner on anti-Semitism were covered at length by the advocacy 
		group, Law for Palestine.
Misinformation about risk assessment is 
		just one of the many examples of underhanded practices revealed by the 
		ELSC report. The European Commission also failed to address and reflect 
		the diversity of positions regarding definitions of anti-Semitism. The 
		EC not only ignored that the IHRA is highly controversial and contested, 
		it completely ignored less controversial definitions of anti-Semitism 
		such as the Jerusalem Declaration on Anti-Semitism, and the Nexus 
		Document. In contrast to the EU, the US has referenced other 
		controversial definitions of anti-Semitism.
In sharp contrast to 
		the IHRA definition, the Jerusalem Declaration states that, "Even if 
		contentious, it is not anti-Semitic, in and of itself, to compare Israel 
		with other historical cases, including settler-colonialism or 
		apartheid." The Nexus Document is equally explicit. It states that 
		"Paying disproportionate attention to Israel and treating Israel 
		differently than other countries is not prima facie proof of 
		anti-Semitism."
The US also 
		appears to favor a less politicized definition that is not centered on 
		shielding Israel and the political ideology of Zionism. 
		In detailing its plan to combat the rise of anti-Jewish racism, the 
		White House opted for the following definition: "Anti-Semitism is a 
		stereotypical and negative perception of Jews, which may be expressed as 
		hatred of Jews" said the strategy document, without mentioning Israel 
		once. "It is prejudice, bias, hostility, discrimination or violence 
		against Jews for being Jews or Jewish institutions or property for being 
		Jewish or perceived as Jewish. Anti-Semitism can manifest as a form of 
		racial, religious, national origin, and/or ethnic discrimination, bias, 
		or hatred; or, a combination thereof. However, anti-Semitism is not 
		simply a form of prejudice or hate. It is also a pernicious conspiracy 
		theory that often features myths about Jewish power and control."
		
Questions were also raised over why the EU adopted a definition that 
		had been discarded because of its threat to fundamental rights to free 
		expression. In 2004-2005, the European Monitoring Center on Racism and 
		Xenophobia (EUMC) published a "Working Definition of Anti-Semitism". 
		This definition, according to the ELSC report, featured "contemporary 
		examples of anti-Semitism", including examples relating to the State of 
		Israel. The examples were criticized due to its conflation between 
		opposition to Israel and anti-Semitism. The definition was abandoned by 
		the EUMC's successor body, the Fundamental Rights Agency (FRA), which 
		removed it from its website in 2013. In its explanation for discarding 
		the IHRA, FRA explained that it had "never been viewed as a valid 
		definition of anti-Semitism; that the Agency was not aware of any 
		official EU definition of anti-Semitism; and that the document was 
		removed in a clear-out of non-official documents."
The most 
		serious bad-faith attempt to mislead the public in order to roll out the 
		IHRA is the claim that the definition is "non-legally binding". Despite 
		promoting the IHRA as "non-legally binding", most of the EU Member 
		States have endorsed the IHRA as the authoritative instrument for 
		addressing anti-Semitism which, according to the ELSC, has given the 
		definition centered on shielding Israel and Zionism "soft law power".  
		EU statements and policies through which the IHRA is being applied, is 
		said to show that it has gained law like force and impact.
		"Hard-core advocates of the IHRA always intended it to have binding 
		legal status and force," said ELSC. "The 'non-legally binding' provision 
		was only added to secure its adoption by the IHRA Plenary in May 2016. 
		Efforts have been made since, in some Member States to introduce the 
		IHRA as a basis for legislation.
The real-life impact has been 
		devastating for critics of Israel. The IHRA has been implemented in the 
		UK, Austria and Germany by public and private bodies in ways that have 
		led to widespread infringement of the fundamental rights to freedom of 
		expression and assembly, ELSC found. Advocates of Palestinian rights, 
		who are targeted, are said to suffer a range of unjust and harmful 
		consequences, including loss of employment and reputational damage. IHRA 
		is often found to be weaponized by pro-Israel advocates to intimidate 
		and silence those advocating for Palestinian rights.
The good 
		news is that, when challenged in court, most of the allegations of 
		anti-Semitism based on the IHRA are found to be unsubstantiated and 
		thrown out. Though this is a silver lining, the adoption of the IHRA has 
		created a perverse situation which undermines democracy and the 
		principal of "innocent until proven guilty". In this toxic culture, some 
		sections of the population are having to go to court to protect basic 
		freedoms, like the right to free speech. According to the ELSC report, 
		even though most challenges to the implementation of the IHRA were 
		successful, the disciplinary procedures and litigation resulting from 
		false allegations of anti-Semitism have produced a "chilling effect" on 
		the freedom of expression and assembly.
- Nasim Ahmed is a 
		political analyst. He publishes articles on a daily basis with the 
		London-based Middle East Monitor (MEMO) focusing in particular on Israel 
		and Palestine and the Gulf region.
		
		
		Europe is shielding Israel under guise of combating anti-Semitism (palinfo.com) 
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