|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Middle
East
UN rapporteur says Israels occupation of Palestine resembles
apartheid
By Jean Shaoul
14 March 2007
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
The one accusation against Israel guaranteed to provoke a furious
reaction is that it has subjected the Palestinians living in the
territories illegally occupied for nearly 40 years to a regime
akin to apartheid South Africa.
Former US president Jimmy Carter was recently vilified as an
anti-Semite and denounced for the title of his book, Palestine:
Peace not Apartheid, with its comparison between the occupation
of the West Bank and Gaza Strip and the racist regime in South
Africa, which denied the majority black population their political
and human rights.
Of some significance, therefore, is the publication of a United
Nations report which demonstrates in legal terms that the apartheid
comparison is entirely legitimate.
John Dugard, the UNs special rapporteur for human rights
in the occupied Palestinian territories since 2001, says that
Israels laws and practices in the (Palestinian territories)
certainly resemble aspects of apartheid.
He knows what he is talking about. A distinguished South African
law professor, who campaigned against apartheid in the 1980s,
he holds the chair of public international law at Leiden University
in the Netherlands. His 24-page report, written in response to
the Human Rights Council, General Assembly resolution 60/251 of
March 15, 2006, will be presented later this month at the 47-nation
rights councils first session of the year. It provides a
detailed description and legal assessment of the terrible situation
in the Palestinian territories.
Israel has remained in control of Gazas air, sea and
external borders, which have been closed for long periods since
its so-called withdrawal from Gaza. To all intents and purposes,
Gaza became a sealed off, imprisoned and occupied territory,
Dugard says, following the economic sanctions imposed by Israel
and the West after the election of a Hamas-led government in January
2006. It is a controlled strangulation that apparently falls
within the generous limits of international toleration.
The economic siege of Gaza is a form of collective punishment
in violation of the Fourth Geneva Convention. The siege
and the consequent unemployment meant that more than 80 percent
of the population lives below the official poverty line, with
1.1 million of the 1.4 million inhabitants receiving food assistance.
The Wall surrounding the West Bank and East Jerusalem, which
the International Court of Justice (ICJ) determined was illegal
in 2004, serves to imprison the Palestinians and restrict their
freedom of movement. It cuts them off from their livelihoods,
farms, families and basic services such as schools and healthcare,
under conditions where permits to travel beyond the Wall are almost
impossible to obtain.
While the Israeli government had originally argued that the
Walls sole purpose was to provide a defence against infiltration
into Israel by suicide bombers, a claim which the ICJ rejected,
it has now admitted that the Wall is designed to fulfill a political
as well as a security purpose: that of including the West Bank
settlements within the Wall. In other words, the function of the
Wall was to acquire land surrounding the settlements and annex
the settlements to Israel. Fully 76 percent of the West Bank settlers
are enclosed within the Wall.
Dugard calls the 75km Wall being built around East Jerusalem
an instrument of social engineering designed to achieve
the Judaization of Jerusalem by reducing the number of Palestinians
in the city.
The Palestinians in East Jerusalem have been put in an impossible
situation. If Palestinians on the West side of the Wall retain
their Jerusalem identity documents they will find it difficult
to travel to the West Bank, while if they chose to live in the
West Bank to be near their work they will lose their Jerusalem
residency.
Illegal under article 49 of the Fourth Geneva Convention, the
Jewish settlements have continued to grow either as a result of
government approval for new settlements, the expansion of existing
settlements by stealth or ostensibly illegallyin contravention
of Israeli laws that are not really enforcedon land that
belongs to the Palestinians. According to a study published last
October by Peace Now, 40 percent of the land held by Israeli settlements
in the West Bank is privately owned by Palestinians.
Israels restrictions on the Palestinians rights
of travel, residency and house construction and the increasing
number of settlements make clear that it intends to retain control
of the Jordan Valley, despite having abandoned its earlier plans
to extend the wall along the river Jordan.
As of December 2006, there were more than 500 checkpoints that
serve to divide the West Bank into four distinct areas with further
enclaves within them. Together with the specially constructed
highways reserved for Israeli use these have created 10 small
cantons similar to the old South African Bantustans.
While the settlers can travel at speed to their destinations,
the Palestinians face journeys of interminable length, if they
can be completed at all. The daily suffering and humiliation generated
by these arrangements is the sharpest reminder of a similar system
designed to restrict the free movements of blacks in apartheid
South Africathe hated pass laws.
Dugard states, It has become abundantly clear that the
wall and checkpoints are principally aimed at advancing the safety,
convenience and comfort of [Israels 430,000] settlers
who live in the West Bank. He asks, Can it seriously be
denied that the purpose of such action is to establish and maintain
domination by one racial groupJewsover another racial
groupPalestiniansand systematically oppress them?
He adds, Israel denies that this is its intention or
purpose. But such an intention or purpose may be inferred from
the actions described in this report.
Dugard argues that Israels laws and practices probably
fall within the 1973 International Convention on the Suppression
and Punishment of the Crime of Apartheid and calls for serious
consideration to be given to bringing Israels occupation
of Palestine before the International Court of Justice for another
advisory opinion. If upheld, such a determination would fuel demands
for economic sanctions to be imposed against Israel, just as they
were against South Africa.
Dugard is also scathing about the role of the international
community and says Israel is not solely to blame for the crisis
in the occupied Palestinian territories.
The Palestinian people have been subjected to economic
sanctionsthe first time an occupied people have been so
treated. This is difficult to understand. Israel is in violation
of major (UN) Security Council and General Assembly resolutions
dealing with unlawful territorial change and the violation of
human rights and has failed to implement the 2004 advisory opinion
of the International Court of Justice, yet it escapes the imposition
of sanctions.
Instead, the Palestinian people, rather than the Palestinian
Authority, have been subjected to possibly the most rigorous form
of international sanctions imposed in modern times.
Israel boasts of being the only democracy that operates under
the rule of law in the Middle East and has abolished the death
penalty. But more than 650,000 Palestinians have been jailed since
1967; many have been subject to mistreatment, held in Israeli
prisons rather than in the occupied territories, and denied visits
from their families.
More than 700 Palestinians are currently held in administrative
detention without trial, and more than 500 Palestinians have been
killed, including 168 innocent civilians via extrajudicial killings
or targeted assassinations. Israels High Court ruling last
December sanctioned targeted assassinations in some circumstances.
Should Israel fail to curb the IDF, then, as Dugard says, Israel
will continue to be seen as an abolitionist society
that employs the death penalty on a wide scale through the back
door of targeted assassinations.
Dugard states that the Palestine is the only instance of a
developing country denied the right of self determination and
oppressed by a Western-affiliated state. He warns of the dangers
if the West fails to address the Palestinian question, saying
that this failure will erode the ability of developed countries
to be the arbiter of democratic values and the defence of human
rights.
Such claims of democratic guardianship made for the imperialist
powers have already been shown to be a political fraud, not only
by the treatment of the Palestinians but also by the illegal war
and occupation of Iraq.
Needless to say, Israel and the United States vehemently rejected
the charge of apartheid, dismissing this and other reports by
Dugard as one-sided.
Dugard himself counters such charges by noting that he was
appointed to investigate only violations by the Israelis and his
remit did not include investigating any violation of human rights
against Palestinians by the Palestinian Authority. He nevertheless
denounces the firing of homemade rockets by the Palestinians in
Gaza into civilian areas in Israel, which have killed two Israelis
and injured more than 30, as a war crime that cannot be
condoned. Nevertheless, he continues, Israels
response has been grossly disproportionate and indiscriminate
and resulted in the commission of multiple war crimes and
the firing of Qassem rockets cannot justify the drastic
punishment of a whole people in the way that Israel has done.
The Kadima-Labour coalition government has not only rejected
the apartheid accusation, it has conducted a hysterical campaign
charging those who make it with being anti-Semites. As well as
Carter, leading bourgeois figures who have incurred Israels
wrath include Nobel Peace Prize laureate Desmond Tutu, who heads
South Africas Truth and Reconciliation Commission.
These critics restrict the apartheid comparison to the occupied
territories, but the analogy is to some degree applicable to non-Jewish
citizens within Israel itselfand, one might add, to Israels
treatment of its Jewish citizens of Middle Eastern and North African
origin.
The State of Israel, as its courts have determined, is not
the state of its citizens. Rather, it is the sovereign State
of the Jewish people, where the Jewish people consists
not only of those residing in Israel but also the Jews of the
Diaspora. Thus, there is no Israeli nation apart from
the Jewish people.
Yet, one sixth of the citizens of this state are not Jews.
Furthermore, while the Right of Return entitles any Jew to return
to live in Israel, such rights are denied to the indigenous Arab
population, many of whom were either driven out or fled when war
broke out in 1948 over the partition of Palestine and the establishment
of the Zionist State.
Those that remained, the Arab Israelis, were subject at first
to military laws put in place by the British and to this day suffer
legal, political, economic and social discrimination at the hands
of Zionist state. Last January, the Arab Center for Alternative
Planning reported that GDP per capita amongst Israeli Jews was
three times that of Arab Israelis.
See Also:
New York Times promotes escape
to Israel
[10 March 2007]
Jimmy Carters book on
Israel and Palestine touches a raw Zionist nerve
[5 February 2007]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |