- An earlier article reviewed the April Mossawa Advocacy
Center for Arab Citizens in Israel report titled, "One Year for Israel's
New Government and the Arab Minority in Israel," accessed through
the following link:
-
- http://sjlendman.blogspot.com/2010/07/deteriorating-conditions-for-israeli.html
-
- This article discusses a new Association for Civil Rights
in Israel (ACRI) report titled, "Project Democracy - Fighting for
the Ground Rules" for Israeli Arabs.
-
- Israel's bogus democratic credentials are shameless and
transparent, for growing numbers of Israeli Jews, but mainly for denying
equal rights to minority Arabs, comprising 20% of the population. ACRI
explained, saying:
-
- "One of the most important principles in a democracy
is to protect the minority against....tyranny. A democratic state is by
nature pluralistic and respectful of diversity among its citizens, and
enables each group within its population that so wishes to maintain all
the components of its own identity, including its heritage, culture, and
national identity."
-
- Israel governs mirror opposite, disdaining anyone not
Jewish, largely denying them any rights, while increasing harsh levels
of persecution, especially against unwanted Arabs. As a result, today's
reality is lawless discrimination, at times erupting in violence, injuries
and deaths.
-
- Arab citizens are increasingly persecuted because Israel
won't "hesitate to employ lethal violence against" them on any
pretext or none whatever. With no accountability or prosecutions, Muslims
are unsafe, knowing their government is the enemy, not protector of their
rights.
-
- At the start of the second Intifada, the events of October
2000 shocked many by the murder of 13 Arabs, 12 citizens and one Occupied
Territories resident. No prosecutions followed, a chilling reality that
persists. As a result, fear and mistrust grow, instead of adopting the
Or Commission's recommendations to diffuse them.
-
- Established to investigate the October 2000 incidents,
it gave Israel "a historic opportunity to redefine its attitude"
to its Arab minority. Ten years later, nothing's changed. In fact, conditions
are worse. "(I)n particular, we have seen an unprecedented deterioration
in the attitude of the state toward (its) Arab citizens," more than
ever since Israel's War of Independence treated them like a fifth column,
an enemy to be routed and removed. Today that same attitude prevails.
-
- Besides attacks on personal freedoms, authorities propose
discriminatory laws, make racist statements publicly, exert force lawlessly,
and most recently want Arabs to declare loyalty to "a Zionist, Jewish
and democratic state," tarnishing or even made to renounce their own
heritage in the process.
-
- Moreover, since October 2000, "dozens of Arab citizens
have been killed by the security forces." Rarely is anyone held accountable,
at most offenders given "light penalties that do not reflect the gravity"
of their crimes.
-
- Democracies afford equal rights and protections to all
its citizens, none excluded for any reason, the true test shown by how
minorities are treated. Instead, since inception, Israeli Arabs "have
faced systematic and institutionalized discrimination" and repression.
-
- Importantly, as recognized by the Or Commission, not
only do Arab citizens constitute a large minority, they represent an indigenous
people with longstanding roots before Israel's establishment. As distinct
from immigrants, they "bear a stronger affinity" to their historic
homeland, international law recognizing their right to equality in all
respects.
-
- Yet an extremist Knesset demands "No citizenship
without (pledged) loyalty," what no real democracy requires or enacts
repressive measures against any of its citizens. Yet hardline Israelis
believe Arab rights depend "on (the) condition that they abandon their
national identity, culture, language, and historical heritage, and declare
their 'loyalty' to values they do not share."
-
- No "loyalty," no rights, they believe, including
examples reflecting tyranny, not democracy, such as denying:
-
- -- free expression;
-
- -- nonviolent protests; and
-
- -- participation in social and political life.
-
- An example of the latter came from the early 2009 Central
Election Committee (CEC) decision to disqualify two Arab parties (Balad
and the United Arab List) from standing for Knesset elections. Although
Israel's Supreme Court overturned the action, CEC's conduct "constituted
an attack not only on the Arab minority itself, but also on the democratic
system," exposing its sham nature.
-
- Numerous other examples also highlight it, including
events after the May Gaza Flotilla attack, unleashing "a tidal wave
of attacks and challenges to the Arab Members of the Knesset."
-
- A proposed "Zuabi Law" was introduced, connected
to MK Hanin Zuabi's participation. It stipulated that by a special 80 MK
majority, any Knesset member could be expelled for having "committed
incitement and negated the existence of the State of Israel as a Jewish
and democratic state." So far, it's not enacted, but indicates the
fragility of personal freedom in Israel, fast eroding and heading for tyranny.
-
- This and other examples reflect "the unprecedented
deterioration in the current Knesset in all aspects relating to respect
for the democratic process." Its most fundamental precept protects
the right to dissent, what Howard Zinn called the highest form of patriotism.
-
- It also prohibits state-sponsored violence, what Israel
uses against its Arab minority, including Bedouin citizens, forcefully
removed from their lands with no right to contest. Worse still is cold-blodded
murder with no accountability except for meaningless hand slaps.
-
- As a result, the attitude of authorities becomes "a
role model for many members of the (Jewish) public. The disrespect (and
lawlessness) shown by (MKs);" the hostile approach of security force
harshness; "the state's denial of the rights of the Arab minority,
its preference for (force) over dialogue, and its treatment of Arab citizens"
like enemies influences public attitudes and behavior overall.
-
- Surveys and other expressions, in fact, confirm an "atmosphere
of hostility, hatred, and racism." Countless examples include:
-
- -- in 2009, three Misgav district communities (Manof,
Yuvalim and Mitzpe) required candidates for membership to declare loyalty
to the "Zionist vision" and Israel as a Jewish, democratic state;
-
- -- in July 2010, a proposed law passed its First Reading
to let communities make these demands;
-
- -- discriminatory racism is common in workplaces, at
times prohibiting Arabic being used; in other cases excluding non-Jews;
"out of 150,000 employees in the industry in Israel, only some 500
(0.33 percent) are Arabs; and
-
- -- overall treating Arab citizens like enemies, at times
violently.
-
- Since inception, government decisions, court rulings,
and official documents confirm a culture of discrimination against anyone
not Jewish, especially Muslims. The Or Commission, in fact, found that:
-
- "government attention to the Arab sector has largely
been characterized by neglect and discrimination." Moreover, "the
establishment has not shown sufficient sensitivity to the needs of the
Arab sector, and has not taken adequate action to allocate state resources
in an egalitarian manner, including to this sector."
-
- The Commission recommended genuine equality for Israeli
Arabs, saying:
-
- "The state should initiate, develop, and operate
programs to close gaps, with an emphasis on the fields of budgets, in all
areas relating to education, housing, industrial development, employment,
and services."
-
- Nonetheless, discriminatory gaps widened in areas of
education, land, housing, construction, employment, healthcare, politics,
civil liberties, and personal safety. Israel institutionalized second-class
citizenry for everyone not Jewish, mainly Muslims. ACRI thus concluded,
saying:
-
- "This reality is morally intolerable and, ultimately,
it threatens not 'merely' " Israel's 20% minority, "but all of
us....A state that restricts" basic rights; allocates them unfairly;
"discriminates against citizens (by misallocation) of resources, infrastrutures,
and education; and that labels certain citizens as enemies, is a state"
with no democratic legitimacy whatever, heading rapidly toward despotism.
-
- A Final Comment
-
- Israel's huge political prisoner population belies any
democratic pretense, Ahmad Sa'adat a prominent prisoner of conscience,
discussed in an earlier article, accessed through the following link:
-
- http://sjlendman.blogspot.com/2010/07/ahmad-saadat-palestinian-prisoner-of.html
-
- On December 8, 2008, he was sentenced to 30 years imprisonment,
Israel's harshest political punishment, illegal under international law.
-
- An early October 2010 article updated his status, accessed
in a final comment through the following link:
-
- http://sjlendman.blogspot.com/2010/10/israels-persecution-of-ameer-makhoul.html
-
- It mentioned an October 4 International Campaign for
the Release of Kidnapped Palestinian Legislators press release, saying
Sa'adat spent over "500 days in solitary confinement under the most
inhumane conditions...."
-
- On October 21, Israel sentenced him to six additional
months of isolation until April 21, 2011, the web site freeahmadsaadat.org
calling it:
-
- "another outrage and attack upon the humanity of
Palestinian prisoners and the Palestinian people. (His) ongoing and repeated
isolation (will) now stretch to over two years" to silence him on
grounds of "security."
-
- In fact, it's to crush his human rights mission and perhaps
kill him by repression and neglect. The campaign to free him "calls
upon all to confront this outrage," adding that "Isolation will
not silence" him, other Palestinian political prisoners, or their
cause.
-
- Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago and can be reached atlendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.
Also visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com and listen to cutting-edge
discussions with distinguished guests on the Progressive Radio News Hour
on the Progressive Radio Network Thursdays at 10AM US Central time and
Saturdays and Sundays at noon. All programs are archived for easy listening.
-
- http://www.progressiveradionetwork.com/the-progressive-news-hour/.
|