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Israel's Knesset Targets Leftist Organizations: Gideon
Levy's Critical Op-Ed
10 January 2011 By Stephen
Lendman
Now the latest. On January 5,
Israel's Knesset, by a 47 - 16 vote, approved forming
a parliamentary committee to investigate leftist
Israeli organizations. Among them, B'Tselem issuing a
same day press release headlined, "B'Tselem proud of
its activities and completely transparent. The
Knesset's decision is what harms Israel's
international status," adding:
"We are proud of our work to
promote human rights in the Occupied Territories,
which is conducted legally and with complete
transparency. Persecution and attempts at silencing
will not stop us. In a democracy, criticism of the
government is not only legitimate - it is essential.
B'Tselem calls on all members of the Knesset to hold
an informed debate on the information provided by
human rights organizations, instead of harassing and
smearing those who dare to question and criticize."
The statement continued, saying:
-- the inquiry's purpose isn't to
establish facts; it's to smear;
-- B'Tselem's donor list is
public information, available online;
-- its financial reports are
available at the NGO Registrar's office that just
awarded B'Tselem a Certification of Proper
Administration; and
-- if MKs care about Israel's
deteriorating international standing, "they should
stop promoting parliamentary initiatives that will
only cause it to plummet even further."
Israel's media are all over this
story. In America, major broadsheets like The New York
Times, Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, Chicago
Tribune and Wall Street Journal ignored it, showing
their usual one-sided support for Israel's worst
crimes, belligerence and extremism, including by
legislators.
Even Israel's right-wing
Jerusalem Post (JP) expressed concern. One article
headlined, "Left-wing NGOs mad Knesset to probe
foreign funding," said:
"Left-wing NGOs railed on
Wednesday evening against the" Knesset vote. "Hours
after (its debate), Government Services Minister
Michael Eitan (Likud) wrote a letter to Prime Minister
Binyamin Netanyahu complaining that Deputy Minister
Danny Ayalon had intentionally misled MKs and the
public" with information he provided as justification
for the probe.
JP's earlier July 15, 2010 Ruth
Eglash article headlined, "Legislation against
left-wing NGOs could harm Israelis," saying:
"A spate of legislation aimed at
local NGOs critical of Israel could end up limiting
freedom of speech and expression of every Israeli,"
according to Ronit Heyd, Executive Director of SHATIL,
The New Israel Fund's Empowerment and Training Center
for Social Change Organizations in Israel, saying:
"The most worrying trend over the
last year is that most people do not really understand
that our democracy is now under serious threat.
Currently it only affects a certain group in society;
human rights organizations, (but) in the future it
could affect other communities and individuals who do
not agree with the mainstream view or the views and
policies of the country's decision-makers."
At the time, besides other
extremist Knesset legislation, she referred to a new
bill passed its preliminary reading to prohibit
Israelis from backing the global BDS movement, or
receive money from supportive international
organizations.
Heyd added:
"There is a serious need for
concern when the government is trying to silence
dissenting voices, trying to silence any voice in
society that criticizes the way the government is
working."
Doing so is the essence of
despotism, the track Israel, like America, is further
along on than most people in either country
recognize.
On January 5, Haaretz writer
Jonathan Lis headlined, "Leftist groups: 'Witch hunt'
against us will destroy democracy in Israel," saying:
"Israeli left-wing organizations
decried Wednesday('s) Knesset plenum decision to
support a panel of inquiry to investigate certain
groups suspected of 'delegitimizing' the Israeli
Defense Forces."
The next step involves a Knesset
House Committee debate, then a vote on whether foreign
states, international organizations or others linked
to alleged terrorist groups provide funding.
According to Peace Now
Director-General Yariv Oppenheimer:
Knesset approval is "another step
on the path toward wiping out democracy in Israel" by
trying to persecute critics.
The New Israel Fund (NIF) said
the decision "proves how much the stature of Israeli
democracy has deteriorated - even in the house of
legislators," acting more like despots than legitimate
lawmakers. "Democracy cannot function properly without
freedom of expression, freedom to sound criticism of
the system, and active human rights groups. The
political persecution of human rights groups cause
great damage to Israel across the world, and this is
precisely what will lead to the delegitimization (of
Israel) and the representation of it as a McCarthyite
state in which a witch hunt is taking place"
lawlessly.
The Public Committee Against
Torture in Israel (PCATI) called the move
"authoritarian, immoral and illegitimate," adding that
it mourns the "slow but sure death" of Israeli
democratic values.
In total, 16 human rights groups
signed an open letter in protest, including B'Tselem,
the Association of Civil Rights in Israel (ACRI), Yesh
Din, Machsom Watch, Adalah, Mossawa Center, Ir Amin
and Hotline for Migrant Workers.
"Investigate us all, we have
nothing to hide," they said. "You are invited to read
our reports and our publications. We will be happy if
for a change you relate in a germane way to our
questions instead of trying to besmirch us. It did not
work in the past and it will not work this time."
A second Jonathan Lis article
headlined, "Knesset votes to probe Israeli groups
accused of 'delegitimizing' IDF," saying:
The approval came "after Attorney
General Yehuda Weinstein ruled in August that no
investigation should be launched against such groups."
Opposition MKs and human rights groups vocally
disapproved. As a result, the Knesset debate was
stormy, "charged, (and) filled with heckling and
interruptions." So much so that security guards were
present "to prevent physical altercations" between
opposing sides.
MK Nitzan Horowitz called the
initiative "a shame on the Knesset....The persecution
campaign against human rights and citizens rights
groups has reached a new low. (It's) a brutal act of
political persecution using a coalition majority and
Knesset funding, under the legal guise of an
investigation committee. Human rights and citizens
rights groups save the honor of Israel in the world
and maintain its character as a democratic state."
Extremist MKs want to destroy it. "All to whom Israeli
democracy is dear must oppose this committee of
persecution."
Gideon Levy's
Critical Op-Ed
In Haaretz on January 6, he
headlined, "When did it become illegal to be a leftist
in Israel," saying:
"The police, the legal system,
the Knesset, the Shin Bet, and the IDF have joined
forces with the propagandists of the right to act as
prosecutors without a trial." Coming next perhaps will
be "declar(ing) the left an illegal entity....From
then on, whoever thinks left, acts left, demonstrates
left or tolerates left will belong in jail."
Israel stands humiliated, shamed
and exposed for its extremism. As a result, a
"land-stealing settler is a Zionist; a warmongering
right-winger is a patriot; an inciting rabbi is a
spiritual leader; a racist who expels foreigners is a
loyal citizen. Only the leftist is a traitor."
What Knesset members proposed
would even make Joe McCarthy and some of today's
American right-wingers blush. Though never finding
any, McCarthy targeted alleged communists for
political advantage. America's current Congress
pursues terrorists, again for the same purpose and as
justification for Washington's imperial wars.
As a result, personal safety in
both countries is jeopardized. The common atmosphere
is charged with extremism, racism, militarism, and
opposition to anyone challenging state authority,
especially its most lawless aspects, targeting
innocent people at home while rampaging abroad against
groups or nations posing no threat to either country.
In Israel, solidifying occupation
control reigns terror against anyone pursuing freedom
and justice issues, and without pretext waging all-out
war, justifying it as self-defense against terrorism.
For Jews and Israeli Arabs, "(o)ne
single law could simplify matters: Let every Israeli
know that (it's) forbidden to believe in a just
Israel, forbidden to fight against any of its
injustices, forbidden to struggle for its soul."
It begs the question: is Israel's
democracy so anathema that even blowing its cover is
acceptable. Targeting human rights defenders proves
it.
A Final
Comment
Ramzy Clark, former US Attorney
General, now progressive anti-war activist and
International Action Center founder led a solidarity
delegation to Gaza, beginning on January 5 when he met
with Palestine's elected Prime Minister, Ismail
Haniyeh.
Their schedule also includes
meetings with human rights activists, survivors of
loved ones killed during Cast Lead, and public
meetings to address attendees. On return, they plan
"to help bring truth about Gaza to the people of the
United States," denied it by America's dominant
media.
Numerous previous articles
explained Israel's hardline anti-democratic agenda,
several accessed through the following links:
http://sjlendman.blogspot.com/2010/10/israeli-knessets-anti-democratic-agenda.html
http://sjlendman.blogspot.com/2010/11/lurching-toward-gomorrah-growing.html
http://sjlendman.blogspot.com/2010/12/israels-sham-democracy.html
Stephen Lendman lives in
Chicago and can be reached at lendmanstephen@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/.
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