The Next
Phase in the War on BDS: Why Israel Detained
Omar Barghouti
By Ramzy
Baroud
March 30,
2017 "Information
Clearing House"
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The Israeli state
has
violated international law
more than any other country, yet has rarely, if
ever, been held accountable for its crimes and
misconduct.
Israel’s successful
public relations campaigns through its
ever-willing western media partners, coupled
with the
relentless work and pressure
carried out by its powerful backers in
Washington DC, London, Paris and elsewhere, have
borne stupendous results.
For a while, it
seemed that Israel was capable of maintaining
its occupation and denying Palestinians their
rights indefinitely, while promoting itself as
“the
only democracy
in the Middle East”.
Those who dared
challenge that skewed paradigm through
resistance in Palestine were eliminated or
imprisoned; those who challenged Israel in
public arenas anywhere in the world were smeared
as “anti-Semitic”
or “self-hating
Jews”.
Things seemed to
move forward nicely for Israel. With
American-western financial and military aid, the
size, population and economy of illegal
settlements
grew at a fast rate.
Israel’s trade partners seemed oblivious to the
fact that settlement products were manufactured
or grown on illegally occupied Palestinian land.
Indeed, for a long
time the
occupation was very profitable
with very little censure or pressure.
All that Israeli
leaders needed to do was to adhere to the
script: Palestinians are terrorists, we have no
peace partner, Israel is a democracy, our wars
are all carried out in self-defence and so on.
The media repeated such misleading notions in
unison. Palestinians, oppressed, occupied and
disowned were duly demonised. Those who knew the
truth about the situation either faced the risk
of speaking out – and
suffered the consequences
– or remained silent.
But as the
saying goes: “You can fool all the people some
of the time, and some of the people all the
time, but you cannot fool all the people all the
time.”
Justice
for Palestinians, which once appeared as if a
“lost cause” received a massive resurgence
during the Second Palestinian Intifada
(Uprising) in 2000.
Growing awareness
resulting from the dedicated work of many
intellectuals, journalists and students saw the
arrival of thousands of international activists
to Palestine as part of the
International Solidarity Movement
(ISM).
Academicians, artists, students, religious
officials and ordinary people came to Palestine
and then fanned out to many parts of the globe,
utilising whatever medium available to spread a
unified message to their numerous communities.
It was that
groundwork that facilitated the success of the
Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions
movement (BDS).
Established in 2005, BDS was a call made by
Palestinian civil society organisations to
people around the world to take part in exposing
Israeli crimes and to hold accountable the
Israeli government, army and companies that
benefit from the subjugation of Palestinians.
With large
and growing networks already in place, BDS
spread quickly and took the Israeli government
by surprise.
In the last decade,
BDS proved resilient and resourceful, opening
many
new channels and platforms
for discussions on Israel, its occupation,
Palestinian rights and the moral accountability
for those who either support or ignore Israel’s
violations of human rights.
What worries Israel
most about BDS is what it calls the movement’s
attempt to “delegitimize”
it.
Since its
inception, Israel has fought for legitimacy. But
it is difficult to achieve legitimacy without
respecting the rules required for a country to
be legitimate. Israel wants to have it both
ways: sustain its profitable occupation, test
its latest weapon technology, detain and
torture, besiege and assassinate while receiving
international nods of approval.
Using
threats, intimidation, cutting off of funds, the
US and Israel have laboured to silence criticism
of Israel, America’s main ally in the Middle
East, to no avail.
As recently as days
ago, a
United Nations report
said that Israel has established an “apartheid
regime”; although the author of the report,
Rima Khalaf
resigned under pressure, the genie cannot go
back to the bottle.
Progressively, BDS has grown to become the
incubator of much of the international censure
of Israel. Its early impact included artists who
refuse to entertain in Israel, then companies
started to shut down their Israel operations,
followed by churches and universities divesting
from Israeli economy. With time, Israel has
found itself facing a unique, great challenge.
So, what
is Israel to do?
Ignoring
BDS has proved dangerous and costly. Fighting
BDS is like launching a war on civil society.
Worse, the more Israel tries to disrupt the work
of BDS, the more it legitimises the movement,
offering it new platforms for debate, media
coverage and public discussions.
In March 2016, a
large conference
brought together Israeli government officials,
leaders from the opposition, media pundits,
scholars and even entertainers from Israel, the
US and elsewhere.
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The
conference was organised by one of Israel’s
largest media companies, Yedioth Ahronoth.
It was a
rare display of unity in Israeli politics;
hundreds of influential Israelis and their
backers trying to forge a strategy aimed at
defeating BDS.
Many ideas
were put on the table.
Israeli
Interior Minister, Aryeh Deri, threatened to
revoke the residence of Omar Barghouti, BDS
co-founder and one of its most effective voices.
Intelligence and Atomic Energy Minister, Israel
Katz, called for the “targeted civil
elimination” of BDS leaders, signaling Barghouti,
in particular.
Public
Security Minister, Gilad Erdan, wanted BDS
activists to “pay the price”.
The war on
BDS had officially started, although the
groundwork for that battle was already in
motion.
The
UK government announced
earlier in the year that it was illegal to
“refuse to buy goods and services from companies
involved in arms trade, fossil fuels, tobacco
products, or Israeli settlements in the occupied
West Bank.”
That same month,
Canada passed a motion
that criminalises BDS.
A couple of months
earlier, the US Senate passed the
Anti-Semitism Awareness Act,
conflating the definition of anti-Semitism to
include criticism of Israel on US campuses, many
of which have responded positively to the call
made by BDS.
Eventually, the UK adopted a similar definition
equating between legitimate anti-Jewish hate
crimes and criticism of Israel.
More recently,
Israel passed a
law that bans individuals
accused of supporting the BDS movement from
entry to Israel. Considering that entering
Israel is the only way of gaining access to the
Occupied Palestinian Territories, the Israeli
ban aimed at severing the strong rapport that
has been connecting Palestinians to the global
solidarity movement.
The anti-BDS
campaign finally culminated in the detaining and
interrogation of Omar Barghouti himself.
On 19 March,
Israeli tax authorities detained Barghouti
and accused him of tax evasion.
By doing
so, Israel has revealed the nature of the next
stage of its fight, using smear tactics and
faulting leading activists based on charges that
are seemingly apolitical in order to distract
from the urgent political discussion at hand.
Along with other
steps, Israel feels that defeating BDS is
possible through censorship, travel bans and
intimidation tactics.
However,
Israel’s war on BDS is destined to fail, and as
a direct result of that failure, BDS will
continue to flourish.
Israel has
kept global civil society in the dark for
decades: selling it a misleading version of
reality. But in the age of digital media and
globalised activism, the old strategy will no
longer deliver.
Regardless
of what transpires in the case of Barghouti, BDS
will not weaken. It is a decentralised movement
with local, regional, national and global
networks spanning hundreds of cities across the
world.
Smearing
one individual, or a hundred, will not alter the
upward movement of BDS.Israel will soon realise
that its war on BDS, freedom of speech and
expression is unwinnable. It is a futile attempt
to muzzle a global community that now works in
unison from Cape Town, South Africa to Uppsala,
Sweden.
Dr.
Ramzy Baroud has been writing about the Middle
East for over 20 years. He is an
internationally-syndicated columnist, a media
consultant, an author of several books and the
founder of PalestineChronicle.com. His books
include “Searching Jenin”, “The Second
Palestinian Intifada” and his latest “My Father
Was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza’s Untold Story”. His
website is
www.ramzybaroud.net.
The
views expressed in this article are solely those
of the author and do not necessarily reflect the
opinions of Information Clearing House.