Palestinians Inside Israel Are Under Attack
By Jonathan
Cook
August 04,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- Was it meant as an epic parody or an insult to his
audience’s intelligence? It was hard to tell.
Israeli
prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu took to social
media to apologise for last year’s notorious
election-day comment, when he warned that “the Arabs
are coming out to vote in droves” – a reference to
the fifth of Israel’s population who are
Palestinian.
In videos
released last week in English and Hebrew, Mr
Netanyahu urged Palestinian citizens to become more
active in public life. They needed to “work in
droves, study in droves, thrive in droves,” he said.
“I am proud of the role Arabs play in Israel’s
success”.
Pointedly,
Ayman Odeh, head of the Palestinian-dominated Joint
List party, noted that 100,000 Bedouin citizens
could not watch the video because Israel denies
their communities electricity, internet connections
and all other services.
Swiftly and
predictably, the reality of life for Israel’s 1.7
million Palestinians upstaged Mr Netanyahu’s fine
words. In a radio interview, Moti Dotan, the head of
the Lower Galilee regional council, sent a message
to his Palestinian neighbours: “I don’t want them at
my [swimming] pools.” Sounding like a mayor in the
southern United States during the Jim Crow-era, he
added: “Their culture of cleanliness isn’t the same
as ours. Why is that racist?”
Dotan was
no extremist, observed the liberal newspaper
Haaretz. He represents the Israeli mainstream.
Notably, Mr Netanyahu did not distance himself from
Mr Dotan’s remarks.
At the same
time, Samar Qupty, star of a new film on
Palestinians in Israel called Junction 48, was
questioned for two hours and then strip searched at
Ben Gurion airport and denied her hand luggage
before being allowed to fly to an international film
festival.
Stories of
state-sponsored humiliation at the airport are
routine for Israel’s Palestinian academics,
journalists, actors and community leaders – in fact,
for any Palestinian active in the public sphere.
The list of
restrictions on Palestinian citizens is long and
growing. A database by the legal group Adalah shows
that some 60 Israeli laws explicitly discriminate
against non-Jews, with another 18 in the pipeline.
Two laws
passed last month intensify the repression of
dissent. An Expulsion Law is designed to empower
Israeli MPs to oust Palestinian lawmakers whose
views offend them, while a Transparency Law
stigmatises human rights groups working to protect
Palestinian rights.
Recently
leaked protocols reveal that the police have
secretly awarded themselves powers to use live fire
against Palestinian protesters in Israel, even if
they pose no danger. Yet another law threatens jail
for any Palestinian citizen who tries to dissuade
another from volunteering in the Israeli army.
Growing
numbers of Palestinian citizens, including poets and
writers, are being jailed or put under house arrest
for posts on social media the Israeli authorities
disapprove of.
Defence
minister Avigdor Lieberman recently compared the
work of the Palestinians’ national poet, Mahmoud
Darwish, to Hitler’s Mein Kampf. Darwish is banned
from school curriculums.
The culture
minister, Miri Regev, meanwhile, has tied state
funding for theatre and dance companies to their
readiness to perform in Jewish settlements,
illegally located in the occupied territories in the
West Bank.
In his
video, Mr Netanyahu said: “Jews and Arabs should
reach out to each other, get to know each other’s
families. Listen to each other.”
And yet his
officials have just halved funding for the training
of Palestinian student teachers, though not Jewish
ones, to deter the former from pursuing teaching
careers. Jewish schools face severe staff shortages,
but Israel’s educational segregation is so complete
that Palestinian citizens cannot be allowed to teach
Jewish children.
Mr
Netanyahu also extolled his government for a promise
to increase funding for Israel’s near-bankrupt
Palestinian local authorities. He forgot to mention,
however, that he had conditioned the money on the
same councils demolishing thousands of homes in
their jurisdiction. For decades Palestinians in
Israel have been routinely denied building permits.
Israel’s
Palestinian citizens were not fooled by Mr
Netanyahu’s video. But as their leaders noted, they
were not the intended audience. The video was a
cynical PR exercise aimed firmly at the Europeans,
who have been discomfited by Israel’s increasingly
repressive climate and the government’s regular
incitement against its Palestinian minority.
Mr
Netanyahu is worried about a backlash in the West,
including growing support for the boycott movement,
European efforts to revive peace talks, and
potential moves at the United Nations and
International Criminal Court.
Palestinians in Israel have known worse repression
than they currently endure. For Israel’s first two
decades they lived under military rule, locked into
their towns and villages and largely invisible
unless they agreed to do and say as they were told.
Palestinian MPs could be elected to the parliament
but only if they were first approved by Zionist
parties like Mr Netanyahu’s.
The Israeli
right sounds ever more nostalgic for that era.
Slowly the ethos of the military government for
Israel’s Palestinians is returning – and the perfume
of Mr Netanyahu’s soothing words about ending
“discord and hate” will not cover the stench.
Jonathan
Cook is a Nazareth- based journalist and winner of
the Martha Gellhorn Special Prize for Journalism
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