Bi-Weekly Brief for February 14, 2022

Bi-Weekly Brief for February 14, 2022

A one page digest of Israel’s ongoing dispossession of Palestinian land and livelihoods, and Palestinian resistance. 

Powerful Amnesty report on Israeli apartheid called ‘absurd’ by US and ‘antisemitic’ by Israel 

On Feb. 1, after a 4-year study, Amnesty International issued a 278-page report, Israel’s Apartheid against Palestinians: Cruel System of Domination and Crime against Humanity, along with a curriculumvideo and toolkit.  The report states that since its establishment in 1948 Israel has sought to dominate and control Palestinians and that it maintains an apartheid regime in the entirety of the territory between the Mediterranean Sea and Jordan River in violation of international law.  

Heavily criticized by IsraelUS officials, and US mainstream Jewish groups, the report was completely ignored by the New York Times and debunked by the Wall Street Journal, while Newsweek and MSNBC had pieces defending it.  Michael Benyair, a former Israeli Attorney General,  in a Feb. 12 op ed agreed that Israel is an apartheid regime and “it is time for the international community to recognize this reality as well.” But Tom Nides, the new US Ambassador to Israel who had wasted no time in calling the report ‘absurd,’ told the Times of Israel on Feb. 9 that applying the word apartheid to Israel is ‘appalling.’ He said he is ‘100% a Zionist’ who wants to keep alive ‘the vision of two states.’  He claimed his decision to forego visiting settlements is not intended to signal that they are illegitimate, but rather to avoid doing things ‘that agitate people.’  US support for Israel, he said, is strongly bipartisan and ‘rock-solid.’

 

Army unit that killed elderly Palestinian-American terrorizes the West Bank on behalf of settlers

The US has said it is ‘not satisfied’ with the Israeli army’s decision to reprimand the commander and suspend two officers of the Netzah Yehuda army unit involved in the death of an elderly Palestinian-American, Omar Abdalmajeed As’ad.  A Feb. 9 Haaretz piece describes the violence inflicted on Palestinians by the Netzah Yehuda brigade ‘just for laughs’ and the army’s reluctance to dissolve it as this would be “a declaration of war for the settler leadership.  Their view on the ground is that this battalion belongs to them, that it’s a force that works for the settlement enterprise.” Soldiers and/or settlers in Feb. have destroyed Palestinian homescisternswater tanks and pipelinesbulldozed farmlandsuprooted olive trees, attacked West Bank farmers and protestors, and repeatedly fired on farmers and fishermen in Gaza. The army also carried out an extra-judicial killing of 3 Palestinians in Nablus who were allegedly on a ‘wanted’ list and killed a 17-year-old during a protest near Jenin. 

 

Bitterly contested settler outpost of Evyatar is on its way to ‘legalization’ 

Early in February, outgoing Israeli Attorney General Avichai Mendelblit issued an opinion outlining a procedure for legalizing the settler outpost of Evyatar, which was erected on privately-owned Palestinian land near the village of Beita in May 2021.  Since then, Beita’s residents have held weekly protests during which 9 Palestinians have been killed and more than 5,300 injured. There are some 140 settler outpostsestablished without official permission throughout the West Bank, some of which are described by Patrick Kingsley in a rare New York Times  piece about settler violence.

 

Water Fact

Israel’s new 20-foot-high, 40-mile-long wall that penetrates deep into the ground as it encircles the Gaza Strip is severely impacting wildlife, biodiversity and water.  Building the wall has further polluted Gaza’s depleted water supply and undermined the stability of the coastal aquifer.  By stopping the flow of water towards the Strip, the wall prevents the water-starved territory from benefiting from rainfall outside its borders.  In its Apartheid report Amnesty International states: “Israel’s blockade of the Gaza Strip and other discriminatory policies have created a water and sanitation crisis characterized by an acute shortage of potable water, reduced ability to filter water and water pollution.  The routine power cuts and lack of equipment and resources to treat sewage, wastewater and solid waste puts the population of Gaza at increased risks of waterborne diseases and other health problems in the context of a collapsing health sector” (p.195).

 

Compiled by The Alliance for Water Justice in Palestine

Banner Design by Paul Normandia of Red Sun Press

Good News

“Tens of thousands of donated books have started to arrive at the new location of a Gaza bookshop that was destroyed by Israeli air strikes last year, and owner Samir Mansour now plans to reopen its doors next month. The two-storey Samir Mansour bookshop, which was reduced to rubble last May, had been founded by the Palestinian Mansour 22 years ago and was a beloved part of the local community. Its destruction during the 11-day conflict, which killed more than 250 people in Gaza and 13 in Israel, prompted a campaign that raised $250,000 (£187,000) to help rebuild it, plus donations of 150,000 books.”

More than wonderful’ … Gaza bookshop to reopen after unexpectedly successful global campaign

The ruins of the Samir Mansour bookshop in May 2021. Photograph: Marcus Yam/Los Angeles Times/Getty Images

AWJP & Friends Stand Out for Palestine

At its Feb. 10 Stand Out in Central Square in Cambridge the Alliance for Water Justice in Palestine denounced Israel's Apartheid practices, described in great detail by Amnesty International's recent report, 'Israel's Apartheid Against Palestinians.' Do US taxpayers want to give $3.8 billion every year - and possibly another $1 billion this year to replenish Israel's Iron Dome system - to support Israel's Apartheid system? Nearly $130 million comes from MA taxpayers every year - those are funds that are urgently needed at home!

Here is one participant’s experience:

Thursday, 2/10/22, the passersby in Central Square, Cambridge were greeted with a stand-out by activists for justice in Palestine.  In spite of the strong winds, we were glad to be back on the street with our banners, posters and flyers. Our energy and spirits were high.

Many people stopped to find out what we were all about, some just took the flyers but there were some good conversations as well.

Consequences of the Apartheid Wall

"Water is another problem the wall has worsened. “The wall, extending above and below the surface of the ground, will prevent the flow of water toward the enclave, depriving it of an important source of water estimated at millions of cubic meters,” said Mazen al-Banna, the director general of the Water Resources Unit at the Water and Environment Quality Authority in Gaza. 'The wall will prevent us from benefiting from any rainfall outside the borders of the Gaza Strip, thus lowering the groundwater level.'

The wall is also polluting the existing groundwater, Banna said, because 'the machines used to build it disturbed the soil and its cohesion, which allows pollutants on the surface to penetrate the groundwater. This act by Israel is contrary to international law that sets standards for managing transboundary shared water resources.' ” 

Israeli wall harms wildlife in Gaza

A Palestinian man sits inside his car at a petrol station next to the Israeli wall on May 17, 2021 in Bethlehem, West Bank. - Samar Hazboun/Getty Images