New Zealand Month – time for straight talking

 

New Zealand’s Foreign Affairs Minister Murray McCully’s meetings with Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu and the planned series of top-level visits, described by Israel’s Foreign Ministry as “New Zealand Month”, are an opportunity for this country to show the world where it stands in relation to human rights and international law.

Recent questions posed by the New Zealand Palestine Human Rights Campaign (PHRC) in a recent Open Letter to Murray McCully http://palestine.org.nz/phrc/index.ph raise urgent and long-neglected issues. While our Foreign Minister wholeheartedly supports Israel’s membership of the OECD, Israel is encouraged to continue stifling the Palestinian economy through belligerent military occupation. The Palestinian people have no control over their borders, air space, sea or access to the wider global economy. Israel severely restricts access by Palestinian fishing boats to essential fishing grounds, often at the expense of fishermen’s livelihoods, vessels and even life and limb. In addition, Israel uses its military might to take a grossly disproportionate amount of Palestine’s water, to the detriment of Palestinian agriculture and health. For 44 years now the US and the UK, and, by association, New Zealand, have stood by Israel and allowed this exploitation to continue while pressuring the victims to negotiate with their oppressor.

Although the Gaza Strip and the West Bank are recognised under international law as a single territorial unit, Israel continues to prevent the movement of Palestinians between the two areas. As the UN Office for the Co-ordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) reports, Israel maintains an average of 520 permanent checkpoints, road obstacles and other restrictions besides imposing hundreds of mobile checkpoints, all inside Palestinian territory. Furthermore, Israel’s illegal settlements and annexation Wall, with its ethnically discriminatory Israeli-only roads, place intolerable costs upon the movement of Palestinian goods, workers and students.

Our Foreign Affairs Minister is unable to show any softening of Israel’s relentless suppression of Palestinian human rights, and aspirations through decades of what he likes to call “dialogue” with Israel. The PHRC invites Mr McCully, once again, to answer the questions posed in our Open Letter to him dated 30 April 2012. Consideration of these questions might help him concentrate his mind on the vital issues that confront, not only the Palestinian people but also the wider world community. “New Zealand Month” should be used to demonstrate to Israel that dialogue no longer means cosy chats and complicity but plain speaking and the demand that Israel end its gross violations of international law.

River to Sea Uprooted Palestinian  
The views expressed in this article are the sole responsibility of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of this Blog!
by Leslie Bravery
Friday, May 11th, 2012

The Mossad hit and Israel’s path of self-destruction

As Gilad Atzmon wrote, The Tide Has Changed. According to  Abu Nimah Israel “is on a path of self-destruction. The great fear is how much more harm it will do to others on the way.”  meanwhile Bradly Burston envy the people who hate Israel

The Mossad hit and Israel’s path of self-destruction
Hasan Abu Nimah, The Electronic Intifada, 25 February 2010

Some of the agents suspected of involvement in the assassination of Mahmoud al-Mabhouh in Dubai. (Dubai Police)
The assassination of Mahmoud al-Mabhouh, a Hamas official in Dubai, almost certainly by a death squad dispatched by Israel’s Mossad, is by no means the first such aggression against the sovereignty of another state. While Israel has literally gotten away with murder thousands of times, was this one killing too far?

Israel has a long, bloody history of murder, sabotage and outright terrorism all over Europe, in Beirut, Tunis, Amman, Damascus and now Dubai. And that is just what we know about. All of this is allegedly in “self-defense” against “terrorism” even though the Zionist movement in Palestine invented the sort of modern terrorism for which the Middle East became known. It started with countless Zionist bomb attacks on Palestinian civilians from the 1930s, often in markets and cafes, the bombing of the King David and Semiramis hotels in Jerusalem in the 1940s claiming dozens of innocent lives, and the murder of UN mediator Count Folke Bernadotte. These crimes, on top of the long history of massacres of Palestinians, Lebanese and other Arabs over the past six decades, were all worn as badges of honor by Zionist leaders including Menachem Begin and Yitzhak Shamir who later became prime ministers.

Current Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who according to reports personally approved the killing of al-Mabhouh, must have thought it would be a great achievement celebrated by the “civilized” world that is engaged still in a “war on terror.” The so-called “international community,” after all, has helped Israel isolate Hamas and labels it a “terrorist” organization despite Hamas’ diplomatic overtures, repeated offers of truces and ceasefires, and the mandate it won at the ballot box.
Unfortunately it is not working out that way this time. Counting on the usual international complicity was not that unrealistic on Israel’s part. Indeed there has been no clear condemnation of the act of extrajudicial execution of al-Mabhouh, in a hotel room, apparently by electrocution and smothering with a pillow according to The Daily Mail (UK). What has been greeted with indignation is the forging of passports and identity theft.

Meeting in Brussels, EU foreign ministers strongly condemned the abuse of passports, but did not have the courage to publicly name Israel even though several governments including the UK and Ireland had already summoned their Israeli ambassadors. The British and Irish foreign ministers even directly confronted their Israeli counterpart Avigdor Lieberman, who was also in Brussels.
Mossad, the Israeli intelligence and international murder agency, has a long history of using fake and stolen passports of countries including Canada, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, Ireland and Germany. It notoriously used fake Canadian passports during the attempted murder of Hamas leader Khaled Meshal in Amman in 1997. Countries view their passports much like their currencies — their credibility and value must be defended. The lives of their citizens may well depend on it; an Irish, British or German citizen has to be able to travel all over the world without fear that he or she will be suspected of being a Mossad assassin.
Several years ago, New Zealand, a country of three million people, broke off diplomatic relations with Israel over the use of its passports by Mossad. But apart from that example, most countries have been too timid to confront Israel. That Lieberman refused to provide any additional information or even acknowledge an Israeli role in the Dubai attack when he met with the European foreign ministers is a sign that Israel still feels safe displaying arrogance and lawlessness, because it knows the “international community” has never dared to hold it accountable.
This time, however, Israeli arrogance may have exceeded the limits of what has been tolerated so far, and turned what was supposed to be an “heroic” act into a scandal with far-reaching consequences. There are some specific and general factors that contribute to that. First, the crime was committed on the territory of a moderate Arab country whose support for peace with Israel has been practically translated into unofficial bilateral relations. A high-level Israeli delegation had been in the country only days before the Mossad hit squad arrived. Showing so much contempt for a leading moderate Arab state gives a very bad example for any other state that might consider softening its position toward Israel (as the United States had been demanding as “confidence-building measures” for the “peace process”).

A second factor is that Israel mostly used stolen identities of living people, whose very public shock and fear at waking up to find their names splashed over the newspapers and linked to a murder, could not easily be hidden.

A third factor is that the Israeli adventure in Dubai carries the traits of just the kind of terrorist act the world has been mobilizing to fight. Improvements in passport security were introduced in recent years to stop terrorism, but here is a country violating and sabotaging these security measures in order to commit murder.

We cannot assume that the assassination in Dubai will be the straw that breaks the back of Israeli immunity and impunity, but we can be sure that the general erosion of Israel’s standing as a result, particularly of its aggressive recent wars on Lebanon and Gaza, means that what was tolerated by the world more easily five or ten years ago, is less tolerated now. Global public disgust at Israeli actions has reached levels that may require governments who normally prefer complicity and silence to act.

And when there was a “peace process,” Israel’s crimes particularly against Palestinians were ignored in the interests of not damaging relations or slowing momentum toward the hoped-for successful conclusion. But no one today — except the most naive or delusional — believes that there is any peace process. Despite Israel’s efforts to blame the Palestinians, only the most pro-Israel extremists deny that Israel’s aggressive colonization in Jerusalem and the West Bank, as well as the siege on Gaza, is what killed any prospect of a negotiated solution for the foreseeable future.

Consider that just days before the passport affair broke out, Israel was once again pressuring the UK to change its laws to protect Israeli officials from arrest for war crimes should they visit London.

Although British officials had publicly expressed shameful enthusiasm to tailor UK law to meet Israeli needs, they may now face real public opposition if they attempt to change it. What interest does the UK have to protect the likes of Tzipi Livni from arrest if the facts and evidence make it necessary?

The truth is that as it becomes desperate, Israel is turning ever more wild and dangerous, not only for its neighbors but for world peace, security and prosperity.

Without constant pressure from the Israel lobby, there may have been no invasion of Iraq. Today, it is Israel and its apologists who are constantly inciting confrontation and war against Iran when most of this region wants peace and good relations.

Even if the countries harmed by Israel’s latest brazen act do not hold it properly and adequately accountable — as they must and should — it appears that it is on a path of self-destruction. The great fear is how much more harm it will do to others on the way.

Hasan Abu Nimah is the former permanent representative of Jordan at the United Nations. This essay first appeared in The Jordan Times and is republished with the author’s permission.

River to Sea
 Uprooted Palestinian

NEW ZEALAND: More arrested in protests against Israeli tennis player Shahar Peer

Australians For Palestine

January 8, 2010
TVNZ – 8 January 2010
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Two more people protesting against Israeli tennis player Shahar Peer’s presence at the ASB Classic have been arrested.

It follows the arrest of five protesters at the venue on Thursday.
The group of protesters say they are targeting Peer because there is an international consensus that the best way to challenge Israel’s “brutal oppression of Palestinians” is through an international boycott, disinvestment and sanctions campaign.
So far, the protests have had no effect on Peer’s performance, with her advancing to the tournament semi-finals.

An account of the protest by photographer and demonstrator John Darroch

Today five pro Palestine protesters were arrested outside the New Zealand Tennis Open, heres my account of what happened.
The protest had been going for about ten minutes with protesters holding placards, chanting and using a megaphone when police approached a protester. Whilst I could not hear exactly what they told the protester the general gist seemed to be that the protester should stop using his megaphone. A few minutes later they approached a second protester who had been using a microphone and told her something similar.

A few minutes later I got on a megaphone and explained to the police that my understanding was that two recent court decisions protected our rights to protest loudly including using a megaphone in a public place. I talked about Rees versus Police where a friend (Rochelle) had been charged with disorderly conduct for using a megaphone in the CBD and had on appeal won a clear victory. I also made reference to the recent Brooker case which went all the way to the supreme court. I invited the sergeant in charge of the protest to come over and explain why using a megaphone was disorderly and otherwise based on my understanding of the law I would continue to use the megaphone. All this was clearly audible to the cops who started smiling and laughing as I continued my explanation. On two other occasions I attempted to talk to the senior officer asking him to explain why using a megaphone as part of a protest action was illegal.

About five minutes later groups of officers began walking up and almost at random picking off protesters. The arrests were brutal, no warning was given, no one was asked to stop making noise. Instead officers grabbed people and marched them off. John Minto was the first person to be arrested.
After taking photos of this I decided to begin using the one remaining megaphone. To emphasis my point I decided to climb a tree with my megaphone. Once up the tree I began chanting “freedom for Palestine” and “Blood, Blood, Blood on your hands” I did so to express my anger at the current atrocities occurring in Palestine. I was also calling for a boycott of high profile Israeli figures as a way to put pressure on Israel. An officer got a boost up and after struggling for a minute or two made it to the branch I was on. After being asked to come down I passed my megaphone down and jumped down. At no stage was I asked to stop making noise, I was not told to stop using my megaphone, I was only asked to come down “For your own safety”.

Once down I was arrested and I went limp, the officers dragged me off to a waiting paddy wagon where I began the several hour long arrest process.

To be clear what the police did today was completely illegal, we have every right to protest loudly including using megaphones. This may be annoying and it may be disruptive, that is the point of protest actions. What happened today was the police getting annoyed and then making arrests until they got what they wanted. The right to protest is being eroded steadily. It is standard practice for police to use the power of arrest to shut a demonstration down.

The arrested protesters are facing charges of disorderly behaviour, three people are also facing charges of obstruction, and one with assaulting a police officer. The women charged with assault was herself assaulted and was left bleeding as a result of the way she was treated.
To finish this off lets refer to the most relevant section of Rees vs Police which No Right Turn dug up

It is not correct to say that in exercising the right to protest, a citizen has the duty not to annoy. It is permissible, within limits, for a citizen to annoy others while protesting. It is not enough that the conduct is irritating or ill mannered or in bad taste. Protestors often set out to cause irritation, to attract attention to their message. That is not in itself illegitimate, or a breach of the criminal law. There is a line beyond which protestors cannot cross without offending the criminal law, and that line involves annoyance beyond that which is normal and acceptable to New Zealanders. Loud protests through a megaphone are not uncommon in New Zealand streets. It is a method of protest that is often used. It is not a breach of our criminal law in itself to use such a method of protest. It is not a breach of our criminal law to annoy others while doing so.
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River to Sea
 Uprooted Palestinian

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