Australian government continues Israeli love affair

March 8, 2008
Issue 

Well, so much for our new government taking an even-handed position on Israel/Palestine.

Before our politicians even warmed their seats in the new parliamentary sittings, PM Kevin Rudd announced that he will lead a parliamentary motion to honour Israel on March 12 acknowledging Yom Ha'atzmaut, Israel's Independence Day. Coalition leader Brendan Nelson will second the motion.

Then, celebrations will take place at a reception in the Mural Hall of Parliament House.

If Palestinians and their supporters had any hopes of a sympathetic hearing from the new Rudd Labor government on the multiple human rights abuses being perpetrated by Israel in the Occupied Palestinian Territories, those hopes are now well and truly dashed.

This year marks 60 years of Palestinian dispossession and displacement — and a savage, relentless occupation that is smothering the lifeblood of the Palestinians while Israel celebrates its ill-gotten gains. Palestinians are starving in Gaza and being sold out in the West Bank. Their very existence is under threat.

Every Australian ought to be asking why our prime minister and the parliament feel so humiliatingly obligated to Israel that they must go to these lengths to show their friendship with a foreign country that consistently violates international law, United Nations resolutions and human rights conventions?

If supporting the Palestinian cause is too much to ask, then refusing to single Israel out for any kind of recognition would at least be sensitive to the Palestinians living here.

The Palestinians were never asked if they would agree to the foreign imperial division of their country: most had their family homes and lands taken from them by Zionist forces ruthlessly pushing for a Greater Israel not intended by the 1947 United Nations Partition of Palestine.

Such demonstrations of affection are not new. Former PM John Howard had already fostered this extraordinary bond when he declared Australia as Israel's closest friend.

True to form, Israel has rewarded its friends with facile honours. Howard received two in one year. He was awarded the Jerusalem Prize from the World Zionist Organisation and he had a forest named after him in the Negev by the Jewish National Fund, which specialises in acquiring property for "the purpose of settling Jews on such lands".

These lands are the subject of legal proceedings brought by the now displaced indigenous Bedouins of the Negev who are being "moved out" for the exclusive benefit of Jewish people worldwide who want to live in Israel. Although these Bedouins live in what is now called Israel, 45 of their villages are not recognised by the Israeli government and have never received even the most basic amenities.

All this falls hard on the heels of the new PM's moving apology to our own Indigenous people. The similarity between the grievous losses suffered by both peoples — the Aborigines and the Palestinians — is not fanciful. Both peoples have been the hapless victims of the great white colonial enterprise.

There are some 11 million Palestinians worldwide whose collective memory is seared with the narrative of their people who fled in terror during Israel's 1948 purge of Palestine. About two-thirds of the Palestinian population never saw their homes again. Many still have the keys to their front doors, the deeds to their properties and lands, the photos of happier moments, and the endless familiar memories of smells and sounds unfaded by time.

Around 7.2 million refugees are languishing today in refugee camps waiting to return home and to receive compensation for the calculated decimation of their society — one that had successfully developed culturally and economically over centuries, despite 400 years under Ottoman rule.

Palestine was not a land without people as Israel's mythmakers have tried to promote, particularly through the emotive Hollywood film Exodus.

Palestine was, in fact, populated by successful citizen merchants and officials who added an economically vibrant dimension to the essentially peasant population who were actively engaged in working the land. Not only did Palestinians own land, but even where there was no legal title, the land was considered as belonging to the Palestinians through their history of land use and uninterrupted possession.

More and more people are beginning to wake up, as intrepid journalists report a far from rosy picture in the Occupied Palestinian Territories. Yet, these are still lone voices in our Australian media and not enough to reach the wider population.

For decades, Israel has won the battle for the hearts and minds of people, despite the official reports of every human rights organisation — from Amnesty International to Israel's B'Tselem — documenting in graphic detail Israel's litany of human rights abuses. Most are gathering dust, but they provide more than enough evidence to challenge the appropriateness of aligning ourselves with Israel.

And there are stirrings in our churches, universities, the legal fraternity, social justice groups and in the consciences of people generally, to reach out to the Palestinians.

In response, Israel has established the Peres Centre for Peace in Australia, which is endeavouring to project an image of Israel as peacemaker. Rather than the usual rounds of dialogue and conflict resolution, it is being done on a populist level through sporting activities and culture.

The centre has already persuaded the Australian Football League to include a friendly team of Israelis and Palestinians in their 18-team line up for this year's AFL International Cup. In this way, Israel hopes to normalise its image with the Australian public, and show its willingness to work towards peace — something it has been unable to do at the negotiating table.

However, Israeli tanks and soldiers are still shelling Gaza, and Israel is further tightening its siege on this tiny sliver of land with a population almost at bursting point. The recent smashing of the wall with hundreds of thousands of desperate Palestinians swarming into Egypt to look for food and other basic necessities gave the world a glimpse into the misery of their lives.

And, in the West Bank, Israel is increasing — not decreasing as it promised to do in the most recent peace negotiations — the number of checkpoints that totally suffocate the ordinary daily movement of another burgeoning population.

The surest sign though of Israel's real intentions is its blatant disregard of international law and all requests to stop its illegal settlement project that is literally turning thousands of Palestinians on to the streets — homeless and stateless and forced to rely on the world's pitiful humanitarian aid that can never bring them economic or political independence.

As conditions deteriorate for the Palestinians, and the words "apartheid" and "ethnic cleansing" begin to enter mainstream consciousness after being given voice by former US president Jimmy Carter and South African Archbishop Desmond Tutu, Israel is employing new public relations strategies to secure its legitimacy in the global community.

In Australia, where sport dominates so much of our cultural life and social interaction, using sport as a vehicle for peace is a powerful image. This latest venture by The Peres Centre — named after one of the more notorious Zionist architects of Palestinian ethnic cleansing — is already bedazzling the AFL administrators with the idea of people crossing all boundaries "for the simple love of the game".

This is a notion that would never be entertained by a government at war with an enemy state. In fact what is needed is sports' boycotts to stop countries like Israel behaving oppressively. Nowhere else was this so effective than in South Africa's anti-Apartheid struggle.

There is no excuse for our leaders in politics and business to buy into this scam when they know that some 4 million Palestinians are being denied justice and basic human rights under Israel's illegal military occupation, with no sign of reprieve. If it were not for the West's craven politicians indecently rushing to join Israel's circus, Israel would long ago have had to find a solution to give justice and dignity back to the Palestinians.

Regrettably, our leaders will continue to pursue their self-serving policies until ordinary, decent people force them to accept that our common humanity is worth more than the lucrative deals that bring such enormous profits to the multinational corporations, and from which many governments benefit.

It is by no means impossible. Just as people brought down the Apartheid regime in South Africa, the people can bring down the ethnically divisive Zionist regime in Israel as well. This is why the word "apartheid" so rattles Israel's supporters.

But, we have a long way to go, especially when governments insist on continuing their love affairs with Israel. In the meantime the Palestinian catastrophe of dispossession and displacement is being accelerated. This crime against humanity is what needs to be acknowledged in our parliament and not a motion honouring Israel. The concept of a "fair go" that our PM so fondly embraces, has never sounded so hollow or sunk so low.

[Sonja Karkar is the founder and president of Women for Palestine in Melbourne, Australia. Visit <http://www.womenforpalestine.com>.]

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