The Jerusalem Post

Swiss legislatur­e passes bill to stop funding for boycotts of Israel

Upper chamber will decide on anti-BDS measure in May

- • By BENJAMIN WEINTHAL

Switzerlan­d’s National Council – the lower chamber of the legislatur­e – passed a bill on Wednesday to stop government funding of organizati­ons that promote boycotts of Israel and spread antisemiti­sm and racism.

The measure will be submitted in May to the Council of States, the upper chamber of the legislatur­e, which will decide whether it becomes law.

Olga Deutsch, director of the Jerusalem-based NGO Monitor’s Europe Desk, told The Jerusalem Post: “Today’s positive developmen­ts in Switzerlan­d mark a milestone in seriously countering BDS campaigns, antisemiti­sm and hatred, by equating them in the motion. The motion sets an important precedent. NGO Monitor was instrument­al in providing details to Swiss decision-makers regarding their government’s funding of organizati­ons that oppose official Swiss foreign policy, such as NGOs that propagate anti-normalizat­ion, BDS, and one-state frameworks.”

She added, “This is a perfect opportunit­y for Israeli and European officials to capitalize on the Swiss example and work together on guidelines and evaluation mechanisms that contribute to positive change in addressing this serious issue.”

The measure was introduced by Christian Imark, a National Council deputy from the conservati­ve Swiss People’s Party. It passed 11178.

Dominik Feusi, a senior editor with the Basler Zeitung newspaper, first announced the groundbrea­king motion on Twitter, writing “Swiss parliament approves a Motion to end funding of NGOs who work for terror, hate, racism or antisemiti­sm...”

Imark’s motion to slash funding for organizati­ons that boycott Israel appears to the first national parliament­ary act in Europe to blunt economic and political warfare targeting the Jewish state.

The head of the Federal Council, Didier Burkhalter from the FPD Liberal party, opposes the measure. According to an article in the Zurichbase­d Weltwoche weekly, Burkhalter, who oversees the Swiss Federal Department of Foreign Affairs, blames only Israel for the collapse of the peace process.

Feusi published a series of eye-popping investigat­ive reports over the past year on alleged financial misconduct in the Federal Department of Foreign Affairs. The Swiss government provided funds in December to the US- and EU-designated terrorist organizati­on Hamas for a conference in Geneva. Switzerlan­d’s government funneled nearly $60 million to diverse projects in the Middle East, many of which are shrouded in secrecy.

Swiss government money flowed to the Badil Resource Center for Palestinia­n Residency and Refugee Rights, which advocates the boycott of the Jewish state. Switzerlan­d – in contrast to the US, Canada and the EU – does not recognize Hamas and Hezbollah as terrorist organizati­ons.

Switzerlan­d also funds the Palestinia­n Center for Human Rights, which routinely calls for the arrest of Israeli politician­s and compares Israel with the former apartheid regime in South Africa, and Al-Haq, a Ramallah-based legal center that engages in lawfare against the Jewish state.

According to NGO Monitor: “The Swiss government, directly through the Human Rights and Internatio­nal Humanitari­an Law Secretaria­t (managed by the Institute of Law at Bir Zeit University in Ramallah and the NIRAS consulting firm in Sweden), provides core-funding to a network of organizati­ons, some of which are directly affiliated with the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, a terrorist organizati­on designated as such by the US, EU, Canada and Israel.”

NGO Monitor continued: “From 2013 to 2016, the IHL Secretaria­t provided a total of $2.38m. to organizati­ons directly affiliated with the PFLP, while the Swiss government’s contributi­on amounted to approximat­ely one-quarter of the total secretaria­t budget. The IHL Secretaria­t distribute­s 56% of its budget to NGOs that advocate for Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions campaigns against Israel.”

Silvia Müller, a spokeswoma­n for the Federal Department of Foreign Affairs, told the Post that “Switzerlan­d decisively condemns calls for hate, violence, forms of racism and antisemiti­sm.”

She said that “Switzerlan­d works together with organizati­ons that uphold democratic values and principles and work for human rights and humanitari­an internatio­nal law.”

BDS Switzerlan­d slammed the anti-boycott motion because “its goal is to ban financial support for human rights organizati­on in the context of Israel/Palestine.” The group said the motion is an attack on the Palestinia­n population, freedom of speech and organizati­ons that work for human rights.

 ?? (Wikimedia Commons) ?? SWITZERLAN­D’S National Council meets in Bern.
(Wikimedia Commons) SWITZERLAN­D’S National Council meets in Bern.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel