The Jerusalem Post

Salah’s arrest strengthen­s him among Arab public

- • By BEN LYNFIELD

The most memorable image of the arrest and remand Tuesday of Sheikh Raed Salah, head of the banned Northern Branch of the Islamic Movement, was of him smiling broadly and waving in the court room.

The sheikh, arrested on suspicion of incitement, has good reason to be pleased. His arrest can only make him more popular and relevant among Israeli Arabs by depicting him as the victim of an establishm­ent and government widely viewed as racist and pursuing policies that harm their standing.

“The more the government goes after him, the more this idolizes him in the eyes of the young people that follow him,” said an activist of the Hadash party component of the Joint List who asked for anonymity.

In an illustrati­on of the huge gulf between Israeli-Jewish and Israeli-Arab societies, Salah’s arrest was applauded by the Right and Left on the Jewish side, including by Labor Party leader Avi Gabbay, while being condemned across the board on the Arab side. The key words invoked by almost all the Arab politician­s commenting on the arrest were “political persecutio­n.” It is a phrase that resonates with a public that increasing­ly feels its very citizenshi­p status is being called into question among other things by efforts to pass the Nationalit­y Law and last week’s first ever stripping of citizenshi­p by an Israeli court against an Umm el-Fahm resident convicted in a terrorist attack.

According to police, Salah gave a speech at the funeral of two of the three assailants who carried out the deadly Temple Mount attack last month in which he praised their actions and “incited for a war over the Temple Mount.” Salah says he was just drawing on the Koran.

A Balad party statement termed the arrest of Salah, which comes two years after his movement was banned for alleged links to terrorist groups and inciting a wave of violence,” the continuati­on of the political persecutio­n applied by the Israeli government against basic political streams active in Arab society and a continuati­on of the policy of criminaliz­ing political work in accordance with the Israeli ceiling and the Zionist consensus.”

Balad may have reason to fear it could be next in line. Housing Minister Yoav Gallant told Israel Radio on Tuesday that there is no “real difference” between Salah and Balad legislator­s Haneen Zoabi, Jamal Zahalka and imprisoned ex-MK Basel Ghattas. “They should not be allowed to have a platform in the Knesset to harm Israel,” he said.

Salah deftly invoked the phrase “political persecutio­n” during his remand hearing, saying, according to Ynet: “What you are doing is an expression of the continued persecutio­n of our public by the Israeli government.

This is political persecutio­n.”

The sense by the Arab public of being persecuted and incited against goes right back to the election of the current government, when Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Arabs were going to the polling stations “in droves.”

Last year, during the wave of forest fires, Arab citizens were profoundly angered by Public Security Minister Gilad Erdan blaming Arabs for starting the blazes. The efforts to pass the Nationalit­y Law also strike a raw nerve with critics saying it harms Arab standing by favoring Jewish over democratic values and demoting the Arabic language from its official status.

The attempted and actual stripping of citizenshi­p and talk of transferri­ng Umm el-Fahm to the Palestinia­n Authority – without consulting its residents – make many Arabs feel their very citizenshi­p is threatened by the government.

The fact that all of the Joint List MKs came out against Salah’s arrest, including avowed secularist­s who are his foes on what the character of Arab society should be, is a reflection not of support for Salah but “a way of talking against what the government is doing,” said the Hadash activist.

Adding to the criticism of the arrest is that the judge, Menachem Mizrachi, appeared to question some of the police’s incitement allegation­s.

According to Wadia Awawdy, who works for Hala Television in Taibe: “It may be that he infringed here and there on the law relating to incitement, but between that and making him the arch demon responsibl­e for the entire dreadful situation that we live in is, to put it mildly, inaccurate.”

 ?? (Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) ?? RAED SALAH
(Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) RAED SALAH

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel