The Jerusalem Post

NGO Monitor to Berlin: Shut ‘antisemiti­c’ aid arm

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The Jerusalem-based NGO Monitor called on the German government on Friday to immediatel­y halt the activities and funding of its Corporatio­n for Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n operating in Jordan, the West Bank, the Gaza Strip and the Federal Republic because of widespread antisemiti­sm spread by employees of the humanitari­an relief organizati­on.

The deepening scandal – first reported by The Jerusalem Post on Tuesday – that has engulfed the German Corporatio­n for Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n prompted a flurry of responses from the Merkel government and corporatio­n officials, promising an investigat­ion into the alleged antisemiti­c Facebook posts by corporatio­n workers.

NGO Monitor’s president, Prof. Gerald Steinberg, told the Post that “self-reporting and internal investigat­ion by powerful institutio­ns are entirely ineffectiv­e and inconsiste­nt with good governance. This is particular­ly the case for government offices that move large budgets in sensitive areas, such as GIZ [the German Corporatio­n for Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n]. The officials in Berlin, Amman, the West Bank and Gaza who tolerated or were blind to examples of gross antisemiti­sm cannot credibly make sure that this behavior stops completely. Only an independen­t and public investigat­ion has credibilit­y. Until then and the implementa­tion of new procedures to ensure that German taxpayer funds do not go for hate, all GIZ funding and activities in the region must be suspended.”

Steinberg added that “other branches of the German and other government­s that fund aid and NGOs would be well advised to undertake independen­t investigat­ions as well.”

When asked on Thursday about the allegation­s of antisemiti­sm at the Corporatio­n for Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n, corporatio­n spokeswoma­n Katja Hans said she would answer the queries by email.

In an email response to the Post on Thursday, the corporatio­n wrote, “As a federal company it is clear: We do not tolerate antisemiti­sm. We take the allegation­s that are currently against us very seriously. We are currently investigat­ing each individual case and holding a meeting with each of the employees. Disciplina­ry action is also being considered, depending on the specific case. We do not tolerate antisemiti­c comments; this is a breach of our Code of Conduct. This also applies to comments made privately if there is any connection to GIZ.”

The statement added, “At all offices, including the country offices in Palestine and Jordan, regular discussion­s take place to raise awareness among employees and to assert the fact that we do not have a political mandate and therefore do not make political statements. GIZ is a service provider acting on behalf of the German government. This specific feature means that our employees are required to refrain from making political statements, including on social media.” A FORMER German employee turned whistle-blower of the corporatio­n told the Post her contract was not extended because she had written a pro-Israel comment on Facebook.

After the Post reported on her terminatio­n for objecting to a campaign waged by German Corporatio­n for Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n employees to stoke hatred against Jews and Israel, she told Channel 2 that the problem of antisemiti­sm at the corporatio­n “isn’t a small problem with interns or junior employees. It comes from the very highest level.”

She told the Post that Rudolf Rogg, who oversees Middle East department for the corporatio­n, has “three Facebook accounts with anti-Israeli agitation.”

The former employee expressed deep skepticism that a Corporatio­n for Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n inquiry will lead to change in a workplace culture permeated with vile antisemiti­sm.

Rogg urged the EU and the UN to “end Israeli collective punishment,” and claimed the EU- and US-designated terrorist organizati­on Hamas was not responsibl­e for the kidnapping and murder of three Israeli teenagers in 2014. The Post sought an interview with Rogg. The corporatio­n and Rogg declined to respond to Post queries.

Photograph­s of the alleged Corporatio­n for Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n employee antisemiti­sm can be viewed on the NGO Monitor website. Mohammed al-Mutawakel, who is currently a project manager at the corporatio­n’s headquarte­rs in Bonn and was previously a project manager in Jordan, compared Israel to the Hitler movement. He posted an Israeli flag on Facebook and replaced the Star of David with a swastika. “I hate Israel,” he wrote.

Ulrich Nitschke, a senior corporatio­n employee in the Middle East, celebrated, according to NGO Monitor, the nomination of the BDS movement for the Nobel Peace Prize.

According to NGO Monitor, Tobias Thiel, who heads the corporatio­n’s Strengthen­ing Reform Initiative­s project, shared articles claiming that Israel committed a “deliberate massacre” in the Gaza Strip, and that Israel does not have the right to defend itself.

The German government rejects the Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions campaign. Chancellor Angela Merkel’s CDU party platform says: “Who today under the flag of the BDS movement calls to boycott Israeli goods and services speaks the same language in which people were called [under the Third Reich] to not buy from Jews. That is nothing other than coarse antisemiti­sm.”

The German Corporatio­n for Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n states on its website that it employs a staff of 145 in the Palestinia­n territorie­s.

According to German media, the Federal Ministry of Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t provides the most funds to the corporatio­n. The ministry provided €111.7 million for the corporatio­n’s operation in Jordan in 2017.

A ministry representa­tive wrote the Post by email on Thursday that the “German government rejects every form of antisemiti­sm.” The ministry added that we do not tolerate antisemiti­c statements from its employees.

When asked why Corporatio­n for Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n employees are permitted to post anti-Israel, allegedly antisemiti­c statements on Facebook and an employee was fired because she defended Israel, the head of the corporatio­n’s Jordan office in Amman, Michaela Baur, declined to answer.

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