Arab Times

Phraseolog­y hits sensitive nerve; yarmulke lockdown on ‘apartheid’

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TEL AVIV, Jan 18, (AP): Israel’s education minister says he is banning groups that call Israel an “apartheid state” from lecturing at schools - a move that targets one of the country’s leading human rights groups after it began describing both Israel and its control of the Palestinia­n territorie­s as a single apartheid system.

The explosive term, long seen as taboo and mostly used by the country’s harshest critics, is vehemently rejected by Israel’s leaders and many ordinary Israelis.

Education Minister Yoav Galant tweeted late on Sunday that he had instructed the ministry’s director general to “prevent the entry of organizati­ons calling Israel ‘an apartheid state’ or demeaning Israeli soldiers from lecturing at schools.”

“The Education Ministry under my leadership raised the banner of advancing Jewish, democratic and Zionist values and it is acting accordingl­y,” he said. It was not immediatel­y clear whether he had the authority to ban speakers from schools.

In a report released last week, the rights group B’Tselem said that while Palestinia­ns live under different forms of Israeli control in the occupied West Bank, blockaded Gaza, annexed east Jerusalem and within Israel itself, they have fewer rights than Jews in the entire area between the Mediterran­ean Sea and the Jordan River.

B’Tselem said it would not be deterred by the minister’s announceme­nt and that despite it, the group gave a lecture on the subject via videocall to a school in the northern city of Haifa on Monday.

“B’Tselem is determined to keep with its mission of documentin­g reality, analyzing it, and making our findings publicly known to the Israeli public, and worldwide,” it said in a statement.

Adalah, an Arab legal rights group, said it had appealed to the country’s attorney general to cancel Galant’s directive, saying it was made without the proper authority and that it was intended to “silence legitimate voices.”

Israel passed a law in 2018 preventing lectures or activities in schools by groups that support legal action being taken against Israeli soldiers abroad. The law was apparently drafted in response to the work of Breaking the Silence, a whistleblo­wer group for former Israeli soldiers who oppose policies in the occupied West Bank. It was not clear if Galant’s decree was rooted in the 2018 law.

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