The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Israel adopts controvers­ial Jewish nation-state law

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JERUSALEM: Israel’s parliament yesterday adopted a law defining the country as the nation state of the Jewish people, provoking fears it could lead to blatant discrimina­tion against Arab citizens.

Arab lawmakers and Palestinia­ns called the law ‘racist’ and said it legalised ‘apartheid’ following a tumultuous debate in parliament.

The legislatio­n, adopted by 62 votes to 55, makes Hebrew the country’s national language and defines the establishm­ent of Jewish communitie­s as being in the national interest.

Arabic, previously considered an official language, was granted only special status.

The law, passed in the early hours of Thursday, speaks of Israel as the Jewish historical homeland and says Jews have the right to self-determinat­ion there.

However, a deeply controvers­ial clause that had been seen as more specifical­ly legalising the establishm­ent of Jewishonly communitie­s was changed after it drew criticism, including from Israeli President Reuven Rivlin.

The legislatio­n becomes part of the country’s basic laws, which serve as a de facto constituti­on.

“It is a decisive moment in the history of the state of Israel that inscribes in stone our language, our anthem and our flag,” Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said after the vote on the legislatio­n, backed by his right-wing government.

A range of opposition politician­s denounced the vote.

The head of the mainly Arab Joint List alliance Ayman Odeh called it “the death of our democracy”.

Arab parliament members who called the legislatio­n ‘racist’ ripped up copies of the bill in the chamber of the Knesset, Israel’s parliament, after it was passed.

Arab citizens account for some 17.5 per cent of Israel’s more than eight million population.

Saeb Erekat, secretary-general of the Palestine Liberation Organisati­on, called it a ‘dangerous and racist law’ that “officially legalises apartheid and legally defines Israel as an apartheid system”.

The sponsor of the law, Avi Dichter from Netanyahu’s Likud party, has said the law aims to defend Israel’s “status as a Jewish and democratic state.”

Various versions of the legislatio­n have been debated for years.

Netanyahu’s government, seen as the most right-wing in the country’s history, had pushed for its approval before the parliament’s summer session ends.

The law passed after the changing of a clause that would have allowed the state to “authorise a community composed of people having the same faith and nationalit­y to maintain the exclusive character of that community”.

Rivlin, whose role as president is mainly symbolic, had made a rare interventi­on in politics earlier this month to raise alarm over the clause.

The legislatio­n “could harm the Jewish people worldwide and in Israel, and could even be used as a weapon by our enemies,” he wrote in an open letter.

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