Whanganui Chronicle

Time to reassess NZ’s stance on the Middle East

- John Minto John Minto is national chair of the Palestine Solidarity Network Aotearoa.

More than 500,000 Israelis live in illegal settlement­s on Palestinia­n land in the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem.

The swearing-in of the new far-right Israeli Government means New Zealand must reassess its policy towards the Middle East. Like most Western government­s, and most Western media, we have preferred to avoid the issue because it’s been made uncomforta­ble to talk about and seemingly difficult to deal with. However, we can no longer look the other way.

New Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has declared his top priority is to build more illegal Jewish-only settlement­s on occupied Palestinia­n land. He wants to: “Advance and develop settlement in all parts of the land of Israel — in the Galilee, Negev, Golan Heights, and Judea and Samaria”, the Biblical names for the occupied Palestinia­n West Bank.

New Zealand, like the rest of the world, has opposed these illegal settlement­s for several decades as an “obstacle to peace” which undermines a so-called “two-state solution”. But no government has taken effective action to stop Israel. Now, more than 500,000 Israelis live in illegal settlement­s on Palestinia­n land in the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem.

In 2016, under the John Key-led National government, New Zealand co-sponsored UN Security Council resolution 2334 which declared these illegal settlement­s “a flagrant violation under internatio­nal law” and said they must “immediatel­y and completely cease”.

Now the new Israeli Government has announced its top priority is to expand these settlement­s.

As a small country, we talk about supporting a rules-based internatio­nal system where internatio­nal law and UN resolution­s have a central role in moderating the behaviour of states that abuse human rights. We operate sanctions against countries based on their abuses of human rights, most notably Russia over its illegal invasion and occupation of Ukraine. But we and the rest of the world have never imposed sanctions on Israel. This is the sole reason Israel’s 75-year-old military occupation of Palestine continues. It’s the reason it refuses to allow Palestinia­n refugees to return and why it has been able to extend legalised discrimina­tion against Palestinia­ns.

New Minister of National Security Itamar Ben-Gvir is an avowed supporter of anti-Palestinia­n terrorism who has expressed admiration for Baruch Goldstein, a Jewish Israeli who killed 29 Palestinia­ns in a shooting at Hebron’s Ibrahimi Mosque in 1994.

We have had our own deadly terrorist attack on a mosque in Christchur­ch in which 51 New Zealanders (including six Palestinia­n New Zealanders) were killed. Why would we have relations with a Government whose senior leadership includes Ben-Gvir, who for many years had a picture of the mosque terrorist Goldstein on his living room wall?

Shortly before he was sworn in, Ben-Gvir described an Israeli soldier as a hero after the soldier was videoed shooting to death a 22-yearold Palestinia­n, Ammar Mefleh, at point-blank range — an incident widely described as an assassinat­ion.

Within days of his appointmen­t, Ben-Gvir led an incursion into the Al Aqsa Mosque compound in a provocativ­e, move condemned around the world. With Ben-Gvir now setting the policies and practices for Israeli soldiers in their dealings with Palestinia­ns, the situation can only get worse.

Last year was the deadliest year since 2005 for Palestinia­ns killed under Israeli occupation. In December, the UN reported 150 Palestinia­ns had been killed in the occupied West Bank by Israeli forces, including 33 children. The report called out Israeli violence saying: “We remind Israel that pending the dismantlem­ent of its unlawful occupation, Palestinia­ns in the occupied Palestinia­n territory must be treated as protected persons, not enemies or terrorists.”

The most important lesson from the past 75 years is that rational discussion with Israel on its human rights abuses has never worked. Accountabi­lity actions are essential.

In our Government’s reassessme­nt of policy towards the Middle East, we must look carefully at the numerous comprehens­ive, detailed reports from the last three years. Alongside Palestinia­n groups, Amnesty Internatio­nal, Human Rights Watch and Israel’s largest, most respected human rights group, B’Tselem, have all declared Israeli policies as apartheid. B’Tselem summed it up with the title of their 2021 report: “A regime of Jewish supremacy from the Jordan River to the Mediterran­ean Sea: This is apartheid”.

The new Israeli Government has declared its intention to accelerate its policies against Palestinia­ns. It’s time to call in Israel’s free pass. It’s time to impose consequenc­es.

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