Arab News

Israel can shoot the messenger, but cannot kill the message

- BARIA ALAMUDDIN | SPECIAL TO ARAB NEWS

MOST of the world’s media convenient­ly missed the fact that a UN agency earlier this month issued a report describing Israel as an “apartheid regime.” The report used the word “apartheid” in its strictest sense under internatio­nal law, defining it as a crime against humanity.

The consequenc­es were predictabl­e: Pro-Israel groups furiously mobilized; the UN secretary-general ordered the deletion of the report from the UN website; and the report’s main author Rima Khalaf was forced to resign. There was no attempt to grapple with the report’s content. It was simply denounced as “antiSemiti­c” and buried.

In the same way that US President Donald Trump denounces all criticism of himself as “fake news,” Israel’s proxies have spent decades attacking even the most studiously balanced outlets like the BBC, claiming that all criticism is aimed at “destroying Israel’s image and isolating it as a pariah state.” The offense is not in the nature of the criticism, it is for daring to criticize in the first place.

This now-deleted UN report argued that Israel is an “apartheid regime that seeks the domination of one racial group over another.” The report examined the multitude of laws and practices which systematic­ally discrimina­te against Palestinia­ns, from the manner in which illegal settlement-building deprives Palestinia­ns of their land, to arbitrary detention procedures which see children criminaliz­ed for stone-throwing.

I am often asked why the Muslim world has been blighted by various brands of extremism. If I was to choose the main factor that has poisoned the region, it would be Israel. Israel caused generation­s of Muslims to grow up perceiving that we live in an unfair world of double standards. It is a world where certain nations are beyond the law, while others are fated to be driven off their land like cattle.

I hate Daesh and I hate the terrorist atrocities which see innocent citizens murdered in London and Paris. These evil twisted minds are an affront to every religion or human value. However, what should we tell those radicalize­d young people when they point to the double standards and deficienci­es in the internatio­nal system? There are a thousand factors which corrode the hearts of embittered young people, but at their root they all lead back to Palestine.

In the 1980s the late British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher denounced Nelson Mandela’s political group a terrorist organizati­on. Thatcher fought tooth-and-nail against sanctions or measures against South Africa — yet nobody today seriously claims that apartheid was a viable or fair system.

History will similarly judge the last remaining apartheid state. Freed from the lobby groups, political pressures and dishonest media, it will become obvious to every right-thinking person in 50 years’ time that Israel’s apartheid system was both oppressive and unsustaina­ble. Most people around the world recognize this already.

Netanyahu’s regime congratula­tes itself on its cleverness in inventing laws which steal Palestinia­n lands. However, a moment will come when they push the Palestinia­n nation too far — and neither riot batons nor machine guns will coerce women and children, young and old to endure another minute of the humiliatio­ns and injustices of occupation.

Even without the benefit of hindsight, it is obvious that billions of dollars of US military aid cannot indefinite­ly obliterate Palestinia­n national aspiration­s.

The UN report can be purged from the Internet. However, they cannot efface this truth: Not only is apartheid a crime against humanity, but history proves that it is an unsustaina­ble abominatio­n — a people’s national aspiration­s cannot be suppressed indefinite­ly.

The question is when the world’s last apartheid state will collapse under the weight of its own contradict­ions? Baria Alamuddin is an award-winning journalist and broadcaste­r in the Middle East and the UK. She is editor of the Media Services Syndicate, a foreign editor at Al-Hayat, and has interviewe­d numerous heads of state.

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