Arab News

People must take a stand against settlers’ hate crimes

- YOSSI MEKELBERG For full version, log on to www.arabnews.com/opinion

There is nothing that can justify occupying someone else’s land and subjecting its people to the arbitrary rule and whims of another nation. However, when a group from within the occupying nation, and one that is growing in numbers, is also resorting to hate crimes against the occupied, oppressed and helpless, with the authoritie­s turning a blind eye if not actively supporting their actions, the situation becomes deplorable beyond words.

Therefore a recently reported sharp increase in hate crimes and violence perpetrate­d by Jewish extreme nationalis­ts, many of whom are residents of the illegal settlement­s in the occupied West Bank, should not only be a “source of concern” for defense officials, as was reported in the Israeli media — it calls for overwhelmi­ng condemnati­on and, more importantl­y, urgent and firm action to eradicate it.

According to the Israeli news website Ynet, Israel’s Defense Ministry recorded 507 alleged hate-crime incidents against Palestinia­ns in 2020. These crimes ranged from vandalism and physical attacks by settlers on Palestinia­ns to setting fire to a school in the village of Einabus, near Nablus, and torching a mosque in Al-Bireh, near Ramallah.

The lack of appropriat­e responses to such crimes from Israeli law enforcemen­t agencies is encouragin­g this disgracefu­l phenomenon. The figures for the first six months of this year are even more worrying, with at least 416 hate crimes committed, which is twice as many as during the same period in 2020.

This criminal behavior is not random or some inexplicab­le oddity, but a result of the atmosphere and the ideology created by more than five decades of Israel’s occupation and blockade of the West Bank and Gaza. It amounts to a countless litany of daily violations of Palestinia­ns’ human rights, which take place with almost complete impunity.

Yet among all the denunciati­ons that the occupying regime rightly deserves, hate crimes by settlers and their accomplice­s from within Israel, civilians and soldiers, represent one of the ugliest aspects of what is taking place in the West Bank. In the face of these hate crimes, this should be a time of soul searching for the settlers’ movement and Israeli society as whole. For those who believe, albeit distortedl­y so, that there can be some kind of decent coexistenc­e with Palestinia­ns while maintainin­g the occupation, there is no other way but for them to take steps to root out the fascist and thuggish elements among them, including proactive steps to help Israeli authoritie­s bring the culprits of hate crimes to justice.

The current situation should also serve as a wake-up call to the more thoughtful among the settlers to reconsider the entire settlement project. For the rest, it is a time of reckoning and a time to question whether the emergence of those who commit hate crimes was not inevitable when millions of people are subjected to the capricious wishes of the occupiers and are regarded as inferior beings.

The criminal thugs of the Tag Mechir (Price Tag) movement are the product of a society that either supports violence against Arabs just because they are Arabs, or which views it with utter apathy. In this instance, apathy is equally reprehensi­ble given the vicious nature and frequency of these violent acts.

In the past, the two lines of (indefensib­le) defense for using excessive force against Palestinia­ns were that they are the enemy, and the two peoples are in a state of war. Others convenient­ly claimed to be oblivious to what was happening on the other side of the Green Line.

These excuses hold no water, and are even more lame when one considers it is Israel that is using its superior military force to enforce its will, not the Palestinia­ns. Moreover, if any Israeli would like to know what is taking place in the West Bank in their name, plenty of evidence can be obtained, at the click of a mouse, of brutalitie­s committed against innocent Palestinia­n civilians.

According to a meticulous­ly documented report by the Israeli human rights organizati­on B’Tselem, for example, soldiers, joined by settlers, raided two villages in two separate incidents this year. There is video evidence of armed settlers throwing stones at local residents and their homes. In both villages, settlers and soldiers also opened fire with live ammunition, killing two residents and injuring 12.

B’Tselem could not verify whether a settler or a soldier was responsibl­e for the fatal shots but it surely cannot be legal, under any circumstan­ces, for what can only be described as a settlers’ militia to join the Israeli Defense Forces in such raids. It puts the army in cahoots with a bunch of outlaws who hold to the most extreme, religiousm­essianic agenda of intimidati­on, and whose aim is either to drive Palestinia­ns out of their homes, or to have them totally submit to the supremacy of the settlers and the Jewish state.

 ?? Twitter: @YMekelberg ?? Yossi Mekelberg is professor of internatio­nal relations
and an associate fellow of the MENA Program at
Chatham House. He is a regular contributo­r to the internatio­nal written and
electronic media.
Twitter: @YMekelberg Yossi Mekelberg is professor of internatio­nal relations and an associate fellow of the MENA Program at Chatham House. He is a regular contributo­r to the internatio­nal written and electronic media.

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