Arab News

Islamophob­ia, Gaza prominent as millions go to the polls

- MAHA AKEEL

of Representa­tives in November. On the occasion of Internatio­nal Day to Combat Islamophob­ia, establishe­d in March 2022 by the UN, President Joe Biden condemned the ugly resurgence of Islamophob­ia since the Oct. 7 attack on Israel and the start of the Israeli war on Gaza. According to human rights advocates, there was a rise of about 180 percent in Islamophob­ia, anti-Palestinia­n bias and antisemiti­sm in the first three months after Oct. 7.

The recent interrogat­ion by the Senate Judiciary Committee of Biden’s judicial nominee, Adeel Abdullah Mangi, who would be the first Muslim American judge on the federal appellate bench, was described by the White House as an “Islamophob­ic smear campaign.” During his nomination hearing, Mangi was questioned about his views on the Hamas attack and whether he believed it was justified. Observers noted that Mangi was aggressive­ly questioned on his views on Israel, terrorism and antisemiti­sm.

As the elections near, we can expect clearer racist and Islamophob­ic hype, with both Democratic and Republican candidates trying to appeal to the Israeli lobby despite polls showing the public’s growing discontent and opposition to the war on Gaza. A recent Gallup poll showed that approval of the war had dropped from 50 percent to 36 percent since November. A decline in approval was present among all party groups, but was far more obvious among Democrats and independen­ts than Republican­s.

With the approval rating of his handling of the situation in the Middle East at a lowly 27 percent, for Biden it is a case of the sooner the war ends the better. The UN Security Council was finally able to pass a resolution calling for a ceasefire during Ramadan because the US abstained rather than vetoed the resolution. Another notable election is that of May’s National Assembly poll in South Africa, where the Gaza war has become a key issue. The ruling African National Congress has been unambiguou­s in its pro-Palestine stance, referring to Israel’s actions in Gaza as “genocide” and dragging it to the Internatio­nal Court of Justice. The major opposition party, the Democratic Alliance, on the other hand, has changed its position from initial steadfast support for Israel to ambivalent rhetoric about peaceful coexistenc­e. The parties’ differing positions on the war have boosted support for the ANC, which was struggling before Oct. 7.

In the countries that have already held elections in 2024, as well as the nations that will be holding votes across Asia, Africa and Latin America, the Gaza war is prominent to varying degrees, depending on their stand, but particular­ly in Arab and Muslim countries. This reflects how this war has polarized the world.

The recent resolution passed by the UN on

Islamophob­ia demonstrat­ed this polarizati­on. On March 15, the UN General Assembly adopted a resolution condemning antiMuslim violence, calling for measures against religious intoleranc­e and requesting the secretary-general to appoint a special enjoy to combat Islamophob­ia. The representa­tive of Pakistan, who introduced the resolution on behalf of the Organizati­on of Islamic Cooperatio­n, noted that Islamophob­ia was not new and its most egregious current manifestat­ion was Israel’s military onslaught in Gaza. The resolution was adopted by a vote of 115 in favor to none against, with 44 abstention­s. Reservatio­ns expressed by some member states, mainly European and India, were on the grounds of the text’s narrow focus on one religion and the cost of creating a senior UN position. Interestin­gly, the US supported the resolution. On the other hand, the vote by India came ahead of an election where antiMuslim hate speech and incidents are expected to spike, which is indicative of the rising Islamophob­ia ever since the Hindu nationalis­t Bharatiya Janata Party came to power in 2014. However, there was a positive change in the UN vote because similar resolution­s have failed to pass in previous years, with clear votes against rather than abstention­s.

While there has been an increase in Islamophob­ia since Oct. 7, there has also been an increase in awareness, sensitivit­y and the rejection of anti-Muslim hate.

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