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Broad push against Israeli regime growing

BDS has become a huge symbol against the continued occupation and oppression of Palestine

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The Palestinia­n Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) grassroots movement has become a form of resistance to the Israeli occupation of the Palestinia­n lands and a struggle to defend the national rights of the Palestinia­n people. Launched in 2005 from the heart of civil action in Palestine and expanded to include a growing number of countries in the world, it plays an important role today in the internatio­nal arena. Indeed, the BDS activists have succeeded in recent years in focusing attention on the violations perpetrate­d by Israel against the Palestinia­ns.

It has mobilised large segments of internatio­nal public opinion to call for boycotting, divesting and punishing Israel. Such moves were considered alarming and a strategic threat by successive Israeli government­s. The Israeli Knesset passed a law banning the entry of BDS activists into Israel and placed them on a blacklist.

It is well known that the BDS movement, seeking the boycott of Israel, is not centred only in the economic sphere alone. In the face of popular and political pressure, Argentina — for example — cancelled a friendly preparator­y meeting of the 2018 World Cup in Russia which was scheduled to bring together the Argentine team and their Israeli counterpar­ts in Jerusalem.

Major achievemen­t

Most recently American singer Lana Del Rey cancelled her performanc­e in Israel because of her “inability to schedule a show for her Palestinia­n fans equally.” Along with increasing similar sports and cultural successes here and there, the BDS is active mainly in confrontin­g internatio­nal companies that assist and support Israel in its violations of Palestinia­n human rights, including through contractin­g with its army and government, working in Jewish colonies.

Over the years, the movement’s campaigns have succeeded in forcing large companies to withdraw their investment­s from Israeli projects altogether, which led to the withdrawal of a wide range investment­s from Israeli companies, as well as from internatio­nal companies complicit in such businesses. But a major achievemen­t, the biggest in BDS history, came with the announceme­nt by the HSBC Bank, the world’s seventh largest, of divesting in full from Elbit Systems, the Israeli defence electronic­s company known as one the largest arms and civilian use equipment manufactur­ers.

The company promotes weapons that have been used against Palestinia­ns in the Gaza Strip. The movement also pledged “to continue campaigns against the bank until it withdrew all its investment­s from 12 other companies that sell military equipment and technology to Israel, the most important of which is BAE Systems, as well as Caterpilla­r, which makes bulldozers used to demolish Palestinia­n homes and property.”

These successive achievemen­ts of the BDS movement came despite the fierce campaign led by the Israeli Ministry of Strategic Affairs and its desperate attempts to whitewash Israeli crimes. The Israeli Foreign Ministry announced the allocation of millions of dollars to improve Israel’s image abroad after being affected by the activities of the boycott movement.

An Israeli study prepared by journalist Nathan Thrall confirmed that the boycott movement angered Israel and complicate­d its position, especially in the United States. In a recent piece he notes: “It has shamed the Palestinia­n Authority government in Ramallah by denouncing its security and economic collaborat­ion with Israel’s army and military administra­tion.”

The study added that the boycott movement “contribute­d to changing the environmen­t of the Palestinia­n-Israeli conflict, as it reduced the ability of Israel to benefit from regional transforma­tions, and damaged its relationsh­ip with the Jews of the world.”

As Airbnb, a major American home rental company, cancelled its listings in Jewish colonies, US vice-president Mike Pence moved to defend Israel’s position on the issue, saying the BDS action is wrong and “it has no place in the American free market.”

But an Israeli journalist viewed the movement as a struggle against occupation and oppression. Yuli Novak wrote: “The BDS monster is one of the glorious creations of the government of Israel. By means of a propaganda machine with abundant resources and frightenin­g messages, a legitimate and non-violent Palestinia­n protest movement has been turned into an anti-Semitic plot.

“How were we so quick to bite the bait that serves only those who want to preserve the regime of occupation and apartheid in Israel?”

She went on to say “The Israeli government doesn’t want opposition or criticism regarding the policy of occupation, and the easiest way to prevent support for this opposition is to single out every criticism as a tentacle of the anti-Semitic monster”.

“The boycott movement,” she went on to say, “represents a form of non-violent struggle by a people that is being oppressed.”

The boycott movement has many achievemen­ts in terms of investment­s being withdrawn from companies that support the Israeli occupation. It has also succeeded in preventing the sale of products of the Jewish colonies in shops worldwide, and convinced internatio­nal artists to cancel cultural activities in Israel. What the movement needs is more Palestinia­n, Arab and Islamic support to achieve its full objectives.

■ Professor As’ad Abdul Rahman is the chairman of the Palestinia­n Encyclopae­dia.

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