Gulf News

Israel’s democracy disguise is wearing thin

It is not a country that abides by the rule of law when it promotes colonies deemed illegal by UN resolution­s

- BY LINDA S. HEARD Special to Gulf News

Icannot count the number of times I’ve heard Israeli officials boasting that their country is the only democracy in the Middle East even as it flouts all democratic principles whose mainstays are equality, free expression, human rights, civil liberties and the rule of law.

Israel’s banning of Democratic Congresswo­men Ilhan Omar and Rashida Tlaib from visiting, ostensibly due to their backing of the BDS Movement, is being billed by Israel’s critics, wrongly in my opinion, as an affront to its democratic values whereas, in fact, those claims pre-suppose that such values existed in the first place.

This democracy in name only allows diverse opinions when they suit and when they touch a nerve, they are branded as being anti-Semitic even when expressed by Jews termed ‘self-haters’.

Perhaps America’s democratic values should be placed under a microscope instead given that a US President has openly advised a foreign nation to bar his nation’s own democratic­ally-elected representa­tives else be considered weak. Whether Donald Trump — who boasts an Israeli colony in his name on the occupied Golan Heights courtesy of his buddy Netanyahu — is an AmericanFi­rst

president or one that puts Israel first is now a question under debate.

Isn’t it about time that the internatio­nal community dropped the pretence of considerin­g the Jewish State a democracy? For decades, Israeli leadership­s have chipped, nay hammered, away at David Ben-Gurion’s Declaratio­n of Independen­ce that pledges complete equality of social and political rights to all inhabitant­s irrespecti­ve of religion, race or sex.

That Declaratio­n sounds worthy but in reality wasn’t worth the paper on which it was written when 700,000 sons and daughters of the soil were forced to flee, their villages permanentl­y erased or their homes sequestere­d, and never permitted to return.

The myth

The notion that the state sees all Israelis as equals is a myth and always has been. Almost from Israel’s birth Jews from Arab lands, many herded into ghettoes, were seen as an underclass not fit to socialise with the more ‘refined’ Yiddish, Russian or German-speaking European Jewry. Israel invented a new word for these Arabic-speaking others, collective­ly called Mizrahim whose customs, traditions and oriental prayer chants were frowned upon as being alien.

In the 1980s and 1990s, Israel opened its doors to Ethiopian Jews escaping violence and famine but instead of finding a welcoming sanctuary, they were greeted with discrimina­tion and blatant racism on the part of the establishm­ent.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s 2018 Nation State Law unapologet­ically shredded all vestiges of Gurion’s lofty pledge, stating “the right to exercise national self-determinat­ion” within Israel, “is unique to the Jewish people. In one sweep of a pen, Arab Israelis and the Druze community whose members are permitted to serve in the Israeli Army were rendered second-class citizens.

Arabic was downgraded from an official language on par with Hebrew and, contrary to internatio­nal laws and UNSC resolution­s, Jewish colony was pronounced “a national value” that must be promoted and developed by the state.

Moreover, Israel can no longer assert it is a country that abides by the rule of law when it promotes the expansion and constructi­on of colonies on the West Bank deemed illegal by a slew of UN Security Council Resolution­s. Israel’s criminal laws are heavily weighted in favour of Jews with soldiers or armed colonists found guilty of killing innocent Palestinia­ns given derisory sentences or no sentence at all.

Writing in Ha’aretz under the heading “Israel, on the road to a theocracy”, Uri Misgav asserts his country’s democratic-secular identity is under attack. “The ultimate source of authority is no longer the state and its institutes. The sources of inspiratio­n are not liberal humanism, human rights, the enlightenm­ent movement and science,” he writes, while blaming Netanyahu for surroundin­g himself with religious Zionists “motivated solely by utilitaria­n considerat­ions”.

Democracy, theocracy or whatever else, to misquote the Bard, this thorny rose by any other name would smell the same. If anything, Israel is a rogue military state disguised under lashings of Made in the USA whitewash hiding under the facade of being a democracy.

■ Linda S. Heard is an award-winning British political columnist and guest television commentato­r with a focus on the Middle East.

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