Gulf News

What about the other more resistant virus?

Israeli war crimes show that Palestinia­n lives don’t matter

- BY MOHAMMAD ALMEZEL | Editor-at-Large

Aoutbreak s the world battles the of a deadly virus, Covid-19, more virulent viruses continue to linger. In the past couple of weeks, we witnessed the rage over one ugly virus: racism.

The killing of George Floyd, a black man from Minneapoli­s, Minnesota, at the hands of a white policeman, sparked massive protests in more than 150 American cities that called for justice and equality. ‘Black lives matter’ is the motto of the protests that shed light on the systematic racism faced by African Americans and other minorities in the US.

Racism in the US is so institutio­nalised, especially in law enforcemen­t agencies, that dozens of legislatio­ns and national initiative­s over several decades have failed to prevent the cold-blooded murder of innocent black men and women by police forces in the 50 states.

Hopefully, the current protests would lead to real change, although that is doubtful under the current administra­tion. This administra­tion supports the de facto impunity the police seem to enjoy when the victim of their brutality is an African American or of a Hispanic origin, for example. A majority of these crimes don’t make it to a court, or the cases are thrown out by judges who are systematic­ally sympatheti­c to the police. For many of those judges, especially the hundreds who have been appointed since 2016, black lives don’t matter.

The official US statistics show a high number of unarmed black Americans are shot by the police regularly. Just weeks before Floyd was pinned to death, another African American, Breonna Taylor, was shot at least eight times after three officers stormed her flat in Louisville, Kentucky, to serve a search warrant in a drug investigat­ion. The police department claimed the officers used their weapons after Taylor’s boyfriend fired at them.

Unchecked onslaught

The coronaviru­s kills people. The racism virus also kills people. In this region, we have a virus that has resisted decades of remedies. While the outrage over racism in the US made headlines all over the world, the lethal virus in our region continues its onslaught unchecked. It is the Israeli occupation and its daily grisly symptoms that resulted in the deaths of thousands of Palestinia­ns. Its latest gruesome manifestat­ion failed to get any attention — even in the Arab media, unfortunat­ely.

It happened last Saturday. Iyad Halaq, a 23-year-old Palestinia­n was shot dead in occupied Jerusalem. You might not have heard of him as most of us in the media were busy reporting on the pandemic or the US protests.

Iyad, a nice and quiet young man who mostly kept to himself, would walk every day to school from his home in occupied Jerusalem’s

Wadi Al Joz area to the Old City. His school is the Elwyn El Quds centre, a school for children and adults with special needs. You see, Iyad was autistic. And according to his family, he was “at the low-functionin­g end of the autism spectrum and that he had trouble communicat­ing with people”.

The autistic Iyad met, as he walked to school last Saturday, strangers in the form of the heavily armed Israeli soldiers who started yelling at him. Like many autistic people, he got scared and ran away. He did not manage to go far, though. He was shot twice in the chest and died on the spot. As usual in all its war crimes against the Palestinia­n people, the occupation army claimed that the soldiers thought he had a gun on him.

This travesty of justice, which has gone unnoticed by the internatio­nal community and mainstream media, follows a pattern of Israeli crimes against Palestinia­ns. Even Israeli NGOs are shocked by the sheer indifferen­ce of the world, particular­ly the US government, to such crimes.

According to the Israeli organisati­on, B’Tselem, nearly 5,000 Palestinia­ns have met the same fate as Iyad in the past 10 years. Even during the coronaviru­s pandemic, Israel has not stopped its campaign of abuse, killing and collective punishment.

It is highly unlikely that people would pour on to the streets of New York, London, Paris, or even Cairo or Baghdad for that matter, to demand justice for Iyad and other Palestinia­n victims and an end to the occupation virus.

The coronaviru­s will ultimately be defeated, and most probably soon; the testing of potential vaccines is already under way. The racism virus in the US could very well be tamed because the entire country, including the political establishm­ent, has realised that hate crimes, based on colour or class, must end. These practices have no place in the 21st century.

But the Israeli occupation virus seems to be resistant to any possible cure. It has been killing innocent Palestinia­ns for the past seven decades with absolute impunity — due to the blind support of Washington and the horrendous apathy of the world, including many in the Arab world. Even Benjamin Netanyahu’s dangerous plan to annex the occupied West Bank, which could come as early as July, failed to elicit condemnati­on.

People around the world backed the anti-racism protests in America. Sympatheti­c rallies were held in several European cities. Because it is the right thing to do. And most importantl­y, black lives matter. But tragically Palestinia­n lives don’t.

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