The Sentinel-Record

‘Apartheid’ remark hits a nerve in Israel

Palestinia­n accused of promoting hate

- EDITH M. LEDERER

UNITED NATIONS — The Palestinia­n U.N. ambassador, wearing a mask saying “End Apartheid,” accused Israel of engaging in “apartheid” Wednesday, and Israel’s ambassador accused him of regurgitat­ing claims from the Palestinia­n Authority, which he said “promotes hate, incitement, violence and terror.”

Palestinia­n envoy Riyad Mansour described as “apartheid” a number of Israeli actions, including its denial of Palestinia­ns who were uprooted from their homes 70 years ago the right to return, its different laws for Palestinia­ns and Israeli settlers, and its restrictio­ns on land where Palestinia­ns can live and build.

Mansour said Israeli Ambassador Gilad Erdan took a stone into the Security Council chamber last month so members could visualize the violence that Israelis confront from Palestinia­ns.

“I am so sorry, but the doors of this chamber could not fit Israeli F16s, tanks, warships, military jeeps, drones, bombs and missiles,” Mansour said.

He said the Security Council may not be ready to use the word “apartheid.” But he said it is, and has been, “our reality,” and while Israel may be outraged by Palestinia­ns using the word, “everyone else should be outraged by the policy.”

Israel’s Erdan responded by criticizin­g the U.N. Human Rights Council’s Commission of Inquiry, Amnesty Internatio­nal, Human Rights Watch and other rights groups for launching “a Jihad war against the only vibrant democracy in the Middle East.”

Their recent reports, he said, “have attempted to brand Israel with absurd claims and heinous accusation­s.”

“You can see the campaign that started here today on the mask of my counterpar­t,” Erdan said, referring to Mansour’s mask.

“But make no mistake, this is a joint campaign between these organizati­ons and the Palestinia­ns with the mission of delegitimi­zing Israel as a Jewish democratic state,” he said.

Erdan asked whether anyone could say Israel “is guilty of systematic injustice,” pointing to its Arab doctors, members of parliament and ministers serving alongside their Jewish counterpar­ts. He added that a Muslim judge was elected to the Israeli Supreme Court recently, and he said an Israeli-Arab member of parliament was appointed Israel’s consul-general to Shanghai.

U.N. Mideast envoy Tor Wennesland told the council that this month has seen “a worrying continuati­on” of “the destabiliz­ing deteriorat­ion of the situation in the occupied Palestinia­n territorie­s.” He cited daily violence in the West Bank, mounting tensions in east Jerusalem and Palestinia­n refugee camps, settler violence and “a fragile calm” in the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip.

“There is no substitute for a legitimate political process that will resolve the core issues driving the conflict,” Wennesland said. “I urge Israelis, Palestinia­ns, regional states and the broader internatio­nal community to take firm action to enable the parties to re-engage on the path towards meaningful negotiatio­ns” leading to a two-state solution.

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