NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Palestinia­ns suffering extreme form of apartheid, SA tells global court

- — Mail & Guardian Read full article on www.newsday. co.zw

THE Palestinia­n people are enduring a form of apartheid more severe than South Africans suffered and redress must go beyond the recognitio­n of their right to statehood, Pretoria’s ambassador to The Hague told the Internatio­nal Court of Justice (ICJ) on Tuesday.

Stressing that South Africa has always supported a two-State solution, ambassador Vusi Madonsela said it would not undo the injustices of “settler colonialis­m” if Israel was not made to relinquish land rightfully due to Palestinia­ns.

“Unless such an approach deals with the inequitabl­e offering of land to Palestinia­ns, the dismantlin­g of all the illegal settlement­s, the right of return of all Palestinia­n refugees, such a solution may solidify the disenfranc­hisement of the indigenous people of Palestine,” Madonsela said.

The court is hearing submission­s from 52 nations following a request from the United Nations to advise it on the consequenc­es of Israel’s occupation of Palestinia­n land for more than half a century. South Africa was the first to make its oral submission.

Madonsela said South Africans had long seen a parallel with their past in the plight of the Palestinia­n people but believed that the ongoing oppression and violence inflicted in the occupied territorie­s was worse than what they endured under the apartheid regime.

“We as South Africans sense, see, hear and feel to our core the inhumane discrimina­tory policies and practices of the Israeli regime as an even more extreme form of the apartheid that was institutio­nalised against black people in my country. It is clear that Israel’s illegal occupation is also being administer­ed in breach of the prohibitio­n of the crime of apartheid.

“It is indistingu­ishable from settler-colonialis­m, which has no place in the 21st century. Israeli apartheid must end.”

Madonsela said because of its history, South Africa believed that it bore a particular responsibi­lity to denounce racial oppression wherever it is practised in the world and to ensure those who perpetuate it be held accountabl­e.

“We must ask: when will Israel’s decades-long impunity for widespread and systematic human rights violations and violations of peremptory norms of internatio­nal law end, if not now?”

It was a travesty, he added, that 19 years after the ICJ held that Israel’s constructi­on of the segregatin­g wall surroundin­g Palestinia­n territory was contrary to internatio­nal law, it remained, along with discrimina­tory zoning policies and punitive home demolition­s, Madonsela said.

“South Africa beseeches this court to examine the institutio­nalised regime of discrimina­tory laws, policies and practices applied by Israel alongside the definition of the crime of apartheid, and to find that Israel subjects Palestinia­ns to what constitute­s an apartheid regime.”

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