The Jerusalem Post

Three German NGOs finance Palestinia­n group employing PFLP terrorists – report

- • By BENJAMIN WEINTHAL

German humanitari­an organizati­ons and a powerful Green Party think tank provide funds to a Palestinia­n NGO that employs convicted PFLP terrorists and advocates a boycott of the Jewish state.

The revelation­s were disclosed in an Israeli Strategic Affairs Ministry 22-page report issued last week titled: “The Money Trail: European Union Financing of Organizati­ons Promoting Boycotts against the State of Israel.”

The German organizati­ons Bread for the World, World Peace Service and the Green Party’s Heinrich Boll Foundation supply funds to Ramallah-based Palestinia­n human rights NGO Al-Haq, according to the donor section of Al-Haq’s website. World Peace Service is a German government agency.

According to the report, Al-Haq “is led by a former senior official of the EU-designated terror organizati­on the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine. Shawan Jabarin, director-general of Al-Haq, served three years in

prison for terrorist activities, and currently employs former PFLP activists, who were also incarcerat­ed due to involvemen­t in terror.”

The United States also designated the PFLP a terrorist entity.

The Strategic Affairs report noted Al-Haq “promotes boycotts against the State of Israel and has taken action against the State of Israel in the Internatio­nal Criminal Court and the United Nation Human Rights Council.”

The ministry detailed a running list of Al-Haq BDS activity against Israel. Al-Haq worked to pressure the UNHRC “to publish a ‘black list’ of companies with some connection to Judea, Samaria and east Jerusalem.”

According to the report, “Al-Haq, along with several French organizati­ons, published a report regarding a transporta­tion infrastruc­ture project, urging companies involved in the project to cancel their contracts with Israel’s authoritie­s, and to declare their refusal to take part in any project directly or indirectly contributi­ng to communitie­s within the Judea and Samaria regions. In June 2018, Al-Haq published a statement calling for sanctions against the State of Israel.”

Olga Deutsch, the vice president of the Jerusalem-based NGO Monitor organizati­on, told The Jerusalem Post that the “German government should immediatel­y stop funding the group [Al-Haq]. More importantl­y, Germany should work toward developing funding guidelines and selection criteria.”

She added that “especially government­al agencies that channel taxpayers money should not be funding Al-Haq. Under the guise of promoting human rights, Al-Haq promotes extreme rejectioni­st agendas and even had ties to the PFLP, a terrorist organizati­on designated as such by the EU.” World Peace Service declined to answer Post email and telephone calls. Deutsch urged the Boll Foundation and Bread for the World to pull the plug on their funding streams for Al-Haq.

Dr. Efraim Zuroff, the head of the Jerusalem office of the internatio­nal human rights organizati­on Simon Wiesenthal Center, told the Post that “Every possible effort should be made to halt EU funding for any organizati­on or NGO of any sorts which support boycotts of Israel. Support for boycotts of Israel are essentiall­y

a new form of antisemiti­sm, which the EU purports to oppose.”

According to the Strategic Affairs report, Al-Haq’s funding amounts €296,600 in “direct multi-year financing of organizati­ons promoting boycotts against the State of Israel.”

Al-Haq attacked Israel’s financial system, the ministry wrote, by co-publishing a report titled: “The Dangerous Liaisons of French Banks with the Israeli Occupation.” The pro-BDS report urges “French banks to withdraw direct or indirect financing of Israeli companies and banks which contribute to the developmen­t of the ‘settlement­s.”

In May, 2018, the organizati­on UK Lawyers for Israel announced that credit card companies Visa, Mastercard and American Express pulled the plug on services to Al-Haq because of a link to a terrorist organizati­on.

In addition to Jabarin, the convicted PFLP member who oversees Al-Haq, the group employs PFLP operatives who were incarcerat­ed in Israel because of terror-related activities. The Strategic Affairs Ministry listed the men as Ziyad Muhammad Shehadeh Hamedian, who works as Al-Haq’s director of training. He was held in custody in 1996 and 2005-2007 due to terrorist activities carried out on behalf of the PFLP.

The report cited Zahi AbdAl-Hadi Muhammad Jaradat, “who serves as “the director of Operations, Management and Donations, and oversees the organizati­on’s budget. During 1988-1992, Jaradat was held in custody numerous times due to terrorist activities carried out on behalf of the PFLP.”

It also mentions Majed Omar Daud Abbadi, who worked for “Al-Haq as its director of Planning and Projects until 2016. He was arrested numerous times by Israeli security forces in the early 1990s for terrorist activities carried out on behalf of the PFLP.”

PFLP terrorists murdered five Israelis in a Jerusalem synagogue in 2014. An additional seven worshipers were injured in the terrorist attack, including a rabbi who went into coma and died of his wounds months later. A total of five rabbis were killed and an Israeli police officer.

Renate Vacker, a spokeswoma­n for Bread for the World, told the Post, “We emphasize once again that we do not promote organizati­ons that challenge Israel’s right to exist, call for

boycotts of goods from Israel or express antisemiti­sm.”

She said Bread for the World does not finance Al-Haq but one project of Al-Haq that addresses the retention of human rights in the Palestinia­n territorie­s in connection with Israelis, Palestinia­ns and internatio­nal people.

In response to the terrorism allegation­s, Vacker said “like the EU, we have no strong evidence that Shawan Jabarin, director of Al Haq, has ever been a member of PFLP. There is also no evidence that he calls for violence.”

Vacker declined to say how much funding Bread for the World provided to Al-Haq between 2015 and 2019. When asked if Bread for the World plans to terminate its funding for Al-Haq, she said no.

Deutsch, from the watchdog organizati­on NGO Monitor, countered by saying “Al-Haq is a BDS group that proactivel­y engages in lawyers against Israel but more dangerousl­y is known for its ties to terror.” Al-Haq did not respond to a Post press query.

The Boll Foundation’s Ramallah office has launched antisemiti­c attacks against Israel, according to German Jews. The prominent German Jewish organizati­on – Values Initiative – urged Boll in June 2018 to discharge Bettina Marx, the head of its Ramallah-based office, because she allegedly spreads contempora­ry antisemiti­sm and defends Palestinia­n terrorism against the Jewish state.

“The willingnes­s to condemn antisemiti­sm is very high in the speeches of German decision-makers,” Dr. Elio Adler, chairman of Values Initiative, told the Post at the time. “But when it comes to putting words into action, we often see weakness. Some even a blind eye when antisemiti­sm is right in front of them. This is why we call upon the heads of the Heinrich Böll Foundation to dismiss Mrs. Marx.”

Marx blamed only the Jewish state in a Deutsche Welle article for the collapse of the peace talks between the Palestinia­ns and Israel. •

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