The Jerusalem Post

Thousands in TA protest planned sovereignt­y move

‘Don’t be fooled: Annexation is an economic catastroph­e for both sides. It will ruin everything we’ve worked to build together’

- • By IDAN ZONSHINE

about 2,500 people gathered in Tel aviv’s rabin square on Tuesday evening to protest the planned annexation of 30% of judea and samaria, which the government said will take place as early as july.

red and green Xs marked the ground to help the protesters maintain social distancing as police scanned the crowd for unmasked individual­s, issuing verbal warnings and an occasional fine in an attempt to curb Israel’s recent rise in coronaviru­s cases.

yair Fink, chairman of the moderate darkenu movement, which organized the event, said that “whether we want it or not, the palestinia­ns are there, and we are here – and any one-sided annexation would demolish that.”

Fink said to those seeking to paint the protest in an anti-Israel light, that “if you have such a hard time seeing palestinia­n flags, why do you want to turn us into a multi-ethnic country with a palestinia­n majority? If we go ahead with a one-sided annexation, our country will either cease to be jewish, cease to be democratic, or both at once.”

“annexation is anti-Zionist, anti-jewish, anti-democratic and anti-security,” he said. “That is not my judaism, that is not my Zionism – and we at darkenu will do everything we possibly can to prevent this, and keep Israel jewish and democratic at the same time.”

Celebritie­s, activists, entreprene­urs and security experts spoke at the protest.

actor lior ashkenazi, who regularly plays alternate prime minister Benny Gantz on the long-running satire Eretz Nehederet (A Wonderful Land) hosted the event, introducin­g the first speaker of the evening, former head of the IdF’s military Intelligen­ce directorat­e and the current head of the Institute for national security studies (Inss) amos yadlin.

yadlin explained the security-related risks of annexation, saying that Israel is “on a path to a one-state solution, for two nationalit­ies [jewish and arab]. our goal is a country that is jewish, democratic, safe, legitimate and ethical.”

“The only map we’ve seen so far which predicts what annexation will look like is a conceptual map which was a part of the Trump plan,” he said. “Trump’s plan is a plan for a two-state solution, meant as a starting point for negotiatio­ns, not as a plan for a one-sided annexation.”

some in the crowd began booing as yadlin began praising the plan’s potential security benefits for Israel, before moving back to cheering as he explained that the current map is problemati­c and does not lead to a two-state solution, and that a one-sided annexation would render such a plan strategica­lly useless.

“I can assure you, unilateral­ly annexing 30% of judea and samaria will not bring any strategic advantages – but it will bring with it grave security risks, internatio­nal pressures and failures of legitimacy and morals,” he said. “annexation will hurt the peace agreement and the security cooperatio­n with jordan and the palestinia­n authority, while drawing vital military force away from the northern front with Iran and hezbollah.”

“no country in the world other than Trump’s america supports this version of a deal,” he continued. “[What will happen] if, in five months, the democrats win the election, and we lose their support of this move?”

legendary musicians miki Gavrielov and dana Berger performed. Gavrielov played his new song, “Kav HaOni BaMea 21” (“The poverty line in the 21st Century”) and Berger played her new song, “Walla, Yofi” (“Well, Fine”), both songs teeming with pessimism and sadness at the state of the country.

reem younIs, entreprene­ur and winner of the presidenti­al badge of industrial­ism, and the only speaker of the night from the arab sector, said that annexation contains within itself a “hell: one that would affect each and every one of us for generation­s to come.”

younis spoke of the rising unemployme­nt in Israel since the coronaviru­s pandemic began spreading across the country, and its impact on Israel’s arabic citizens. “half of nazareth is unemployed,” younis said. “add to that some internal financial insecurity, poverty, violence, social unrest and geopolitic­al uncertaint­y, and lo and behold, we get hell.”

“The last decade has proven that jews and arabs can live here together, despite our political difference­s,” she said. “We’ve seen it in our hospitals, together responding to the coronaviru­s pandemic. In the rising number of arab women in the workplace. We’ve seen it in our universiti­es, in our tech start-ups in the arab sector.”

“don’t be fooled, annexation is an economic catastroph­e for both sides. It will ruin everything we’ve worked to build together,” she concluded.

loud boos were heard around the square when Fink mentioned prime minister Benjamin netanyahu’s recent request for special prime ministeria­l tax benefits in the middle of record unemployme­nt and an economic crisis.

The boos intensifie­d and morphed into chants of “Busha!” (shame) after Fink mentioned likud mK miki Zohar’s defense of the tax benefits, saying that this was an attempt to “economical­ly cripple” the prime minister.

Toward the end of his speech, Fink asked if there were any Blue and White voters in the crowd. he asked those voters to write down Blue and White chairman Benny Gantz’s number, urging protesters to message the alternate prime minister personally, saying that they voted for him, and that they oppose annexation.

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