The Jerusalem Post

Approval of bill allowing towns to set up acceptance committees causes uproar

Rights groups say proposed law is racist and undemocrat­ic

- • By MICHAEL STARR

a private bill approved by the ministeria­l Legislativ­e committee to expand acceptance committees in west Bank towns and larger communitie­s is racist and undemocrat­ic, human-rights organizati­ons said sunday.

the amendment to the 2011 law that allows towns to screen aspiring applicants would expand the applicabil­ity of the legislatio­n from townships with 400 households to those with up to 1,000 households. the current law applies to “community settlement­s” in the negev and the Galilee. the private bill submitted by otzma yehudit mK yitzhak Kroizer in january would include the emek Iron, south Hebron Hills, Lachish and adullam regions. a similar government bill will also be considered by the Knesset.

adalah – the Legal center for arab minority Rights in Israel said the bill was part of a series of measures to implement “racial segregatio­n” and promote the annexation of judea and samaria.

the law does not allow acceptance committees to reject resident candidates “for reasons of race, religion, gender, nationalit­y, disability, class, age, parentage, sexual orientatio­n, country of origin, views or party political affiliatio­n,” it said.

provisions allowing applicants deemed unsuitable for the social fabric or compatibil­ity with the social structure of the town effectivel­y sanction discrimina­tion, adalah said.

“the acceptance committee Law is already used to regulate a mechanism of racial segregatio­n and is intended to implement the value of jewish settlement that the nation state Law enshrines as a supreme principle,” adalah’s dr. suhad Bashara said in a statement. “the government’s documents openly reveal that the deepening of racism is now Israel’s official policy, and that it wishes to act to annex the occupied territorie­s by applying the law.”

the applicatio­n of Israeli law in the disputed territorie­s constitute­d an act of annexation, adalah said.

the associatio­n for civil Rights in Israel (acRI) said the Knesset was not authorized to enact a law for west Bank settlement­s, and expansion of the law is undemocrat­ic.

the current law is already controvers­ial and was supposed to apply to small communitie­s with unique characteri­stics, such as kibbutzim, moshavim and their expanded neighborho­ods, it said.

“In a democratic country, every citizen has the right to live wherever they want, as part of human dignity, and

subjecting this right to an invasive and prying selection process requires thorough justificat­ion,” ACRI said.

There was no justificat­ion for acceptance committees in normal suburban areas, it said, adding that the existence of these screening procedures would discourage many from seeking residency in these regions.

The provisions of the bill were too broad and vague, and they allow for arbitrarin­ess and discrimina­tion, whether open or hidden, conscious or unconsciou­s, ACRI said.

Kroizer said he welcomed the passing of the bill in the ministeria­l committee, adding that the “bill will help strengthen the expansion of towns in the South and North, cut down on bureaucrac­y and strengthen settlement.”

The law was highly controvers­ial at the time of its passing in 2011. Critics alleged that the bill sought to prevent Arab-Israelis from living in communitie­s with a Jewish majority.

Sunday’s amendment said the goal of the legislatio­n was to decentrali­ze the population and strengthen the periphery by giving residents the means of maintainin­g their communal and rural ways of life.

The bill’s explanator­y notes said the draft law had failed to provide these benefits to communitie­s in the other periphery areas in Israel, which would be rectified by the amendment.

The Jerusalem Post.

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 ?? YITZHAK KROIZER (Yonatan Sindel/Flash90) ??
YITZHAK KROIZER (Yonatan Sindel/Flash90)

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