Sunday Tribune

Netanyahu’s pact with extremists ‘a threat to justice, peace’

- NA’EEM JEENAH

A STATE that was founded on and perpetuate­s racism, colonial dispossess­ion and genocide has just elected its most racist, most colonialis­t and most genocidal government ever. Welcome to the Israel of Benjamin Netanyahu and Itamar Ben-gvir!

For this election, Netanyahu’s Likud party made a deal with a few smaller parties, including the religious right-wing parties such as Shas, a longterm ally of Likud, and the Religious Zionism Party, which received the third-largest number of votes.

The two leaders of the Religious Zionism Party, Itamar Ben-gvir and Bezalel Smotrich, have become notorious for their racist rhetoric, incitement to violence against Palestinia­ns, and calls for “disloyal” Israelis to be deported.

Ben-gvir is also a follower of the late Rabbi Meir Kahane, whose party, Kach, was banned in Israel for its extremist racism. He and a number of his followers were also convicted of terrorism in the US.

He admitted to bombing the Soviet mission in New York and the Soviet cultural mission in Washington, among other acts of terror. In the recent past, his US supporters have joined white supremacis­t groups.

Ben-gvir is notorious for having threatened Yitzhak Rabin two weeks before the Israeli prime minister was assassinat­ed by another Jewish extremist, for having scores of charges against him for hate speech, and for glorifying the Israeli-american who massacred 29 worshipper­s in the Ibrahimi Mosque in Hebron in 1994.

He has consistent­ly incited racists to attack Palestinia­ns, especially in Jerusalem, and last month pulled a gun on Palestinia­n protesters and told the police and his followers to shoot Palestinia­ns.

Although Netanyahu was Israel’s longest-serving prime minister, having spent 15 years in the post, and he is himself a right-winger, the new racist extremist coalition will give his government a different character to that in the past. The Religious Zionism Party expects to garner two critical ministries and has campaigned for defence, foreign affairs, justice and finance.

Netanyahu lost the last election in 2021 partly because of a plethora of corruption charges that he faced – his court case on these charges is still pending.

The alliance between Netanyahu and this new extremism – which was previously banned even in Israel – will have serious consequenc­es for Israel domestical­ly, for Palestinia­ns in the Occupied Territory (millions of whom have been refugees for more than seven decades because of Israel’s ethnic cleansing), for the region and internatio­nally.

Domestical­ly, Ben-gvir and Smotrich hope to use their leverage in the government and in parliament, the Knesset, to ingratiate themselves to Netanyahu and thus get free rein for their extremist agendas.

They hope to get the attorney-general fired, and thus have corruption charges against Netanyahu dismissed; and close the space for various freedoms, targeting especially journalist­s, Palestinia­ns and political dissidents.

But their biggest targets will be

Israel’s Palestinia­n citizens, who make up 20% of the Israeli population, and Palestinia­ns in the Occupied Palestinia­n Territory, which has been under Israeli occupation since 1967, making the occupation arguably illegal under internatio­nal law.

They and Netanyahu also agree on building new and expanding existing settlement­s in the West Bank, including in Jerusalem. All these settlement­s are illegal under internatio­nal law.

Non-jewish religious sites in Jerusalem, especially Al-aqsa Mosque, the Church of the Holy Sepulchre and other Muslim and Christian sites will likely see their integrity and independen­ce undermined and the Israeli government incrementa­lly taking control over them, as it depopulate­s East Jerusalem of its Christian and Muslim Palestinia­n residents, a process that

has already started. The Israeli government and its Jewish population refer to Israel as a “Jewish state”. Yet half of the 15million people over whom the Israeli government exerts direct control are Palestinia­n, and not Jewish.

The vast majority of these Palestinia­ns are not allowed to vote for Israel’s government; are given few rights (and even those are not respected); have lived under Israeli military, not civilian, rule for decades; and constantly face demolition of their homes, land theft, imprisonme­nt, military courts and the denial of basic rights. With the new government, these conditions will worsen, not improve.

A number of foreign government­s have expressed disquiet over Israel’s new governing coalition. Even many US politician­s who have always been pro-israel have threatened not to

engage with any Israeli ministries headed by leaders of the Religious Zionism Party. However, this is not sufficient. These same politician­s have facilitate­d the creation of Israel as an apartheid state, have supported its colonisati­on of Palestinia­n lands and lives, and have turned a blind eye to Israel’s ongoing ethnic cleansing.

They even ignore the reports of Israeli, Palestinia­n and internatio­nal human rights organisati­ons, such as Human Rights Watch and Amnesty Internatio­nal, as well as the reports of the UN Human Rights Council and successive UN Special Rapporteur­s on the Occupied Palestinia­n Territory.

For as long as Israel’s foundation­s as a racist state are not addressed, it will increasing­ly pose a threat to justice and peace of its own citizens, the region and the world.

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 ?? | EPA ?? RE-ELECTED Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (centre) and his Likud party are set to form a coalition government that includes the far-right Religious Zionism Party whose leaders, Bezalel Smotrich (left) and Itamar Ben-gvir (right) are notorious for racist rhetoric and incitement to violence against Palestinia­ns, says the writer.
| EPA RE-ELECTED Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (centre) and his Likud party are set to form a coalition government that includes the far-right Religious Zionism Party whose leaders, Bezalel Smotrich (left) and Itamar Ben-gvir (right) are notorious for racist rhetoric and incitement to violence against Palestinia­ns, says the writer.
 ?? ?? Executive Director of the Johannesbu­rg-based Afro-middle East Centre
Executive Director of the Johannesbu­rg-based Afro-middle East Centre

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