The Independent on Saturday

Strike threat to Israel-linked ships

- DUNCAN GUY duncan.guy@inl.co.za

PRO-Palestinia­n groups have called on South Africa to sever ties with Israel and for people to shun companies dealing with Israel.

As the Middle East woke to a ceasefire yesterday, pro-Palestinia­n protesters gathered across the water from an Israeli-owned vessel docked in Durban Harbour to voice their disdain for Israel’s actions in the fighting this month.

The protest was prompted by the arrival of the Zim Shanghai in Durban. Word had it among the protesters its cargo was labelled as “hazardous” and it was being offloaded.

The South African Transport and Allied Workers Union had announced its members would refuse to offload the vessel in a show of sympathy for the Palestinia­n victims of Israeli airstrikes.

According to reports, the announceme­nt came days after similar action was taken by dockworker­s in the Italian city of Livorno who refused to load an arms shipment on a ship belonging to the same Israeli company, Zim Integrated Shipping.

Transnet said it had contingenc­y measures in place at the port, and the vessel was “currently being attended to”.

A host of organisati­ons supported the protest, the most visible being the SA Federation of Trade Unions, the SA Students Congress, People Against Oppression, the South Durban Community Environmen­tal Alliance (SDCEA), Abahlali baseMjondo­lo and the SA Boycott, Divest, Sanction Middle East Coalition.

Addressing participan­ts, Na’eem Jeenah, executive director of the Middle-East Centre, called for the South African government to cut ties with Israel and for people to boycott South African companies linked to or doing business with Israel.

Jeenah called on South Africa to support all Palestinia­n resistance and welcomed the ceasefire.

Abahlali baseMjondo­lo provincial spokespers­on Thapelo Mohapi said the informal settlement residents’ movement “feels the same oppression of being evicted by the state”.

A legal battle over Israeli settlers’ claims to land in East Jerusalem triggered the recent trouble.

Sasco provincial chairperso­n Thabo Tsheme said his organisati­on was in solidarity with the people of Palestine because children there were deprived of education because they were not afforded equal rights.

“We have heard some don’t have any education at all, others only for four hours a week.”

The SDCEA’s Desmond D’Sa said South Africans had to help Palestinia­ns by standing up like they had done to apartheid.

“We want to say to Israel, and especially Netanyahu supporters, that it will never be acceptable to take away people’s land.”

He called for Israel to face internatio­nal justice for genocide.

Watching the start of the protest at a pier protruding into the harbour were a number of homeless people who live there, among them Gilbert Esterhuize­n and Fazzil Williams, who did not know about the Middle East issues.

“We are on the streets, we do not hear news. But no one is worried about the homeless.”

One protester offered a jacket to a young homeless boy who had been dressed in a black plastic refuse bag.

 ?? | SHELLEY KJONSTAD ?? THE Palestinia­n flag is displayed among posters protesting against Israel’s part in the Middle East fighting this month. African News Agency (ANA)
| SHELLEY KJONSTAD THE Palestinia­n flag is displayed among posters protesting against Israel’s part in the Middle East fighting this month. African News Agency (ANA)
 ?? | DUNCAN GUY ?? HOMELESS Gilbert Esterhuize­n and Fazzil Williams, who learned about the Middle East crisis when the pro-Palestinia­n protest took place.
| DUNCAN GUY HOMELESS Gilbert Esterhuize­n and Fazzil Williams, who learned about the Middle East crisis when the pro-Palestinia­n protest took place.

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