Ben Gurion University
Ben Gurion University - Anti-Israel Crusader Neve
Gordon (Dept of Political Science) claims that the Israeli democracy
is dead because the Knesset defends Israel, writing in the
anti-Semitic "Counterpunch" web magazine
Israeli legislators realise, though, that
in order to quash all internal resistance, the destruction of the
rights groups will not be enough. Their ultimate target is the High
Court of Justice, the only institution that still has the power and
authority to defend democratic practices.
Their strategy, it appears, is to wait
until the Court annuls the new laws and then to use the public's
dismay with the Court's decisions to limit the Court's authority
through legislation, thus making it impossible for judges to cancel
unconstitutional laws. Once the High Court's authority is severely
hamstringed, the road will be paved for right-wing Knesset members
to do as they wish. The process leading to the demise of Israeli
democracy may be slow, but the direction in which the country is
going is perfectly clear.
http://counterpunch.com/gordon07152011.html
Israel's Growing Crackdown
Knesset Passes Bill Making It Illegal to Advocate Boycotts of
Goods Produced in Israeli Settlements
By NEVE GORDON
Weekend Edition - July 15 - 17, 2011
Political change is slow. One doesn't go to
sleep in a democracy and wake up in a fascist regime. The citizens
of Egypt and Tunisia can attest to the fact that the opposite is
also true: dictatorship does not become democracy overnight.
Any political change of
such magnitude is the result of a lot of hard work and is always
incremental, indicating that there really is no single historical
event that one can claim as the moment of conversion.
There are, however,
significant events that serve as historical milestones.
The suicide of Mohamed
Bouazizi, who doused himself in gasoline and set himself on fire
when police confiscated his produce because he did not have the
necessary permits, will be remembered as the spark that ignited the
Tunisian revolution, and perhaps even the regional social uprisings
now called the Arab Awakening. Similarly, the massive gatherings in
Tahrir Square will probably be seen as the straw that broke the
camel's back, setting in motion a slow process of Egyptian
democratisation.
In Israel, it might very
well be that the Boycott Bill, which the Knesset approved by a vote
of 47 to 38, will also be remembered as a historic landmark.
Ironically, the bill
itself is likely to be inconsequential. It stipulates that any
person who initiates, promotes or publishes material that might
serve as grounds for imposing a boycott on Israel or the Jewish
settlements in the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem is
committing an offence. If found "guilty" of such an offence, that
person may be ordered to compensate parties economically affected by
the boycott, including reparations of 30,000 Israeli shekels
($8,700) without an obligation on the part of the plaintiffs to
prove damages.
The bill's objective is
to defend Israel's settlement project and other policies that
contravene international human rights law against non-violent
mobilisation aimed at putting an end to these policies.
The Knesset's legal
advisor, Eyal Yinon, said that the bill "damages the core of
Israel's freedom of political expression" and that it would be
difficult for him to defend the law in the High Court of Justice
since it contradicts Israel's basic law of "Human Dignity and
Liberty". Given Yinon's statement, and the fact that Israeli rights
organisations have already filed a petition to the High Court
arguing that the bill is anti democratic, there is a good chance
that the Boycott Bill's life will be extremely short.
And yet this law should
still be considered as a turning point. Not because of what the bill
does, but because of what it represents.
After hours of debate in
the Israeli Knesset, the choice was clear. On one side was Israel's
settlement project and rights-abusive policies, and on the other
side was freedom of speech, a basic pillar of democracy. The fact
that the majority of Israel's legislators decided to support the
bill plainly demonstrates that they are willing to demolish Israeli
democracy for the sake of holding onto the West Bank and East
Jerusalem.
The onslaught on
democracy has been incremental. The Boycott Bill was merely a
defining moment, preceded by the Nakba and Acceptance Committee
laws, and will likely be followed by the passing of a slate of laws
aimed at destroying Israeli human rights organisations. These laws
will be voted upon in the coming months, and, given the composition
of the Israeli Knesset, it is extremely likely that all of them will
pass.
Israeli legislators
realise, though, that in order to quash all internal resistance, the
destruction of the rights groups will not be enough. Their ultimate
target is the High Court of Justice, the only institution that still
has the power and authority to defend democratic practices.
Their strategy, it
appears, is to wait until the Court annuls the new laws and then to
use the public's dismay with the Court's decisions to limit the
Court's authority through legislation, thus making it impossible for
judges to cancel unconstitutional laws. Once the High Court's
authority is severely hamstringed, the road will be paved for
right-wing Knesset members to do as they wish. The process leading
to the demise of Israeli democracy may be slow, but the direction in
which the country is going is perfectly clear.
Neve Gordon
is an Israeli activist and
the author of and author of
Israel's Occupation
(University of California Press, 2008).
He can be contacted through his website
www.israelsoccupation.info
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