Alex Ryvchin 31 January 2019
Amnesty International has unveiled a new campaign to
pressure digital tourism companies such as Booking.com, Expedia, Airbnb and
TripAdvisor to delist properties held by Israelis living in the West Bank,
and calling on governments to pass legislation that would result in the total
boycott of those living in Israeli communities in Judea and Samaria .
It is just the latest attack in a long war waged by
Amnesty and other once-respectable human rights organisations intent on turning
public opinion against Israel and bringing about its economic and political
isolation.
The origins of this lie in an infamous
non-governmental organisations forum of the UN World Conference against Racism
held in Durban, South Africa, in September 2001. The conference lives long in
the memory for the appalling racism that marred an event convened for the very
purpose of combating such conduct. Posters displayed Jewish caricatures and
Nazi icons, and participants circulated copies of the anti-Semitic
fabrication, Protocols of the Elders of Zion. US congressman Tom
Lantos called it “the most sickening display of hate for Jews since the Nazi
period”. The UN’s human rights commissioner, Mary Robinson, told the BBC “there
was a horrible anti-Semitism present”.
In 2002, following an Israeli military operation in
the West Bank city of Jenin in response to the Passover massacre in Netanya, in
which a Palestinian suicide bomber murdered 30 civilians during a celebratory
feast, Amnesty accused Israel of carrying out war crimes and massacres of
Palestinian civilians. The allegations, promptly reported by the BBC and other
news outlets, placed the Palestinian civilian death toll at more than 500. But
52 Palestinians died, the majority of them combatants, along with 23 Israeli
soldiers, in fierce urban combat.
False allegations of a massacre made by Amnesty
lubricated the machinery of the political campaign against Israel, leading to
street protests, campus hearings, reams of condemnations and anti-Israel
resolutions across civil society and government.
In 2015, Amnesty was forced into a humiliating
admission that it had lobbied the Australian government to accept murderous
Lindt Cafe terrorist Man Haron Monis as a genuine refugee.
Last April, Amnesty’s secretary-general called
Israel’s democratically elected government “rogue”. In 2010, the head of its
Finnish branch called Israel a “scum state”. Its British campaign manager has
likened Israel to Islamic State and been condemned for his attacks on Jewish
parliamentarians.
Perhaps as revealing as Amnesty’s fixation on Jews
living on the “wrong” side of a long-defunct armistice line has been its
relative silence on the disturbing trend of rising anti-Semitism. In April
2015, Amnesty UK rejected an initiative to “campaign against anti-semitism in
the UK”, as well as “lobby the UK government to tackle the rise in anti-Semitic
attacks in Britain” and “monitor anti-Semitism closely”. It was the only
proposed resolution at the annual general meeting that was not adopted.
The skewed morality revealed by Amnesty’s obsession
with Israel reflects a broader decline in the non-governmental sector. Whereas
groups such as Amnesty and Human Rights Watch once led the struggle against
Soviet tyranny and actively defended the rights of political prisoners, today
they serve an increasingly narrow political agenda, one aligned with
anti-Western, anti-capitalist forces. Amnesty’s apparent contempt for Israel,
its ho-hum attitude to anti-Semitism, and its inordinate condemnations of
democracies all stem from this malaise.
Of course, the settlements are a point of conflict
between Israelis and Palestinians. Indeed, the parties identified settlements
as a final status issue in the historic Oslo Accords signed between the
Palestine Liberation Organisation and Israel in 1993. It was agreed that the
questions of which settlements will be annexed to Israel and which will be
dismantled or transferred to Palestinian sovereignty are to be resolved in
direct negotiations in the context of a final peace agreement. But the pursuit
of peace is not aided by Amnesty’s political manoeuvres and attempts to isolate
Israel, which perpetuate conflict by other means.
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