Apartheid: Israelis adopt
what South Africa dropped
By John Dugard
11/29/06 "AJC" -- --
Former President Jimmy Carter's new
book, "Palestine: Peace Not Apartheid," is igniting
controversy for its allegation that Israel practices a
form of apartheid.
As a South African and former anti-apartheid advocate
who visits the Palestinian territories regularly to
assess the human rights situation for the U.N. Human
Rights Council, the comparison to South African
apartheid is of special interest to me.
On the face of it, the two regimes are very different.
Apartheid was a system of institutionalized racial
discrimination that the white minority in South Africa
employed to maintain power over the black majority. It
was characterized by the denial of political rights to
blacks, the fragmentation of the country into white
areas and black areas (called Bantustans) and by the
imposition on blacks of restrictive measures designed to
achieve white superiority, racial separation and white
security.
The "pass system," which sought to prevent the free
movement of blacks and to restrict their entry to the
cities, was rigorously enforced. Blacks were forcibly
"relocated," and they were denied access to most public
amenities and to many forms of employment. The system
was enforced by a brutal security apparatus in which
torture played a significant role.
The Palestinian territories — East Jerusalem, the West
Bank and Gaza — have been under Israeli military
occupation since 1967. Although military occupation is
tolerated and regulated by international law, it is
considered an undesirable regime that should be ended as
soon as possible. The United Nations for nearly 40 years
has condemned Israel's military occupation, together
with colonialism and apartheid, as contrary to the
international public order.
In principle, the purpose of military occupation is
different from that of apartheid. It is not designed as
a long-term oppressive regime but as an interim measure
that maintains law and order in a territory following an
armed conflict and pending a peace settlement. But this
is not the nature of the Israeli occupation of
Palestine. Since 1967 Israel has imposed its control
over the Palestinian territories in the manner of a
colonizing power, under the guise of occupation. It has
permanently seized the territories' most desirable parts
— the holy sites in East Jerusalem, Hebron and Bethlehem
and the fertile agricultural lands along the western
border and in the Jordan Valley — and settled its own
Jewish "colonists" throughout the land.
Israel's occupation of the Palestinian territories has
many features of colonization. At the same time it has
many of the worst characteristics of apartheid. The West
Bank has been fragmented into three areas — north (Jenin
and Nablus), center (Ramallah) and south (Hebron) —
which increasingly resemble the Bantustans of South
Africa.
Restrictions on freedom of movement imposed by a rigid
permit system enforced by some 520 checkpoints and
roadblocks resemble, but in severity go well beyond,
apartheid's "pass system." And the security apparatus is
reminiscent of that of apartheid, with more than 10,000
Palestinians in Israeli prisons and frequent allegations
of torture and cruel treatment.
Many aspects of Israel's occupation surpass those of the
apartheid regime. Israel's large-scale destruction of
Palestinian homes, leveling of agricultural lands,
military incursions and targeted assassinations of
Palestinians far exceed any similar practices in
apartheid South Africa. No wall was ever built to
separate blacks and whites.
Following the worldwide anti-apartheid movement, one
might expect a similarly concerted international effort
united in opposition to Israel's abhorrent treatment of
the Palestinians. Instead one finds an international
community divided between the West and the rest of the
world. The Security Council is prevented from taking
action because of the U.S. veto and European Union
abstinence. And the United States and the European
Union, acting in collusion with the United Nations and
the Russian Federation, have in effect imposed economic
sanctions on the Palestinian people for having, by
democratic means, elected a government deemed
unacceptable to Israel and the West. Forgotten is the
commitment to putting an end to occupation, colonization
and apartheid.
In these circumstances, the United States should not be
surprised if the rest of the world begins to lose faith
in its commitment to human rights. Some Americans —
rightly — complain that other countries are unconcerned
about Sudan's violence-torn Darfur region and similar
situations in the world. But while the United States
itself maintains a double standard with respect to
Palestine it cannot expect cooperation from others in
the struggle for human rights.
John Dugard is a South African law professor teaching in
the Netherlands. He is currently Special Rapporteur
(reporter) on Palestine to the United Nations Human
Rights Council.
© 2006 The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
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