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Israeli
forest named after Australian Prime Minister
Sonja
Karkar, Women for Palestine
May 23, 2007
http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?SectionID=107&ItemID=12888
There is something
worrying about a prime minister of a liberal, democratic country
who imposes values on his country-s citizens and those who
wish to become citizens, yet does not adhere to those values when
he regards it politically expedient to ignore them. This is precisely
what Prime Minister John Howard has done in accepting the "honour"
of having a forest named after him in Israel-s Negev Desert
and also the Jerusalem Prize for his support of Israel and its "values".
And John Howard is in good company: Sir Robert Menzies and Bob Hawke
- both former Australian prime ministers - also have forests in
Israel named after them, as well as a former governor-general, Sir
Zelman Cowen.
The naming
of the John Howard forest was arranged by a quasi-private land agency,
the Jewish National Fund (JNF) which deliberately discriminates
against non-Jews in its allocation of long-lease agreements. This
arrangement services Israel-s apartheid policies aimed at
bringing about the Judaisation of all of the land originally known
as historic Palestine. The Israeli government relies on the JNF
and international Zionist organizations to bring in Jews from abroad
to settle on land forcibly taken from the non-Jewish inhabitants
- a practice which is discriminatory and illegal. Already the JNF
holds 13 per cent of the land and now is currently advertising its
"Blueprint Negev" as "A Miracle in the Desert".
Only Jews will have access to the new development in keeping with
the JNF-s charter, which is focused on looking after Jews
globally.
The Negev Desert
was and is the home of the indigenous Bedouin Arabs who are now
citizens of present-day Israel. Some 80,000 have been living in
45 unrecognised villages in the southern Negev Desert and although
they have a right to vote in Israel-s national elections and
have a duty to pay taxes if they work, they have been calculatingly
ignored when the Israeli government approves of planning projects
for new Jewish communities. Their lands have been systematically
confiscated and thousands of them have been forced to live in poor
and densely populated shanty towns that is anathema to their traditional
life on the land. These shanty towns are totally neglected by the
Israeli government and the Bedouins have no access to even basic
infrastructure like water, electricity and sewage. There are no
roads or medical and welfare services and no municipal authority
to administer services. The Bedouins, therefore, have no access
to any authority that might issue permits for building and when
out of necessity they do build, they live in constant fear of having
their homes destroyed.
The similarity
of conditions between the Bedouin Arabs and black South Africans
during the Apartheid era is obvious. Like the white South Africans,
Jewish Israelis seek to preserve their privileged position in Israel
at all costs, tragically to the detriment of the non-Jewish citizens.
All Israel-s policies, therefore, are geared to ensure the
exclusivity and security of the Jewish state. Thus, mass expulsions
followed by home demolitions and razing of villages is a familiar
story in Israel just as forced removal was the modus operandi in
South Africa. Under Israel-s former Prime Minister Sharon,
a five-year plan was approved by the Israeli cabinet, to force the
Bedouins living in the unrecognised villages to leave. There was
no consultation, just a gradual increase in house demolitions, the
spraying of herbicide on crops to stop land cultivation and the
filing of eviction suits. Places were renamed and Jewish towns,
villages and cooperatives were built in place of the Bedouin villages.
The Bedouins, who once owned 94 per cent of the total land, have
had their land declared state property. They now own less than 3
per cent, and those who refuse to leave their unrecognised villages,
are called "squatters".
The JNF-
which has marketed itself in the last decade as a premier Zionist
environmental organization - plans to settle half a million Israelis
in the Negev in 25 low density housing communities over ten years.
But, what the JNF calls the last great natural reserve of Israel,
has been the subject of legal proceedings by Bedouin Arabs wanting
to reclaim their land, and John Howard-s forest sits right
in the middle of this disputed land. It would have been far more
prudent for our prime minister to decline these honours than associate
himself with a state that practices racial discrimination and human
rights abuses against its own non-Jewish citizens. After all, Howard
was at great pains to stop the Australian cricket team from playing
in Zimbabwe as a protest against Robert Mugabe-s "grubby"
regime. Equally and clearly, the JNF-s acts on behalf of Israel,
do not measure up to our Australian values of a fair go, tolerance
and inclusion. The prime minister ought to bring his values into
line with the rest of Australia, instead of associating himself
so unreservedly with Israel.
*Sonja Karkar
is the founder and president of Women
for Palestine in Melbourne, Australia.
Reference: Global
IDP Project, "Profile of Internal Displacement: Israel",
Compilation of the information available in the Global Database
of the Norwegian Refugee Council, as of 2 June 2005
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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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