Israel's Ethnic Cleansing Of Its Parliament
15 March 2016By Jonathan Cook in
Nazareth
Benjamin Netanyhu's government is drafting legislation that ought to resolve
in observers' minds the question of whether Israel is the democracy it proudly
claims to be. The bill empowers a three-quarters majority of the parliament to
oust a sitting MP.
It breathes new life into the phrase ''tyranny of the majority''. But in this
case, the majority will be Jewish MPs oppressing their Palestinian colleagues.
Netanyahu has presented the bill as a necessary response to the recent actions
of three MPs from the Balad faction of the Joint List, a coalition of parties
representing the often-overlooked fifth of Israel's population who are
Palestinian citizens.
He claims the MPs ''sided with terror'' this month when they visited Palestinian
families in occupied East Jerusalem who have been waiting many months for
Israel to return relatives' bodies.
The 11 dead are among those alleged to have carried out what are termed
''lone-wolf'' attacks, part of a recent wave of Palestinian unrest. Fearful of
more protests, Israel has demanded that the families bury the bodies in
secret, without autopsies, and in plots outside Jerusalem.
There is an urgent moral and political issue about Israel using bodies as
bargaining chips to encourage Palestinian obedience towards its illegal
occupation.
But the three Palestinian MPs also believed they were under an obligation to
help the families by adding to the pressure on the Netanyahu government to
return the bodies.
Israel's Palestinian minority has a severely degraded form of citizenship, but
it enjoys more rights than Palestinians living under occupation.
When a video of their meeting the families was posted online, however, the
Israeli right seized on the chance to defame the MPs. A parliamentary ''ethics''
committee comprising the main Jewish parties suspended the three MPs for
several months. Now they face losing their seats.
This is part of a clear trend. Late last year the government outlawed the
northern Islamic Movement, a popular extra-parliamentary political, religious
and welfare organisation.
Despite Netanyahu's statements that the movement was linked to ''terror'', leaks
to the Israeli media showed his intelligence chiefs had advised him weeks
before the ban that there was no evidence to support such accusations.
At the time many Palestinians in Israel suspected Netanyahu would soon turn
his sights on the Palestinian parties in the parliament. And so he has.
Balad, which decries Israel's status as a Jewish state and noisily campaigns
for democratic reform, was always likely to be top of his list.
In every recent general election, an election committee dominated by the
Jewish parties has banned Balad or its leaders from standing, only to see the
Israeli courts reverse the decision.
Now Netanyahu is legislating the expulsion of Balad and throwing down a
gauntlet to the courts.
It won't end there. If Balad is unseated, the participation of the other Joint
List factions will be untenable. In effect, the Israeli right is seeking to
ethnically cleanse the parliament.
For those who doubt such intentions, consider that two years ago the
government raised the electoral threshold for entry to the parliament
specifically to exclude the Palestinian factions.
The intention was to empty the parliament of its Palestinian representatives.
But these factions put aside their historic differences to create the Joint
List.
Netanyahu, who had hoped to see the back of the Palestinian parties at last
year's general election, inadvertently transformed them into the third biggest
party. That was the context for his now-infamous warning during the campaign
that ''the Arabs are coming out in droves to vote''.
The current crackdown on Palestinian parties may finally burst the simplistic
assumption – widely accepted in the west – that Israel is a democracy – and
not least because its Palestinian minority has the vote.
This argument was always deeply misguided. After Israel's creation in 1948,
officials gave citizenship and the vote to the few Palestinians remaining
inside the new borders precisely because they were a small and weak minority.
In exiling 80 per cent of Palestinians from their homeland, Israel effectively
rigged its national electoral constituency to ensure there would be a huge
Jewish majority in perpetuity.
A Palestinian MP, Ahmed Tibi, summed it up neatly. Israel, he said, was a
democratic state for Jews, and a Jewish state for its Palestinian citizens.
In truth, the vote of Palestinian citizens was only ever meant as
window-dressing. David Ben Gurion, Israel's first prime minister, assumed that
the rump Palestinian population would be swamped by Jewish immigrants flooding
into the new state.
He miscalculated. The Palestinian minority had a far higher birth rate and
maintained its 20 per cent proportion of the population.
None of that would matter had the Palestinian representatives quietly accepted
their position as shop-window mannequins.
But in recent years, as Mahmoud Abbas' Palestinian Authority has grown ever
weaker, confined to small enclaves of the West Bank, the Palestinian MPs in
Israel have taken up some of the slack.
That was why the Balad MPs met the Jerusalem families. The PA, barred by
Israel from East Jerusalem, has been looking on helplessly as the families
have been desperately trying to get their loved ones' bodies back.
This month Mr Netanyahu said he would surround Israel with walls to keep out
the neighbourhood's ''wild beasts''. In his view, there are also wild beasts to
be found in Israel's parliament – and he is ready to erect walls to keep them
out too.
Jonathan Cook won the Martha Gellhorn Special Prize for Journalism. His
latest books are ''Israel and the Clash of Civilisations: Iraq, Iran and the
Plan to Remake the Middle East'' (Pluto Press) and ''Disappearing Palestine:
Israel's Experiments in Human Despair'' (Zed Books). His website is
www.jonathan-cook.net.
©
EsinIslam.Com
Add Comments