country:south africa

  • Chomsky : pour 40% de la population américaine, le réchauffement climatique n’est pas un problème, puisque de toute façon le Christ sera de retour dans quelques décennies… (je note cette remarque presque amusante, mais ce n’est qu’un détail parmi d’autres longues considérations.)

    Trump in the White House : An Interview With Noam Chomsky
    http://www.truth-out.org/opinion/item/38360-trump-in-the-white-house-an-interview-with-noam-chomsky

    According to current information, Trump broke all records in the support he received from white voters, working class and lower middle class, particularly in the $50,000 to $90,000 income range, rural and suburban, primarily those without college education. These groups share the anger throughout the West at the centrist establishment, revealed as well in the unanticipated Brexit vote and the collapse of centrist parties in continental Europe. [Many of] the angry and disaffected are victims of the neoliberal policies of the past generation, the policies described in congressional testimony by Fed chair Alan Greenspan — “St. Alan,” as he was called reverentially by the economics profession and other admirers until the miraculous economy he was supervising crashed in 2007-2008, threatening to bring the whole world economy down with it. As Greenspan explained during his glory days, his successes in economic management were based substantially on “growing worker insecurity.” Intimidated working people would not ask for higher wages, benefits and security, but would be satisfied with the stagnating wages and reduced benefits that signal a healthy economy by neoliberal standards.

    Working people, who have been the subjects of these experiments in economic theory, are not particularly happy about the outcome. They are not, for example, overjoyed at the fact that in 2007, at the peak of the neoliberal miracle, real wages for nonsupervisory workers were lower than they had been years earlier, or that real wages for male workers are about at 1960s levels while spectacular gains have gone to the pockets of a very few at the top, disproportionately a fraction of 1%. Not the result of market forces, achievement or merit, but rather of definite policy decisions, matters reviewed carefully by economist Dean Baker in recently published work.

    The fate of the minimum wage illustrates what has been happening. Through the periods of high and egalitarian growth in the ’50s and ’60s, the minimum wage — which sets a floor for other wages — tracked productivity. That ended with the onset of neoliberal doctrine. Since then, the minimum wage has stagnated (in real value). Had it continued as before, it would probably be close to $20 per hour. Today, it is considered a political revolution to raise it to $15.

    With all the talk of near-full employment today, labor force participation remains below the earlier norm. And for working people, there is a great difference between a steady job in manufacturing with union wages and benefits, as in earlier years, and a temporary job with little security in some service profession. Apart from wages, benefits and security, there is a loss of dignity, of hope for the future, of a sense that this is a world in which I belong and play a worthwhile role.

    […]

    There are other factors in Trump’s success. Comparative studies show that doctrines of white supremacy have had an even more powerful grip on American culture than in South Africa, and it’s no secret that the white population is declining. In a decade or two, whites are projected to be a minority of the work force, and not too much later, a minority of the population. The traditional conservative culture is also perceived as under attack by the successes of identity politics, regarded as the province of elites who have only contempt for the ’’hard-working, patriotic, church-going [white] Americans with real family values’’ who see their familiar country as disappearing before their eyes.

    One of the difficulties in raising public concern over the very severe threats of global warming is that 40 percent of the US population does not see why it is a problem, since Christ is returning in a few decades. About the same percentage believe that the world was created a few thousand years ago. If science conflicts with the Bible, so much the worse for science. It would be hard to find an analogue in other societies.

  • The Poachers Pipeline - Al Jazeera English
    http://www.aljazeera.com/investigations/the-poachers-pipeline

    Al Jazeera’s Investigative Unit exposes the people and powers behind the illegal trade of one of the world’s most valuable substances - rhino horn. In The Poachers Pipeline, Al Jazeera goes undercover to penetrate the criminal pipelines that traffic horn, from a fresh kill in Africa to a sale in Asia.

    Ground zero for the rhino crisis is South Africa’s Kruger National Park - where poachers kill two or three rhino every night. They hack off the horns, sometimes while the animal is still alive, and within hours the illicit goods are in the hands of a trafficker. Our undercover reporter, made contact with a senior trafficker - known by law enforcement as a level 3 exporter - who shares his secrets on how to get horn out of Africa and how to bribe his way out of trouble. He even claims to have a powerful contact in South Africa’s state security.

    The rhino horn trade is made possible by #corruption at every step of the chain and by an insatiable demand that goes to the very top of Chinese society.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JMguWY99q6s

    #rhino #trafic #documentaire #enquête #afrique_du_sud

  • The Bonds That Tie: Changing South Africa’s public culture | Daily Maverick
    http://www.dailymaverick.co.za/opinionista/2016-11-13-the-bonds-that-tie-changing-south-africas-public-culture

    Patrick Bond has published a “rebuttal” of my short article in the Daily Maverick from October 16, 2016. This is a very welcome development. His initial response was to demand an apology and when this was not forthcoming to report the Daily Maverick to the Press Council. In other words, rather than engage in debate, he sought to shut it down. It is a gesture that reveals something about South Africa’s public culture.

    The ANC is paying a heavy price for its intolerance of criticism and its disdain of independent thought. The lack of real debate in South Africa is also getting in the way of addressing South Africa’s post-colonial challenges.

    In the context of the spurious charges against Pravin Gordhan, Ivan Pillay and Oupa Magashula and other senior public servants, a progressive social movement is emerging. It is focused on the defence of public institutions and of public officials from political interference. It promises to unsettle South Africa’s public culture.

    #afrique_du_sud

  • SACS - the first 6200 km South Atlantic Cable System

    The SACS submarine cable that will be built by NEC will connect Luanda, Angola to Fortaleza, Brazil. There it will be connected to the MONET cable that is currently being laid to connect Sao Paulo with Miami.

    SACS:

    MONET:

    In Luanda the cable will interconnect with the WACS - West Africa Cable System, which connects South Africa and other african countries to Great Britain since 2012 :

    The SACS cable consists of 4 fiber pairs, with an initial design capacity of 40Tb/s (100Gb/s x 100 wavelengths x 4 fiber-pairs). SACS will feature the latest optical technologies to provide the most advanced subsea telecommunications system, coupled with a control plane based on innovative Software-Defined Networking (SDN) technology to serve bandwidth-intensive applications.

    It is owned by Angola Cables, which is joint venture of five Angolan operators Angola Telecom (51%), Unitel (31%), MSTelcom (9%), Movicel (6%) and Startel (3%).

    NEC is currently seeking the best ocean floor route. The cable is supposed to be operational mid-2018. It is the first South transatlantic cable connecting the African continent with Latin America.
    Project cost: $160M

    NEC announcement:

    http://www.nec.com/en/press/201604/global_20160406_02.html

    Angola Cables

    http://www.angolacables.co.ao/en

    A well-known, comprehensive, overall submarine cable map:

    http://www.submarinecablemap.com

    #submarine_cable #câble_sous-marin

  • A documentary raises questions about ‘slavery’ in South Africa’s vineyards - The Washington Post
    https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/worldviews/wp/2016/10/31/a-documentary-raises-questions-about-slavery-in-south-africas-vineya

    For centuries, workers in South Africa’s undulating vineyards were paid some of their salary in wine, a disastrous arrangement called the “dop” system that was outlawed in the early 1960s. The practice unofficially continued for decades under apartheid and has tapered off under strict new laws. But a new film investigating labor conditions in South Africa’s wine industry alleges that the legacy of the dop system — and many other old inequities — continue to haunt farmworkers today.

    #afrique_du_sud #discrimination #sweatshop #travail

  • Beyond the #International_Criminal_Court
    http://africasacountry.com/2016/10/beyond-the-international-criminal-court

    In the past week, three African states (South Africa, Burundi, and Gambia) have announced their withdrawals from the International Criminal Court. Amnesty International describes these withdrawals as a “march away from justice,” and “drastic blow to countless victims globally.” Rather than simply decrying these decisions, perhaps it is time to think more carefully about what […]

    #POLITICS

  • Why is South Africa withdrawing from the #International_Criminal_Court? And why now?
    http://africasacountry.com/2016/10/why-is-south-africa-withdrawing-from-the-international-criminal-cou

    Last Friday, South Africa stunned the world when it announced it has officially initiated the process of withdrawing from the International Criminal Court (ICC). The idea of a mass pullout of African states from the Court has been hanging in the air for a few years now. The main point of contention has been the […]

    #AFRICA_IS_A_COUNTRY #POLITICS #ICC

  • An African salute and the protests shaking a nation | DEMOCRACY WORKS
    http://democracyworks.org.za/an-african-salute-and-the-protests-shaking-a-nation

    Media attention on the protests therefore couldn’t come at a more important time. Since Lilesa’s salute and following a horrific stampede at an Oromo thanksgiving festival at the start of October, killing between 52 and 300 people (concrete figures are difficult to come by in Ethiopia) after police used teargas, rubber bullets and batons on protesters, the Ethiopian government has ordered a six month state of emergency. It has also continued to blame the violence and deaths at protests on banded opposition groups and gangs funded by Ethiopia and Eritrea, the former of which has already denied the claim and the latter of which has maintained a frosty silence. Human Rights groups however implicate the security forces in the deaths.

    As a result of the state of emergency, Ethiopia is on lock down. Foreign diplomats have been banned from travelling more than 40kms outside the capital, protests in schools, universities, and other higher education institutions are forbidden, there are country-wide curfews, security services are barred from resigning, satellite TV, pro-opposition news and foreign news are banned and posting links on social media a criminal activity. In short, there is a total news black-out of anything that is not state sponsored.

    On the African continent, condemnation of Ethiopia’s actions by African governments has been very quiet. However, the protests have been well covered by African media and civil society organizations particularly in Uganda, Kenya and South Africa, while protests supporting the Oromo have taken place in South Africa and Egypt.

    Although it is disappointing that African governments have not spoken out, it is important that the Ethiopian diaspora, along with African and global civil society continue to call loudly for an independent investigation into the deaths and violence occurring and that wealthy Western governments continue to evaluate their support for the increasingly authoritarian Ethiopian sta

    #Éthiopie #contestation #répression #violences_policière #dictature

  • Shutdown–On the death of compromise in #South_Africa
    http://africasacountry.com/2016/10/shutdown-on-the-death-of-compromise-in-south-africa

    “War will bring the revolution; revolution will stop the war”–-Jhumpa Lahiri For some time now people who write about South Africa have been suggesting that the country is in the process of changing. It is now time to accept that the country has changed. We are in a new phase, one that is characterized by […]

    #ESSAYS #Fallists #Fees_Must_Fall #universities

  • Pula! Botswana at 50: love, race and duty in the struggle for freedom
    http://www.groundup.org.za/article/pula-botswana-50-love-race-and-duty-struggle-freedom

    Here was the future King of the Bamangwato, a border people, whose labour was interwoven with South African capitalism, whose capital was at Mafikeng, within South Africa, presuming to transgress the most basic prejudices of the racial order.

    The rush of correspondence to stop this abominable wedding was intense. The British government hired lawyers, mobilised diplomats and succeeded in getting a Church of England Bishop to refuse the marriage. Seretse’s uncle forbade him to proceed and Ruth was cast out of her family for a while.

    (…) Jan Smuts intervened and changed Churchill’s mind, convincing him that support for Seretse would only harden the Nationalists who had defeated Smuts in South Africa. “Natives traditionally believe in authority,” Smuts explained, “and our whole Native system will collapse if weakness is shown in this regard.”

    #Botswana #Afrique_du_Sud #colonialisme #histoire #mariage #racisme #beau
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BMswBd8AND4

  • South Africa Raids Maersk, MSC in Shipping Collusion Probe - Bloomberg
    http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2016-09-28/south-africa-raids-global-shipping-companies-in-collusion-probe

    South Africa’s Competition Commission searched the premises of six shipping companies including AP Moeller-Maersk A/S as part of an investigation into allegations that they colluded to fix incremental cargo rates between Asia and South Africa.

    The antitrust regulator started raids on premises of local operations of Copenhagen-based Maersk and its Safmarine unit, Hamburg Sued Group, Mediterranean Shipping Co., Pacific International Lines Pte Ltd. and CMA CGM SA in the Western Cape and KwaZulu-Natal provinces, it said in an e-mailed statement on Wednesday. The investigation was triggered by a tip-off from a member of the public, the Pretoria-based commission said.

  • Slum Tourism. Poverty, Power and Ethics

    Slum tourism is a globalizing trend and a controversial form of tourism. Impoverished urban areas have always enticed the popular imagination, considered to be places of ‘otherness’, ‘moral decay’, ‘deviant liberty’ or ‘authenticity’. ‘#Slumming’ has a long tradition in the Global North, for example in Victorian London when the upper classes toured the East End. What is new, however, is its development dynamics and its rapidly spreading popularity across the globe. Township tourism and favela tourism have currently reached mass tourism characteristics in South Africa and in #Rio_de_Janeiro, Brazil. In other countries of the Global South, slum tourism now also occurs and providers see huge growth potential.


    https://www.routledge.com/Slum-Tourism-Poverty-Power-and-Ethics/Frenzel-Koens-Steinbrink/p/book/9780415698788
    #tourisme #bidonville #dark_tourism #tourisme_noir #Londres #Afrique_du_Sud #Brésil #livre
    cc @reka

  • #Townships as attraction : an empirical study of township tourism in #Cape_Town

    ❝Since the end of the Apartheid international tourism in South Africa has increasingly gained importance for the national economy. The centre of this PKS issue’s attention is a particular form of tourism: Township tourism, i.e. guided tours to the residential areas of the black population. About 300,000 tourists per year visit the townships of Cape Town. The tours are also called Cultural, Social, or Reality Tours. The different aspects of township tourism in Cape Town were subject of a geographic field study, which was undertaken during a student research project of Potsdam University in 2007. The text at hand presents the empirical results of the field study, and demonstrates how townships are constructed as spaces of tourism.


    http://verlag.ub.uni-potsdam.de/cgi-bin/publika/view.pl?id=491
    #Afrique_du_Sud #tourisme #dark_tourism #tourisme_noir
    cc @reka

  • Ça m’avait échappé : le Liban avait participé à la proposition de no-fly zone sur la Libye ?
    http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm201617/cmselect/cmfaff/119/119.pdf

    17. France, Lebanon and the UK proposed Resolution 1973 in the United Nations Security Council with the support of the United States. On 17 March 2011, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Colombia, Gabon, Lebanon, Nigeria, Portugal, South Africa and permanent Security Council members France, the UK and the United States voted in favour of the resolution. Brazil, Germany, India and permanent Security Council members China and Russia abstained. No Security Council member state opposed the resolution.40 Resolution 1973 authorised member states to establish and enforce a no- y zone over Libya and to use “all necessary measures” to prevent attacks on civilians.41 It neither explicitly authorised the deployment of ground forces nor addressed the questions of regime change and of post-con ict reconstruction.

  • AFROPUNK : The Movie [FULL-LENGTH] - YouTube
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fanQHFAxXH0

    AFROPUNK - “The Rock and Roll Nigger Experience” was the original title for the movie before it was changed to what we know as today: AFROPUNK - The Documentary, a 66 minute documentary explores race identify within the punk scene. More than your everyday “Behind the Music” or typical "Black History month "documentary this film tackles hard questions, covering issues such as exile, loneliness, interracial dating and black power. We follow the lives of four people who have dedicated themselves to the punk rock lifestyles. They find themselves in conflicting situations, living the dual life of a person of color in a mostly white community.

  • Ilan Pappé in book launch with Jonathan Cook: “Israel and South Africa: The Many Faces of Apartheid”
    http://mondoweiss.net/2016/07/colonialism-apartheid-palestinian

    (...) However, launching his new collaborative book in East Jerusalem on Saturday night, esteemed Israeli historian Ilan Pappé abandoned any pretence of restraint and made the intrepid and timely case that the use of apartheid descriptors when engaging in Israel/Palestine discourse should be an indisputable starting point, not an equivocal theory up for debate. The collection which Pappé has edited, ‘Israel and South Africa: The Many Faces of Apartheid’, has assembled contributions from a wide range of respected academics, politicians, journalists and lawyers, that are all rooted in a fundamental position that recognises that the relationship the Israeli state has manufactured with its Palestinian subjects, in Israel and the occupied territories, equates to a form of apartheid.

    Providing introductory remarks to the vast audience that had gathered in the garden, Pappé commented on the necessity of ensuring the paradigm shift, which has been evident over the last 10 or 15 years within marginal spheres of academia and peripheral political systems around the world, gain credence among those Western elites who actually hold power.

    “For about 40 or 50 years in many places like this – institutes, universities, academic centres, media and so on – there was one dominant way or paradigm through which the conflict in Palestine had been analysed and this was the paradigm or model of a conflict between two national movements,” he said, explaining the orthodoxy in western thought, “there is one country for which two national movements are fighting for; they have equal right to the land, they have an equal attachment to the land, and hence what you need is to find a compromise that would answer the aspirations of both national movements, given the fact that they both have a justified claim to the land.”

    Given that this is the central paradigm for peace that the Quartet (United Nations, USA, European Union and Russia), the main stream media and influential “peace” politicians continue to use, Pappé considers it entirely unsurprising that the main outcome remains the unworkable two-state solution.

    What the book endeavours to do, Pappé expounded, is to expose this manifestly deceitful paradigm, and establish a new paradigm, already common amongst activists and marginalised academics, that relates to the reality on the ground; one of “settler-colonialism and its connection with apartheid.” In essence, the conflict is not between two competing national movements with an equal claim to the land, but between a movement of settler-colonialists and a native people.

    The theoretical framework for the book is formed around this concept and the belief that the natural consequence of settler-colonialism is a system of apartheid which ensures the native people are separated from the settler race.

    (...)

    “Any peace paradigm that retains Israel as a Zionist state has no chance in the world of succeeding,” said Pappé, summarizing, “Similarly to the way that we had to get rid of apartheid, we have to get rid of Zionism before we talk about reconciliation. No other solution will work in this place.”

    #palestine #israël #boycott #bds

  • Fighting spatial apartheid in South Africa - Al Jazeera
    http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/features/2016/08/fighting-spatial-apartheid-south-africa-160808093343293.html

    “This #gentrification thing, it could be a good thing because it creates jobs for people, but people are losing their houses. And these developers, they don’t care about the people that have been living so many years here,” Beukes told Al Jazeera.

    zackie #afrique_du_sud #logement #inégalités #photographie

  • The Great Rip Off | Joelle Palmieri
    https://joellepalmieri.wordpress.com/2016/07/28/the-great-rip-off
    https://secure.gravatar.com/blavatar/39e12c0f9546be893bc752414ff6f1a0?s=200&ts=1469697005

    THE GREAT RIP OFF
    South Africa loses billions in export misinvoicing
    By Brian Ashley and Dick Forslund
    “This suggests that export underinvoicing is not due to underreporting of the true value of gold exports, but rather to pure smuggling of gold out of the country. In other words, virtually all gold exported by South Africa leaves the country unreported.”
    This is the sensational conclusion of a very recent study undertaken by UNCTAD on the issue of trade misinvoicing – a key method for illicitly exporting capital out of a country with severe consequences for financing much needed development, reducing poverty or in the case of South Africa, dealing with debilitating mass unemployment.

  • The Turbulent World of Middle East Soccer : Saudi soccer crisis : A microcosm of what reform means for the kingdom
    https://mideastsoccer.blogspot.fr/2016/07/saudi-soccer-crisis-microcosm-of-what.html

    Qu’on la trouve pertinente ou non en définitive, l’analyse de James Dorsey sur le management du foot et la possibilité pour l’Arabie saoudite de se réformer mérite d’être lue.

    The resignation of Prince Nawaf and the campaign against Prince Faisal gained added significance in a nation in which the results of premier league clubs associated with various members of the kingdom’s secretive royal family are seen as a barometer of their relative status, particularly at a time that its septuagenarian and octogenarian leaders have initiated a generational transition and are seeking to restructure the economy and recast the social contract without granting political concessions.

    “The Saudis are extremely worried. Soccer clubs rather than the mosque are likely to be the centre of any revolution. Kids go more to stadiums than to mosques. They are not religious, they are not ruled by religious dogma,” said Washington-based Saudi dissident Ali al-Ahmad, who heads the Gulf Institute.

    Mr. Al-Ahmad was referring to the power of clerics preaching Wahhabism, the puritan interpretation of Islam developed by 18th century preacher Mohammed ibn Abdul Al-Wahhab. Saudi Arabia’s ruling Al Saud family established the kingdom with the help of the Wahhabis who in return were granted the right to ensure that their views would dominate public life.

    Similarly, the federation’s ban on the hiring of foreign talent came as Prince Mohammed was seeking to force employers to replace foreign labour with Saudi nationals. The effort that predates last year’s accession to the throne of King Salman and the instalment of Prince Mohammed as one of the kingdom’s most powerful men provoked soccer opposition already in late 2014.

    Clubs resisted the application of a quota system to soccer and warned that it would put them at a disadvantage in international competitions. The problem of Saudi clubs was compounded by the kingdom’s reluctance to encourage Saudi players to garner experience by playing abroad for foreign clubs.

    Saudi Arabia has long had a complex relationship with soccer because it evokes passions similar to those sparked by religion. Saudi clerics rolled out mobile mosques during the 2010 World Cup in South Africa in an effort to persuade fans gathered in cafes to watch matches to observe obligatory prayer times.

    A senior Saudi soccer executive highlighted a key Saudi soccer problem, saying that “we are funded by the government to serve the country.” With oil prices strongly reduced, Saudi Arabia, like other countries is seeking to cut costs and control spending, making less money available to soccer clubs.
    Equally importantly, serving the country in Saudi Arabia means the government’s desire to control soccer because it provides popular entertainment and often deviates attention from more political concerns, yet constitutes a potentially powerful venue for the expression of dissent.

    To achieve Vision 2030’s goals of greater Saudi competitiveness and transparency, Prince Mohammed and the federation will have to square those goals with dealing with the corrosive effect of political interference in the sport, particularly by members of the ruling family. Dealing publicly with match fixing and debt suggests the government and the federation may have taken a first step.

  • Divided cities: South Africa’s apartheid legacy photographed by drone
    https://www.theguardian.com/cities/gallery/2016/jun/23/south-africa-divided-cities-apartheid-photographed-drone

    Johnny Miller used a drone to take aerial photographs of the gulf in living conditions for the poor and the wealthy in South Africa. ‘During apartheid, segregation of urban spaces was instituted as policy,’ he says. ‘Roads, rivers, buffer zones of empty land and other barriers were constructed to keep people separate. Twenty two years after the fall of apartheid many of these barriers, and the inequalities they have engendered, still exist. Often, communities of extreme wealth and privilege will exist just metres from shacks’


    Sandton/Alexandra, Johannesburg. Photographs: Johnny Miller/Millefoto/Rex/Shutterstoc
    See more : http://www.unequalscenes.com/strandnomzamo
    #photographie #urbanisme #apartheid

  • Bulk Carrier Hard Aground in Mauritius After Fight On Board - gCaptain
    https://gcaptain.com/bulk-carrier-benita-hard-aground-in-mauritius-after-fight-on-board

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FunEHcMgORM

    A 44,000 DWT bulk carrier is hard aground in Mauritius after a fight apparently broke out on board among crew members, with some reports going as far as describing possible mutiny. 

    Local media reports that Liberian-flagged MV Benita was sailing from India to Durban, South Africa when a fight erupted in the engine room Thursday night, resulting in the ship drifting into land along the southeast coast of Mauritius.

    Details are still a bit sketchy, but the melee was reportedly started by the Chief Engineer, who was arrested by the National Coast Guard after locking himself in the engine room of the vessel.

    One crew member, another engineer, was injured in the incident and had to be flown to a local hospital for treatment.

  • BDS Isn’t the Criminal Here
    Even those who don’t believe in the boycott, or think there are better ways to fight the occupation (such as?) cannot go along with this crushing move to criminalize it.

    Gideon Levy Jun 09, 2016 5:58 AM

    http://www.haaretz.com/opinion/.premium-1.723947

    The struggle against the movement to boycott Israel has sunk to a new low – criminalization. From now on it’s not just a propaganda campaign against BDS (which only made it stronger), not the usual victim-like behavior, not the colonialist fibs about the boycott’s harming Palestinian laborers. It’s not even the demonization, which includes accusing anyone who dares support the boycott of anti-Semitism, the mother of all accusations.
    No, from now on the boycott is a crime. It’s a crime to boycott the criminal. A crime to avoid buying goods produced on territories of crime. A crime to avoid supporting a crime factory. A crime to fight violation of international law.
    The powerful Jewish-Israeli lobbying is scoring more achievements. The go-ahead was given by none other than France’s Supreme Court, which ruled last year that boycotting Israel is, incredible as it may sound, a “hate crime.” Not the settlements or the executions at checkpoints, not the settlers’ violence and not the mass arrests – no, it’s the boycott against them that’s a crime.
    America wasn’t far behind, of course. It will never miss an opportunity to cultivate, finance and encourage the occupation. Twenty states have enacted, or are about to enact, amendments against the boycott on Israel. New York Governor Andrew Cuomo even went as far as announcing this week that he signed an administrative order under which his state will boycott any organization or company that dares to take part in the boycott. “We want Israel to know we’re on its side,” said this pseudo Israel lover at a Jewish conference in Manhattan. “If you boycott Israel, New York will boycott you,” he tweeted.
    Thank you, New York. Thank you governor. Your move has proved that New York stands on the occupiers’ side, on the side of crime. Again you’ve proved how unworthy the United States is of the title “leader of the free world.” Again you’ve proved that when it comes to Israel all your declared values are abruptly distorted. Could anyone have imagined issuing a similar order against the international movement against apartheid in South Africa? Can anyone imagine criminalizing the sanctions against Russia following its invasion of Crimea?
    It’s not obligatory to support the boycott. It’s OK not to believe in its effectiveness. But it must be admitted that it’s impossible to be a person of conscience and buy the settlements’ products. Just as a law-abiding person won’t buy stolen property, we must not buy goods manufactured on stolen land. It’s obligatory to exhort people against this. It’s permitted to urge people to boycott such products. And it’s very difficult, in fact impossible, to separate between the settlements and Israel, which has erased the Green Line.
    Israel is invested in the occupation project in its entirety and there is no longer any distinguishing between them. Is there a bank without accounts from the West Bank? Is there a health maintenance organization without a branch in Ariel? Is there a supermarket chain without a supermarket for settlers?
    But even those who don’t believe in the boycott, or think there are better ways to fight the occupation (such as?) cannot go along with this crushing criminalization. The boycott is a legitimate, non-violent means that has and is being used by numerous states, including Israel.
    What are the international sanctions on Hamas, with Israel’s encouragement, if not a boycott? What about those on Iran? Hasn’t Israel violated international law as well?
    Israeli propagandists are delighting in the achievements against BDS. The struggle’s commander, Ambassador to the U.S. Danny Danon, last week held a propagandists’ conference in the UN building, where his forces briefed some 1,500 gullible Jewish students to recite: “Every other word that comes out of your mouths must be ‘peace.’”
    That is moving, of course, to the point of tears. But the hour of truth will come, and then all those who acted to criminalize the boycott will have to answer honestly: Who is the criminal here, what is the real crime and what have you done against it?

    #BDS