BDS, the boycott law and Israel's democracy - 21 July 2011
July 11, 2011 was a watershed in Israel's
political history. The adoption by the Knesset of "The Law to Prevent
Harm to the State of Israel via Boycott" (generally known as the boycott
law), makes it a compensable civil wrong to publicly encourage a
boycott against the state of Israel, its institutions or any territory
under its rule. This legislation conflates dissent against Israel's
continued occupation of Palestinians with de-legitimization of Israel in
its entirety, seriously undermines Israel's global standing and
constitutes the latest--and the most severe--in a series of
parliamentary blows to the country's increasingly fragile democratic
order.
Boycotts
are an acceptable tool of non-violent democratic action utilized
broadly in struggles against oppression and injustice. They offer
citizens a means to express their displeasure with anything from the
price of cottage cheese to official policy directions and actions.
Debates over the validity and viability of particular boycotts have
traditionally focused on their specific objectives, which is precisely
what makes the present legislation so objectionable. It sets out to
stifle all such discussion.
The boycott law is unabashedly political both in intent and content.
Although ostensibly against all boycotts, in fact it seeks to prohibit
any Israeli citizen from shunning Jewish settlements beyond the 1967
borders and their products. This government-backed bill purposefully
blurs the distinction between Israel and the occupied territories. It
treats the West Bank as an integral part of the state--an overt act of
legal annexation. It therefore stands in direct contravention to
Israel's professed support for a two-state solution and reinforces the
settlement enterprise that has emerged as the key obstacle to its
realization.
By effectively erasing the green line, this law goes one step further:
it makes a mockery of efforts to differentiate between spurious attacks
on Israel's fundamental right to exist and legitimate disagreements over
the legality of settlement activities. Many of Israel's foremost
critics of the ongoing occupation have vigorously opposed the call of
the growing global BDS movement to refrain from all things Israeli
precisely because a blanket boycott against Israel might actually delay
the creation of a viable, independent, Palestinian state. Even though
they have consistently refused to purchase goods or services from the
settlements, these Israelis have argued repeatedly that the purpose of a
total economic, cultural and academic boycott of Israel is
insufficiently focused and plays directly into the hands of those who
believe that the whole world is against Israel, thereby reinforcing
precisely those right-wing extremists who parlayed the latest
anti-boycott legislation.
For these critics of the occupation, the international BDS effort has
proven to be counterproductive: it weakens peace and human rights
organizations that have struggled systematically against the continued
Israeli presence in the territories and diverts attention from the need
to find a political solution to the Palestinian-Israeli conundrum. The
ratification of the boycott law takes the wind out of their sails,
ironically reinforcing those who advocate shunning all things Israeli.
The anti-boycott legislation, however, is much more than just an
egregious attempt to muzzle open debate on the single most controversial
issue on Israel's agenda; it is also anti-democratic to the core. By
selectively curtailing the basic civil liberties of those who do not
agree with government policies and who claim that these are antithetical
to Israel's own interests, this law sanctions limiting freedom of
speech, conscience and dissent and makes mincemeat of the concept of
equality before the law. These intrinsic rights of citizens in
democratic societies, protected in Israel's unwritten constitution,
should not be jettisoned at the whim of a heuristic parliamentary
constellation transformed into a band of legal vigilantes who have
opened the door for anyone to sue anyone on political grounds. The
thought that the ruling coalition can override basic freedoms and impose
its political will on all citizens is nothing short of sanctioning the
tyranny of the majority under the guise of majority rule.
No single recent act by Israel has tarnished its name more than the
boycott law, which inevitably reinforces its obdurate image in the
international community. It casts doubt on the credibility of Israel's
desire to reach a lasting accommodation with its neighbors. It belies
Israel's claim to a democratic ethos. And it threatens to sacrifice
Israel's most significant strategic asset--its democracy--to
opportunistic domestic political goals. It is hardly surprising,
therefore, that this law has been criticized by democrats from all parts
of the political spectrum within Israel, by a wide variety of Jewish
organizations abroad and, tellingly, not only by its detractors in the
world but also by its long-time supporters in the United States and the
European Union. The law is a mark of weakness that contributes directly
to Israel's increased global isolation.
The boycott law is just the latest in what is nothing short of a blatant
anti-democratic parliamentary offensive. Prompted by anger,
trepidation and bravado that fuel a need to apportion blame for Israel's
precarious global status, overly-zealous members of the ruling
coalition have abused their parliamentary position in an attempt to
enforce the will of the settlers and their proponents on Israel's body
politic. In the process they have not only misused Israel's democracy,
they have demonstrated their fundamental ignorance of its basic
components.
It is not too late to reverse this deleterious trend. Israel's High
Court of Justice has yet to rule on the petitions against the boycott
law brought by civil society organizations; but any jury of even the
strongest opponents of BDS already knows that the external, political,
democratic and moral damage the law has unleashed is extensive. Only a
comprehensive mind-shift can stem its consequences.-Published 21/7/2011 © bitterlemons-international.org
Naomi
Chazan, former deputy speaker of the Knesset and currently dean of the
School of Government and Society at the Academic College of
Tel-Aviv-Yaffo, is president of the New Israel Fund.