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until gaza revolts, the world will do nothing,......
This is perhaps one of those documents that the Western political class has never read. In a remarkable interview, the UN Special Rapporteur on Palestine said the following: "As long as Gaza does not revolt, as long as Gaza is not periodically bombed with the most sophisticated weapons in the world, as long as Gaza does not make the headlines of the world press, the world will do nothing to change this situation." What he said in 2019 is no different from what Hamas has decided to do on October 7, 2023. "Until Gaza revolts, the world will do nothing," Michael Lynk BY Luk VERVAET
(Part 3: October 7, 2024, one year of the Gaza ghetto uprising) I remember the rare times when we were received as a delegation at the office of the liberal Didier Reynders, then Minister of Foreign Affairs, on the case of Ali Aarrass. (2) We went there to plead for a minimal humanitarian intervention: consular assistance from Belgium for this Belgian-Moroccan, wrongly accused of terrorism, who almost died in a Moroccan prison. And each time, the members of the cabinet were shocked when we told them about the piles of UN documents, the appeals from Amnesty and other human rights organizations that testified in black and white to the torture of Ali Aarrass in Morocco. “I have never heard of it, we did not know about it,” they said. Whether it was pure hypocrisy or pure indifference, who knows? The fact is that all these reports must have rotted somewhere in a dusty corner of the ministry. Nothing has changed. We left the building with a feeling of bitterness, learning that politics is what commands, not the law, nor justice, nor humanitarian considerations. Which side are you on? (3) And no, it is not a question of double standards, as is often heard in critiques of Western policy. When it comes to terrorism and the War on Terror, the new name for colonial wars, there is only one standard and one weight. Whether it is Ali Aarrass, Julian Assange, Nizar Tabelsi or Guantanamo, it is no longer a question of objective facts of torture, kidnapping or murder, but of the camp one is on: in our Western camp or in the camp of the enemy. This is just a small example that I cite to help us better understand what the Palestinians have been experiencing on a large scale and for a long time. In recent decades, not dozens, but hundreds of resolutions, votes and reports have been published at the highest level to condemn Israel for the crimes it commits against the Palestinian people. All without consequence. Without changing even one iota of Western policy. Which continues to support the genocide in Gaza, now extended to the entire region. Which teaches us that when it comes to the fight against terrorism, the European political class is on the same line as the Israeli mass murderers in Palestine. On the same line as the United States, which launched the global war on terror some twenty years ago. Bart De Wever, chairman of the Nieuw-Vlaamse Alliantie (NVA), the New Flemish Alliance, Belgium’s largest party, summed up the situation the day after 7 October 2023: “Today, there is only one side to choose. It is the Israeli side”. What this means a year later, we have heard from other Belgian leaders. “Hezbollah must be banned. The pager story is genius! Let them keep going like this!”, said Francken, a party colleague, after the terrorist attack in Lebanon that left dozens dead and hundreds injured and maimed. Just like Mr Bouchez, chairman of the MR, Belgium’s largest French-speaking party, who said: “The pager attack is a stroke of genius”. Blaming the Victim The day after the Gaza explosion, on October 7, 2023, the Israeli flag was displayed on all official buildings in European cities. The European Parliament did even better: the Israeli flag was projected on the Berlaimont building in Brussels. Cost: 28,520 euros! A year later, the same European political class commemorated the first anniversary as if nothing had happened that year. The lights of the Eiffel Tower were once again turned off and the Israeli flag was projected on the Brandenburg Gate. Europe commemorated the 1,200 Israeli victims of the Gaza outbreak. Just them. Not the tens of thousands killed and maimed in Gaza. The indescribable number of Palestinian, Lebanese, Iranian, Yemeni dead and wounded was not only not mentioned, but the responsibility was attributed to the Palestinian resistance and to what happened on October 7. The President of the European Commission, Christian Democrat Ursula von der Leyen, said that the Hamas attacks, in which 1,200 Israelis were killed and 250 others taken hostage, were an example of “unspeakable brutality” (sic). “The Hamas terrorist attacks against Israel have triggered a spiral of violence that has plunged the entire region into a state of extreme tension and instability,” she said. German Socialist Chancellor Olaf Scholz joined his compatriot: “With its repugnant attack on Israel, Hamas has unleashed a catastrophe for the Palestinian people.” “The Hamas terrorist movement has trapped Israel and dragged it into war,” Bart De Wever said. Hamas may also have on its conscience the fact that refugees were burned alive during the Israeli attack on a tent camp in the courtyard of a hospital in Gaza, just as Hezbollah and Unifil are allegedly responsible for the Israeli bombing of UN peacekeepers in Lebanon. Journalist Caitlin Johnstone responded to these European and American claims: “In effect, we are being asked to believe that the Palestinians are committing genocide against themselves. Can you imagine anything more insulting to your intelligence and common sense?” (5) And again: “I would be happy to talk to someone who can tell me what the Palestinians should do, short of submitting and dying.” Someone who can present me with a plan for the liberation of Palestine that (A) does not involve violence, (B) is effective, (C) is fair, (D) is not naive or stupid. If you can, come and talk to me. Only then will I condemn Hamas.” It is not that the Palestinian people and their resistance organizations have not tried everything to end the occupation, the incessant violence, the expulsion and apartheid, and to awaken and incite the world to put Palestine on the agenda. Everything, that is, with every imaginable peaceful and military means at their disposal. From guerrilla actions to suicide bombings to the firing of homemade rockets. But also by every peaceful means possible. And so the Great March of Return was born. A peaceful civic initiative like many in Western colonies. It was met with violence from the oppressor, again and again. For example, there were the protest marches against the pass laws in apartheid South Africa. These laws required black people in townships to produce documents authorizing them to stay or move within a certain area. When residents of Sharpeville township staged a peaceful protest march outside the local police station in March 1960, 67 protesters were shot dead. Similar peaceful revolts took place during the Soweto uprising in South Africa in 1976 or during the march for equal rights in Northern Ireland on Bloody Sunday in 1972. Or more recently, what happened in Fallujah, during the war and the US occupation of Iraq. On 26 and 27 April 2003, US troops set up their headquarters in a school in Fallujah and turned it into a military base. The next day, some 400 people demonstrated outside the building – students and teachers, parents and relatives – to demand their school back and that the US army be stationed elsewhere. When the demonstration approached the outer wall of the school, the military opened fire. Twenty people died from the bullets, including three children under the age of 10; more than 85 others were injured. (6) The Sharpeville of Gaza, the Fallujah of Gaza: The Great March of Return (from March 30, 2018 to December 27, 2019) To protest against the asphyxiation by the Israeli blockade, the miserable living conditions in Gaza and to demand the right of return of refugees (note that the return of refugees to their country of origin is the most popular slogan in Europe!), a citizens' initiative was born and organized a daily or weekly protest march to the wall that separates Gaza from Israel. Tens of thousands of Palestinians participated. All resistance organizations supported the peaceful demonstrations in front of the wall. The violent response of the occupying forces was not long in coming. Any Palestinian who approached too close to the wall or tried to dig a small hole in it was shot by Israeli snipers. The protesters then set fire to masses of car tires that sent clouds of black smoke over the wall around Gaza, or they released burning kites to set fire to fields that Palestinians used to cultivate and that were now in Jewish hands. No Israelis were killed in the process. On the other hand, the Israeli army shot dead more than 250 Palestinian protesters in those few months. Thousands of Palestinians were injured: “Thousands of protesters suffered serious gunshot wounds, mainly in the legs, breaking bones. Between the first protest and November 2019, more than 35,600 protesters were injured, according to the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA).” (7) The influx of tens of thousands of wounded has shaken the entire health system in Gaza. Remember the Western applause and cheers from all sides when the Berlin Wall fell in November 1989. The same was not true for the wall around Gaza. Subsequently, the Palestinian resistance tried to persuade Israel to conclude a long-term ceasefire. In 1993, Sheikh Ahmed Yassin, the founder of Hamas (assassinated in 2004), proposed a long-term truce with Israel (“a Hudna” (8). On condition that Israel withdraw to the June 1967 borders with Egypt and Jordan, that is, the borders before the Six Day War. An idea taken up by Hamas in February 2006, after its electoral victory. Again on condition that Israel withdraw to the 1967 borders and recognize the right of return of Palestinian refugees. This would put an end to the bloodshed and bring peace and the possibility of (re)building infrastructure and industries. But Israel rejected all proposals, including that of an independent Palestinian state. In exchange, Gaza faced five devastating wars between 2007 and 2023. “Regularly mowing the grass,” is what Israeli officials called these wars. Each time, the people of Gaza made superhuman efforts to rebuild what had been destroyed. Desperate attempts to preserve some form of human life, while in the meantime, in the West Bank, new illegal Jewish settler colonies were springing up like mushrooms. It was the end of a peaceful solution. “Pain had become synonymous with life in Gaza,” writes Jehad Abusalim, “most people knew that an explosion of apocalyptic proportions was coming.” They lived from day to day, but always with no prospects for the future, always with the burning question of whether they would find food and water... Until some in Gaza decided to put an end to decades of wandering around the truth. They decided to direct the explosion brewing in Gaza to the place where it all began: to Israel." (9) As long as Gaza does not revolt. This is perhaps one of those documents that the political class has never read. In a remarkable interview, the UN Special Rapporteur on Palestine said the following: "As long as Gaza does not revolt, as long as Gaza is not periodically bombed with the most sophisticated weapons in the world, as long as Gaza does not make the headlines of the world press, the world will do nothing to change this situation." What he said in 2019 is no different from what Hamas decided to do on October 7, 2023. In its text on leaving the ghetto (10), Hamas wrote: “After 75 years of ruthless occupation and suffering, after the failure of all initiatives for the liberation and return of our people, after the disastrous results of the so-called peace process, what response did the world expect from the Palestinian people? Should we continue to wait and count on the helplessness of the United Nations? Over the past 75 years, the UN has adopted more than 900 resolutions in favor of the Palestinian people. Israel has refused to comply with all of these resolutions, and the US veto has been a constant in the UN Security Council to prevent any condemnation of Israel’s policies and violations.” This is how Hamas, with the support of other liberation organizations, decided to leave the Gaza ghetto. To change the course of history, which could only lead to the slow but certain death of Gaza. Changing the course of history, the resistance argues, is not done through resolutions and votes, nor through parliaments, nor through institutions, nor through NGOs. But by creating events outside the rules, outside the ordinary, by provoking a break with what already exists and by directing history in a different direction. This is the meaning of October 7. This day that, according to Hamas and all the other liberation organizations, from the Marxist Popular Front to the Islamic Jihad to the Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades of Fatah, put Palestine back on the world map and put an end to the murderous pretenses of calm and peace. The General's Plan Did the Hamas surge fuel hatred and murder in Israel? Certainly. But it was above all the pretext to finally implement their plan for the definitive elimination of the Palestinian people, its resistance and its allies in the region. The “general’s plan” is part of it. Thus, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine writes in a press release: “The siege of the Jabalia refugee camp involves the implementation of the plan of what is called the “general’s plan” to eradicate and expel our people from the northern part of the Gaza Strip.” The General’s Plan is written by Giora Eiland, a retired general who, on October 29, 2023, had already declared: “The fact that we give in to the request for humanitarian aid to Gaza is a serious mistake… Gaza must be completely destroyed: we must create terrible chaos, a serious humanitarian crisis, cries for help to the heavens…” Their plan was published in September 2024 by the organ of the association of 1,500 army officers. Not satisfied with the current outcome of the war in Gaza, which is failing to eliminate Hamas and the Palestinian resistance after a year of destruction and mass murder, they propose a different approach. The northern Gaza Strip should be ethnically cleansed and besieged. Anyone left behind after this should be starved by completely blocking the supply of humanitarian aid. In this way, the resistance will also be eradicated and starved. (11) What we see in action is the realization of the Zionist dream: Israel stretching from the river to the sea. Only the Resistance of the peoples and its liberation organizations remain. Part 4: Yahjah Sinwar and the Liberation of Palestinian Prisoners
Professor S. Michael Lynk (Canada), was appointed Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the Palestinian Territory occupied since 1967 in 2016. Prof. Lynk is Associate Professor of Law at Western University in London, Ontario, where he teaches labour law, constitutional law and human rights law. Before becoming an academic, he practiced labour law and refugee law for a decade in Ottawa and Toronto. As well, he worked for the United Nations on human rights and refugee issues in Jerusalem.
SEE ALSO: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2TaL4B2OwmQ
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GENOCIDE....
Last month in New York at separate forums, two senior Democrat figures – John Kerry and Hillary Clinton – pointed to what they saw as major problems: the First Amendment was ‘an obstacle to building consensus’, and the ‘narrative’ in the press needs to be (even more) ‘consistent’.
The challenge presented by the free flow of ideas and information in the digital world, to those accustomed to maintaining control of the narrative, defines our moment in history and the fragility of democratic freedoms.
Those calls for less freedom of speech and for more consistency in messaging to the public by the Fourth Estate, come at a time when large sections of the public have lost trust in a legacy media too consistent in its messaging, and incapable of providing the information and analysis that will enable them to know and fully understand what’s happening.
Many have turned to social media where they are alerted to the work of independent journalists and experts whose commentary is not welcome in the western mainstream press but which provides a multitude of perspectives that are more useful in navigating our world, in understanding our place in it, and indeed how we might be responsible for some of its very significant problems – perhaps that we may be on the wrong side of history.
With respect to foreign policy the legacy media have an unacknowledged partisan perspective, the rectitude of which is reinforced through the validation of all singing from the same song book.
We have learnt to pay attention to messaging emanating from the US political class, because its allies will be expected to concurrently tackle the same issues, in this case, to reign in the problem presented by free speech (the freedom both to speak and to hear) common to western democracies, rendering the population less manageable in its thinking, importantly in the level of its support for war, and at the ballot box.
In Australia, where there is no constitutional or legislated protection for free speech, the 18c ‘hate speech’ provision of the Racial Discrimination Act which made ‘insult’ and ‘offence’ a test for breach of the law, was introduced by a Labor government.
The criteria for breach make this law rife for weaponisation and efforts led by George Brandis under a Liberal government to amend the provision failed, with significant opposition coming from Pro-Israel Lobby groups.
Under the current Labor government further efforts to curb free speech are gathering momentum including the possibility of criminalising ‘hate speech’. Not only will a vexatious litigant be able to bankrupt you, you may also land in jail for insulting or causing offence.
At the same time, independent journalists and commentators in the UK and US are being raided by police under antiterrorism laws. I have little doubt that possibility is being considered here.
Extensive efforts to shape public discourse around Israel policy in the US by pro-Israel Lobby groups were ratcheted up in the past year in the face of university encampments. Those efforts include the push to redefine antisemitism.
Similarly, serious consideration is being given to redefining antisemitism here to include criticism of Israel – of Israeli government policy and of Zionism.
In the Attorney General’s view – stated days before a complaint against me was lodged with the Australian Human Rights Commission under Australia’s hate speech law, anyone holding Israel to a standard they are not holding other countries, is antisemitic, though there is no other nation conducting a genocide of a people under its occupation, and a live streamed genocide at that.
But the stipulation by the AG renders it dangerous for anyone to criticise Israel’s live streamed genocidal acts if they are not resourced to become similarly engaged across the board, lest a similar crime is being committed elsewhere, or perhaps if they have not engaged in a similarly robust way during past war crimes and past crimes against humanity.
This is not only unreasonable, it is Stalinism masquerading as democracy and a transparent attempt to enable a state to conduct a genocide with impunity – with the full support of western governments and their silenced people, removing the focus from a serious crime, by criminalising advocacy against it.
The International Court of Justice has similarly called Israel out for its crimes and has elicited the same claim from Israel – it too is antisemitic. As are International Criminal Court Prosecutors and UN Rapporteurs and the UN Secretary General. So though they have called out war crimes and crimes against humanity by actors other than Israel, this has certainly not prevented any of them from being branded antisemites. Individuals and organisations resourced to hold bad actors across the board to account, and who mostly do, are similarly accused. Sharing a post by such an organisation – HRW in the case of journalist Antoinette Lattouf – can lead to being sacked – because this is the environment of retribution for free speech involving criticism of Israel that has been created. Regrettably, it is being nurtured by the government which plans to bolster it further with new legislation.
Why quarantine Israeli government policy? Why should it be exceptional? Because of the influence of the Pro Israel Lobby. But why stop there if it is achievable? Why not American or Chinese or Australian policy?
The current Labor government is advocating an Orwellian Disinformation Misinformation Bill – again opposed by Brandis, and Peter Dutton, and others including Peter Craven and Arthur Moses – because it will inhibit the expression of political opinion.
The latest raid by counterterrorism police in the UK was that of investigative journalist Asa Winstanley, following his latest report on How Israel Killed Hundreds of its Own People on October 7. All of these raids involve the confiscation of electronic equipment, placing journalistic sources at risk.
Glenn Greenwald posted on X: ‘The amount of authoritarianism and erosion of rights in the West to protect Israel — by censoring criticism of that foreign country and punishing its critics — is almost impossible to overstate.
Mass firings in the US and speech-restricting laws. The UK, as always, is worse:’
And Double Down News: ‘In the UK you can glorify Genocide. You can even fight for the IDF, a foreign country, and actually commit genocide, then come back like you never left.
But, make a post on social media…
Solidarity with Asa Winstanley. Journalism is not a crime’
Over a period of some years, journalists and experts whose views became unpopular with editors of legacy media started up their own independent news, investigative reporting and analysis platforms – Greenwald one of the first and the latest Mehdi Hassan. They are journalists who take a position, one with which we are all free to disagree.
In public discourse about what constitutes journalism, there is much agonising about impartiality, balance, bias, and neutrality. Anyone who has lodged a complaint with a media organisation listing each breach of its code will know the final defence against bias is ‘editorial discretion’. The recent inquiry into racism at the ABC found the organisational culture was racist. It heard from many non-Anglo-Celt staff who described their treatment at the public broadcaster. Well done ABC for conducting the enquiry and publicising the result. However, the 64-million-dollar question is does the culture of racism manifest itself in reporting? Many would argue it does, as it does at the BBC and other major mastheads.
When I was about to take up my position as presenter of SBS World News in the mid 1980’s, an astute radio journalist asked me whether the service would take a perspective other than the Anglo-centric one available on all other networks.
While it may have run material from a greater range of sources, and longer background stories in its earlier days, the prism through which the world was examined in its News, was Anglocentric – the perspective of the backgrounds of its Chief Producers and management. This determined the perspective on every war covered in the 20 year period I was there, including the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, with the Middle East seen thru an Anglo and Israeli lens. The junkets to Israel and free lunches for Chief Producers were par for the course, one Chief Producer freshly returned from Israel fobbing off my request to have a Palestinian guest on for a change with “Why? They’re all mad”. So, an Anglo-centric perspective because.. well, we were Australian.
Journalists like Robert Fisk – and our own John Pilger – among others, did not shy away from taking a position that set them apart. Their approach aligned with my own view of how journalism should be practiced and where its responsibility lies: to hold power to account, to embark on inquiry objectively, being wary of remaining partial to the perspective of one’s own culture’s prism, and never to use neutrality to compound an injustice for the victims of the wrongful exercise of power.
In our rapidly evolving digital world, experts with specialised knowledge of a particular area are no longer restricted to writing books or articles in academic journals, and to waiting to be called upon (if selected) by the media to comment.
They, along with independent journalists and well-informed commentators, now produce output that links them directly with the public on a regular basis, on multiple platforms. The notion that a basic who-what-when-where-how report, or a one minute 30 second duration interview that relies primarily on a government press release or an IDF PR officer, might be regarded as journalism, but the rich multiplicity of choice available online that might refute the facts presented in all such reports, or explain their context, should be regarded as both suspect and not ‘real’ journalism is alarming.
Two separate universes operate today – the legacy media and social media, the latter a conduit for a multitude of perspectives and an enormous enabler of connection between people, evidence, and ideas.
It is the latter universe that has diluted control of the narrative by those desperate to reclaim it..
However they are aided in this aim by proposals put forward by Peter Greste’s Journalism Australia, which would reserve the authority to deem who is a real journalist to a body other than the MEAA and IFJ, and therefore whose work will be protected under law. In concert with this regime, editors of major mastheads would meet regularly with Intel officers to be ‘appraised of their perspective’. In other words a (perhaps unofficial at first) permanent D Notice regime to control what is publishable by ‘real’ journalists. Journalism departments at universities around the country should laugh this in its entirety right out of town. The whole proposal is an Intel Service wet dream that snookers independent journalism.
Today’s public want information from a broad range of sources, including in developing situations – where truth can be and is contested, indeed can only prevail because it has been hotly contested. There is enormous frustration with a legacy media constrained by their own policies such as the avoidance of certain words with respect to reporting on Israel, and headlines that lay bare double standards.
With respect to the issue of fake news and misinformation, yes this can occur, as it does in legacy media. But the social media environment has a way of rapidly self-correcting – word gets around very quickly flagging information is incorrect, with sources that prove it – or without.
Legacy media also make mistakes. The press publishes corrections though not often enough, and in my 20 years presenting a news bulletin, apologising and correcting a story was par for the course. Noone was axed for a mistake, let alone prosecuted.
And there is ample testimony by former agents available on YouTube regarding the planting of disinformation by Intel services with trusted journalists in legacy media over the decades.
To whom are we prepared to entrust decisions about where truth lies, what we can and can’t know, who we are entitled to believe, what we are permitted to think and say?
We only have freedom of speech when we are free to express and to hear what this minute may be an unorthodox view. And because those who disagree with us are also free to do just that. The battle over ideas in a democracy should occur in social discourse not resolved through the weaponisation of laws.
While individuals have paid a heavy price for their defence of the Palestinian cause in the past – the UK’s Jeremy Corbyn and Australian Senator Melissa Parke here are just two, extraordinary widespread efforts have been made to hound those who have criticised Israel’s actions over this past year – a barrage of complaints intended to disrupt lives, to have people sacked, to destroy reputations, to bankrupt individuals in their defence of free speech, or prosecute them under antiterror laws. Those cases that are known publicly are the tip of an iceberg. While there has been publicity around attempts here to silence journalist Antoinette Lattouf, pianist Jayson Gillham and myself, many Australians have been subjected to harassment and have been the subject of complaints, whether to the AHRC, in universities, councils, schools and other institutions, perhaps for wearing a keffiya, questioning Israeli govt policy or condemning IDF actions.
The complaint against me by the Australian Zionist Foundation to the Australian Human Rights Commission is based on my posting of a speech by Nasrallah, with a comment pointing to the threat of escalation in violence that violence begets, that Nasrallah’s threats were mirroring Netanyahu’s actions toward Palestinians, and that Netanyahu has started something he may not be able to finish.
For the alleged offence and hurt caused by such post I maybe forced to embark on a legal process in the courts that will likely go all the way to Australia’s highest court.
No one is complaining about my or others’ posts of the genocidal and messianic speeches of senior Israeli officials, though they are indeed carrying out their threats. No doubt hearing them will be distressing to Palestinians here, whose families may lie under rubble or be among the dismembered and disembowelled or beheaded children. What Palestinian would listen to the words of Netanyahu, Ben Gevir, Smotrich, Daniella Weiss or leading Israeli Rabbis among others, and not feel terrorised? When has anyone suggested we should be barred from hearing them speak, as rabid as their calls might be? It is in fact imperative we do hear them, to understand the personalities driving these extremist policies, their explicitly stated aims and the ends to which they are determined to go to achieve them.
The irony of this double standard in deeming whose feelings deserve to be protected and whose do not, whose threatening rant we will applaud or politely ignore, and whose we will not be permitted to hear, is lost on both the government and the complainants, many of who organised themselves into WhatsApp group chats to plan and coordinate attacks on critics of Israel, including myself.
I have been denounced as an antisemite, with the assistance of the Chief Reporter of The Age, once deemed to be Australia’s leading intellectual mainstream Centre-Left publication, though I have spent my entire career in one form or another working to protect our right to know and to promote the principle of human rights for all.
We must defend our right to choose whether we wish to hear and see both sides of a conflict. I will defend both my obligation as a journalist to expose important information in aid of this, as well as my right to express an opinion about a matter I happen to know something about, having been involved in this geopolitical space (among others) for almost 4 decades professionally in one way or another. Important information and perspectives should not be withheld. That would be a subversion of democracy.
I recently posted a revealing interview with the late Yahya Sinwar because we are entitled to some insight into why millions in the Arab world mourn him as they did Nasrallah, and because we are entitled to make up our own minds about him and his place in the history of the Palestinian resistance movement. Nelson Mandela spent years in jail and was a proscribed terrorist. In the end, he was deemed to have been a freedom fighter and became a President.
To expect journalists to demur from asking uncomfortable questions about government policy including the proscription of an individual as a terrorist, is not defensible, and Opposition leader Peter Dutton’s attempt to bully a young ABC journalist for doing so was inappropriate. Given it is perfectly legitimate to review policies as well as laws, it is a legitimate function of journalism to ask pointed questions about these matters.
Public discourse around the banning of the Swastika, the purpose of that law and the application of the law, are equally legitimate.
The Swastika, a symbol banned in Australia in response to its use by supporters of the genocidal Nazis, was used in a poster in Israeli colours at a rally.
Confronting as this may have been to those supporting the policies of the Israeli government, its use here was not to generate support for Nazism, but to decry it.
Yet the holder of that poster was arrested and charged because it is a ‘prohibited symbol’.
Are we to burn all books containing images of the swastika? Paintings? Cartoons?
It appears the application of the law in this case is achieving far more than its intended purpose, which was to deter those publicly supporting Nazism. Instead, it has led to the prosecution of someone using the symbol to criticise what they deem to be criminal behaviour similar to that of the Nazis.
The Labor government’s incantation around social cohesion and harmony is a weaponisation of that policy against one community. Words and symbols evidently offend and hurt more than bombs and starvation or volunteering to fight in an army conducting acts deemed genocidal by the ICJ, even when that country is a signatory to the Genocide Convention as Australia is.
The Prime Minister, Opposition leader and others say protesters are bringing a conflict ‘over there’ to our streets. As has been pointed out by others, pro-Palestinian supporters can’t bring something here that has been here all along and disregarded. Historically Australia has contributed significantly to the formation and continuation of the problem ‘over there’. It has been a participant in UN processes and continues to be a great supporter of Israel despite its larceny of land, ethnic cleansing over decades and current genocide.
Senior government figures persist in condemning the term ‘From the River to the Sea’ as divisive, even violent, ignorant or feigning ignorance the term has been central to the Likkud Party and is also enshrined in Israeli law as a right reserved for Jewish people only. There are calls from senior figures in Israel to finish the project of Greater Israel, ‘from the Euphrates to the Nile’ – a clear threat to the sovereignty of numerous other nations, while it is once again bombing Beirut, purportedly to eradicate Hezbollah.
Whilst the political class and mainstream media have no problem with double standards, courts may take a different view in the matter of free speech.
In a landmark case in the UK that will reverberate here because the reasoning and principles apply equally, an employment tribunal earlier this year found Prof. David Miller was wrongfully dismissed by Bristol University for allegedly making antisemitic remarks. In recent days the tribunal published its judgement which found it was not antisemitic to criticise Israel for apartheid, ethnic cleansing and genocide, that in fact this position was ‘worthy of respect in a democratic society.’
The judge stated that Miller’s ‘opposition to Zionism is not opposition to the idea of Jewish self-determination or of a preponderantly Jewish state existing in the world, but rather, as he defines it, to the exclusive realisation of Jewish rights to self-determination within a land that is home to a very substantial non-Jewish population’.
Miller’s comments were accepted as lawful, found not to be antisemitic, did not incite violence and did not pose any threat to any person’s health or safety (though feelings may have been hurt and offence was clearly taken).
We have yet to see how this may play out here where a law states that to offend is to cause harm, in concert with other planned moves that will restrict free speech further, including criminal penalties.
One of the first things I was told when I started working in a newsroom was ‘One man’s terrorist is another man’s freedom fighter’. At the time I thought it was a statement of the obvious. Decades later we have now arrived at the point where this idea is dangerously controversial. It is one that may land you in prison as an antisemite and supporter of terrorism.
https://johnmenadue.com/free-speech-journalism-and-democracy-in-a-time-of-genocide/
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YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.