Celebrating our Victories, Planning for More!
Celebrating our Victories, Planning for More!
Marking the 5th anniversary of the Palestinian Civil Society
BDS Call
Occupied Palestine, May 28 2010 – The Palestinian Civil Society Boycott,
Divestment and Sanctions National Committee (BNC) calls on people of conscience
all over the world to unite for a BDS Media Day on 9 July 2010, the 5th
anniversary of launching the BDS movement and the 6th anniversary of the
International Court of Justice's Advisory Opinion stating that Israel is to
dismantle its illegal Wall and associated colonial regime.
Five years since the call for BDS against Israel until it
complies with international law, the global BDS movement has grown to become a
force to be reckoned with. It is time to celebrate our well-deserved
achievements, to critically and rationally appraise our present challenges, and
to further strengthen our collective resolve to end Israel's three-tiered
system of oppression against the Palestinian people by making it pay the price
for it through our civil BDS campaigns in all fields.
For this anniversary on 9 July the BNC urges all partners to
focus on the media to reach a wider audience:
- Publish BDS
articles in your local and national press
- Brief
journalists on your BDS activities, establish enduring relationships and make a
case with them on why they should cover BDS
- Stage public
actions with focus on media, such as direct action and launching of high
profile campaigns,
publicize legal actions, expose violators and promote public
debates;
- Use alternative
media to mark the anniversary;
Activists from 22 countries answered our last call for a
Global BDS Day of Action on 30 March, commemorating the Palestinian Land Day,
with meaningful actions. Join us on 9 July 2010 for a day of media-focused
activities to celebrate our achievements and plan for the future.
For information on how to join this global event and how to
develop ongoing BDS action in your country, organization and network, please
contact the Palestinian BDS National Committee (BNC) at:
ziyaad@bdsmovement.net. For more information
see: http://bdsdayofaction.net
Five years since the BDS Call – building hope for change,
promoting Israel’s accountability, asserting Palestinian rights
Six years ago, on 9 July 2004, the International Court of
Justice (ICJ) declared illegal the Wall under construction in the occupied
Palestinian West Bank and ruled that Israel was to dismantle it and make
reparations to its Palestinians victims. The ICJ, in this landmark ruling,
further stated[1]:
"As regards the legal consequences for other States,
the Court finds that all States are under an obligation not to recognize the
illegal situation resulting from the construction of the wall and not to render
aid or assistance in maintaining the situation created by such construction. The Court further finds that it is for all
States, while respecting the United Nations Charter and international law, to
see to it that any impediment, resulting from the construction of the wall, in
the exercise by the Palestinian people of its right to self‑determination
is brought to an end. In addition, all
States parties to the Fourth Geneva Convention are under an obligation, while
respecting the Charter and international law, to ensure compliance by Israel
with international humanitarian law as embodied in that Convention."
The resounding failure of world governments to uphold their
said obligations was the direct trigger for launching the BDS movement as a
civil society response to official international collusion with Israel's
persistent denial of Palestinian rights and its ongoing disregard of
international law. Inspired by the struggles that unite people from around the
world by the virtue of their common humanity, especially the struggle against
South African apartheid in the past, the 2005 BDS call has sought to galvanize
mass citizen action as pressure and counterforce to states. Western states, in
particular, which provide unconditional political, economic, academic and
military support to Israel, have nourished and sustained its colonial and racist
violence against the Palestinian people, setting back any hope for a just and
comprehensive peace.
Undeterred by the far-reaching conclusions of the ICJ
opinion and, more recently, the UN Goldstone Report which found serious
evidence of Israeli war crimes in Gaza, and emboldened by Western complicity,
Israel has continued, with full impunity, its construction of the Wall and
colonies in occupied Palestinian territory; its fatal siege of Gaza; its ethnic
cleansing of entire Palestinian communities in occupied Jerusalem and the Naqab
(Negev) desert; and its denial of the Palestinian right to free movement,
education, access to health services and water resources, among other rights.
In short, Israel has entrenched its regime of occupation, colonization and
apartheid, and no action has been taken by the UN and the hegemonic powers to
stop this.
Following a long tradition of Palestinian struggle for
freedom, justice and human dignity a wide coalition of Palestinian civil
society issued the BDS Call to assert the primacy of the right to
self-determination. As stated in the BDS Call, this consists of the fundamental
rights of the three main components of the Palestinian people: to live free
from Israeli occupation in Gaza and the West Bank, including East Jerusalem; to
end Israel's system of racial discrimination, or apartheid; and for the
refugees, the great majority of the Palestinian people, to exercise their
UN-sanctioned right to return to their homes of origin.
The BDS movement has presented the best hope yet to
effectively and morally counter Israel's frantic attempts to sideline these
basic Palestinian rights. Based on progressive, anti-racist principles, it has
tapped into the creative energies of dedicated people of conscience the world
over, in their diversity and variance of contexts. Major trade union
federations, from South Africa to Brazil, Ireland and the UK, as well as many
trade unions in major Western countries have endorsed boycott measures against
Israel. Campaigns against free trade and
other agreements with Israel span from Argentina, Chile and Brazil to the EU.
Academic boycott campaigns have sprung in several countries,
including Britain, the US, France, Canada, Italy, Spain, Australia and Norway.
More international cultural figures of the weight of Ken Loach, John Berger,
Naomi Klein, Gil Scott-Heron, Elvis Costello and Carlos Santana are heeding the
call for a cultural boycott of Israel and its complicit institutions.
Divestment from companies profiting from Israel's occupation
and violation of Palestinian rights are spreading across tens of campuses in
the US and Canada, with Hampshire College being the first to actually pass
motions to divest, and with the student senate at the University of California
at Berkeley coming as close as a vote of 80% for divestment, only to be
undemocratically vetoed by the senate's president. Five Nobel laureates and
many prominent public intellectuals have issued statements supporting the
Berkeley divestment campaign, raising public awareness about the complicity of
Western corporations and institutions in Israel's infringement of Palestinian
rights. Campaigns to divest from Lev Leviev Diamonds and to boycott other
Israeli and international companies implicated in Israel’s human rights violations
are developing apace.
At the official level, the European Parliament endorsed the
Goldstone report and its recommendations, which called for investigation and
prosecution of those responsible for Israel's crimes in the occupied and
besieged Gaza Strip. Several suspected Israeli war criminals came close to
facing legal charges in Belgium, Britain, Spain, the United States and
elsewhere. Sanctions by Spain against an Israeli academic team from the illegal
colony-college of Ariel, and by the Norwegian and Swedish national pension
funds against Israel's major weapons manufacturer, Elbit Systems, have also
ushered in a new phase in the growth of the BDS movement into the Western
mainstream. Another key indicator of this changes was the recent European Court
of Justice ruling that Israel's colonial settlement products cannot enjoy tax
breaks under the EU-Israel Association Agreement, which itself is being
intensely challenged by main political forces and human rights groups across
Europe. South Africa’s foreign ministry now regularly defines Israeli policies
as “reminiscent of apartheid,” while Venezuela and Bolivia have entirely cut
diplomatic relations with Israel.
Support for BDS has also grown among progressive, anti-colonialist
Israeli civil society; so has endorsement of the movement by a growing number
of Jewish groups in the West. The Palestinian voice, after decades of being
shunned, muzzled or considered irrelevant, is back in the lead and Palestinian
wishes are respected. We salute those standing with us in this struggle for
justice, freedom and dignity.
As BDS continues to chart spectacular victories at the
grassroots level, powerful states have continued to appease Israel and
whitewash its crimes. Most recently, member states of the Organization for
Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) decided to admit Israel in blatant
violation of their own obligations under international law and in contravention
of the Organization's own charter. Moreover, the US, EU, UN and Russia -
representatives of which form the self-appointed "Quartet" that
dictates the terms of the "peace process” – are hatching yet another plan
aimed at creating what they label a “state,” which will in fact be a formalization
of the current Palestinian ghettos, or Bantustans, undermining basic
Palestinian rights.
On the 5th anniversary of the BDS call, it is therefore
crucial to reaffirm that any political solution must guarantee the basic
Palestinian rights laid out in the 2005 BDS Call for: ending Israel's
occupation and colonization, ending apartheid, and implementing the right of
return for the refugees.
Let’s make 9 July a special media-focused day to celebrate 5
years of the BDS struggle and to reach out to a wider audience!
