September 1, 2007

Zionists Can't Handle Criticism

The British Zionist Federation canceled a London appearance by Ha'aretz columnist Danny Rubinstein the day after he called Israel an “apartheid state” at a United Nations conference on Palestinians.
Rubinstein, the Israeli newspaper's Arab affairs editor and a member of its editorial board, told an audience of some 350 people that "today Israel is an apartheid state with different status for different communities,” according to sources at the event, held at the European Parliament in Brussels. He went on to say that Palestinians living in Gaza, East Jerusalem, the West Bank and Israel each had “a different status," according to a summary of his speech by a United Nations web site. Rubinstein also said "Hamas won the election of the international community and Israel cannot ignore that” and argued that the security fence Israel was building could not be justified, sources said.
“Criticism of Israeli policy is acceptable," the Zionist federation's chairman, Andrew Balcombe, said in a prepared statement. "However, by using the word ‘apartheid’ in a U.N. conference held at the European Parliament, Danny Rubinstein encourages the demonisation of Israel and the Jewish people. I believe he was naïve to attend the UN conference. Indeed his own newspaper Ha'aretz had earlier reported that Israeli and EU lawmakers had attacked the UN meeting for having a completely one-sided, anti-Israeli agenda.”
Rubinstein, who did not return a call seeking comment, made his remarks during a forum that pro-Israel non-governmental organizations -- including B'nai B'rith, U.N. Watch and NGO Monitor -- have described as Israel-bashing sessions run by the U.N. Committee on the Exercise of the Inalienable Rights of the Palestinian People. The pro-Israel groups say that the U.N. committee has a long history of opposing Israeli interests.

source

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

THIS IS APARTHEID

By the way, great news. They're finally waking up to reality:

HRW: IDF Attack Was Legitimate

In a surprising move, the often anti-Israel Human Rights Watch issued a statement in support of Israel’s right to self-defense over the weekend. Rocket launchers in Gaza are “legitimate military objectives,” said HRW’s Middle East Director, Joe Stork. Local “armed groups” are at fault for endangering civilians when they place launchers in civilian neighborhoods, he said.