"It’s apartheid, says Israeli
ambassadors to South Africa"
GroundUp, June 8, 2021
By Ilan Baruch and Alon Liel, former Israeli
Ambassadors to South Africa
https://www.groundup.org.za/article/israeli-ambassadors-compare-israel-south-africa/
During our careers in the foreign service, we both
served as Israel’s ambassador to South Africa. In this position, we learned
firsthand about the reality of apartheid and the horrors it inflicted. But more
than that – the experience and understanding we gained in South Africa helped
us to understand the reality at home.
For over half a century, Israel has ruled over the
occupied Palestinian territories with a two-tiered legal system, in which,
within the same tract of land in the West Bank, Israeli settlers live under
Israeli civil law while Palestinians live under military law. The system is one
of inherent inequality. In this context, Israel has worked to change both the
geography and the demography of the West Bank through the construction of
settlements, which are illegal under international law. Israel has advanced
projects to connect these settlements to Israel proper through intensive
investment in infrastructure development, and a vast network of highways and
water and electricity infrastructure have turned the settlement enterprise into
a comfortable version of suburbia. This has happened alongside the
expropriation and takeover of massive amounts of Palestinian land, including
Palestinian home evictions and demolitions. That is, settlements are built and
expanded at the expense of Palestinian communities, which are forced onto
smaller and smaller tracts of land.
This reality reminds us of a story that former
Ambassador Avi Primor described in his autobiography about a trip that he took
with then-Minister of Defense Ariel Sharon to South Africa in the early 1980s.
During the visit, Sharon expressed great interest in South Africa’s bantustan
project. Even a cursory look at the map of the West Bank leaves little doubt
regarding where Sharon received his inspiration. The West Bank today consists
of 165 “enclaves” – that is, Palestinian communities encircled by territory
taken over by the settlement enterprise. In 2005, with the removal of
settlements from Gaza and the beginning of the siege, Gaza became simply
another enclave – a bloc of territory without autonomy, surrounded largely by
Israel and thus effectively controlled by Israel as well.
The bantustans of South Africa under the apartheid
regime and the map of the occupied Palestinian territories today are predicated
on the same idea of concentrating the “undesirable” population in as small an
area as possible, in a series of non-contiguous enclaves. By gradually driving
these populations from their land and concentrating them into dense and
fractured pockets, both South Africa then and Israel today worked to thwart
political autonomy and true democracy.
This week, we mark the fifty-fifth year since the
occupation of the West Bank began. It is clearer than ever that the occupation
is not temporary, and there is not the political will in the Israeli government
to bring about its end. Human Rights Watch recently concluded that Israel has
crossed a threshold and its actions in the occupied territories now meet the
legal definition of the crime of apartheid under international law. Israel is
the sole sovereign power that operates in this land, and it systematically
discriminates on the basis of nationality and ethnicity. Such a reality is, as
we saw ourselves, apartheid. It is time for the world to recognize that what we
saw in South Africa decades ago is happening in the occupied Palestinian territories
too. And just as the world joined the struggle against apartheid in South
Africa, it is time for the world to take decisive diplomatic action in our case
as well and work towards building a future of equality, dignity, and security
for Palestinians and Israelis alike.
Ilan Baruch served as Israeli Ambassador to South
Africa, Namibia, Botswana, and Zimbabwe.
Dr. Alon Liel served as Israeli Ambassador to
South Africa and as Director General of the Israeli Ministry of Foreign
Affairs.
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