Gaza Freedom Flotilla 2 getting ready to sail

NOVANEWS

 
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The Only Democracy? will bring you posts from Gabe Schivone, a Jewish Voice

for Peace member aboard the “Audacity of Hope.”

Here he is being interviewed by the Arizona Republic about his globe-spanning border activism.

And here is a recent op-ed by Schivone, who also is active with the border rights

group No More Deaths.Crossposted from Mondoweiss.net

Israel’s harassment of US-Mexico border human rights activist raises many questions

On May 16, a 19-year-old American student from a Southwest university was stopped

by Israeli security agents and held for several hours as she attempted to enter the

occupied Palestinian West Bank with 17 other schoolmates and two professors.

At one point in a grueling interrogation that lasted until 2 am, she was harassed

about her affiliation with No Más Muertes/No More Deaths, a humanitarian group

that operates along the U.S.-Mexico border.

No More Deaths is a prominent U.S. humanitarian group, well known for its num-

erous volunteers who have been indicted over the years by the federal government

(though all acquitted) for advocating fundamental change in U.S. Immigration and

Border Enforcement policies and, in the process, helping save the lives of migrants

along the U.S.-Mexico border. So why is Israel so concerned about a human rights

group that operates in a humanitarian border crisis zone several thousand miles away?

A report in recent weeks by Israel’s leading newspaper, Ha’aretz, suggests a possible

answer, or at least provides some interesting insight on Israel’s efforts to deal with

what it perceives as “delegitimization”: people and groups around the world opposing

Israeli state crimes, organizing a mass withdrawal of support for them, and attempting

to press accountability for such crimes under international and domestic law.

Following “an upsurge in worldwide efforts” of these sorts, according to Ha’aretz which

cited senior Israeli officials and Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) officers whose Military

Intelligence (MI) research division “created a department several months ago that

is dedicated to monitoring left-wing groups” overseas and that “will work closely

with government ministries.”

The Israeli officials were not reluctant to admit that the monitoring unit was created

in the wake of a supposed intelligence failure prior to Israel’s lethal raid on the human-

itarian convoy “Gaza Freedom Flotilla” last May in which nine international civilians

were shot to death “in the manner of summary execution” and dozens were seriously

injured, according to a UN fact-finding mission that investigated the attack.

According to the Ha’aretz report, the intelligence unit has been participating in high-

brass discussions preparing for Flotilla 2. The unit’s interest might well be piqued, then,

by the fact that the main No More Deaths Tucson General group announced last month

on its website its support for two volunteers traveling to break the siege of Gaza, one

being this author and the other a Palestinian student wishing to remain anonymous.

Ha’aretz described an official in Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office explaining

that the unit’s “quality of information” about foreign targeted groups has “improved”

and the “quantity” of such information “has increased in recent months.”

One Military Intelligence (MI) official explained to that “[t]he enemy changes, as does

the nature of the struggle,” and so “we have to boost activity in this sphere.” Doubtless

the intelligence unit is doing its job. But whether Israel regards No More Deaths and its

volunteers and supporters as enemies of the state remains unconfirmed.

What other information in the public sphere has the unit been—or would be—able to

“collect” on No More Deaths in order to “adequately prepare” for challenges posed to

Israeli policy by civil society actions such as the flotilla?

Probably most relevant to the case of the student who was interrogated for her

involvement with the group concerns the No More Deaths University of Arizona

(UA) chapter (UANMD), which has been leading the No More Deaths community in

fulfilling its commitment to “Global Movement Building.”

In November 2010, UA NMD allied with fellow campus groups Students for Justice

in Palestine and Jewish Voice for Peace in organizing tours of the U.S.-Mexico border,

starting with Nogales, AZ-Sonora, a border community bisected by the border wall.

The effort aimed to highlight the “concrete connections” between the U.S. and Israel

in their monetary and material exchanges in security technology, training and resou-

rces in maintaining state policy in both areas.

The groups followed their border tours with a national student conference, Concrete

Connections, held in February, in which students and teachers from nearly a dozen

states from across the U.S. attended to discuss comparisons and differences between

US/Mexico border issues and the Israel/Palestine conflict and how solidarity movem-

ents can internationalize their commitment to each other’s struggle for justice in both

areas.

One of the topics discussed by some activists was a “mock wall movement” to employ

atcampuses across the U.S., modeled off the “mock shanty towns” that proliferated on

U.S. campuses during the mid-1980s to symbolize student support for divestment from

companies supporting South African Apartheid. On March 21—incidentally the same

day Ha’aretz ran the above report—the largest mock apartheid wall in the U.S. was

erected, dividing the 40,000-student UA campus for ten days, sponsored by numerous

groups but chiefly organized by none other than the UANMD, Students for Justice in

Palestine, and Jewish Voice for Peace. Numerous other schools across the country

followed suit with their announcements of erecting similar walls later in the spring

and this coming fall.

South African Archbishop Desmond Tutu sent a letter of support to the students,

echoing their call for mock walls to spring up across the country. In April esteemed

public intellectual Dr. Cornel West echoed Tutu’s call for divestment, in particular

supporting the students’ Ethnic Studies solidarity program bringing together youth

from Arizona and Palestine to exchange experiences and strategies of resisting U.S./AZ

and Israeli state attacks on education.

Whatever Israel’s intention, it is clear that groups such as No More Deaths pose a serious

threat to Israel’s ability to carry out state crimes and policies of illegal settlement and

occupation unimpeded.

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