OCCUPIED
JERUSALEM, July 8 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - The Israeli
cabinet sparked charges of racial discrimination Monday, July 8, after
it approved a bill enabling state land to be reserved for Jews only
"for security reasons".
The
text, sponsored by rabbi Haim Druckman, a deputy for the far-right
National Religious Party, to overturn a March 2000 ruling by the
Supreme Court, was approved by 17 to two ministers late Sunday, July
7, a government official said.
Human
rights groups, the main opposition party, the government's legal
advisor and Foreign Minister Shimon Peres all criticized the move,
which Druckman for his part called a "victory for Zionism."
According
to Agence France-Presse (AFP),the measure, which still has to be
approved by the Israeli parliament, stems from a suit brought to the
Supreme Court by Adel Kaadan, an Israeli Arab who wished to buy land
in the cooperative village of Katzir in Galilee, but was rejected
because he was an Arab.
The
village was set up in 1982 by the quasi-governmental Jewish Agency,
whose mission is to attract Jews living abroad to come to Israel and
establish Jewish communities.
As
a result of Kaadan's petition, the Supreme Court ruled there should be
no discrimination between Jews and Arabs in the distribution of state
lands, even those managed by the Jewish Agency.
According
to the Association for Civil Rights in Israel (ACRI), the state holds
title to 93 percent of all land in Israel, the vast majority of which
is leased by the Jewish Agency.
ACRI's
chief legal adviser Dan Yakir said that since the Supreme Court
ruling, the Jewish Agency has not been allowed to discriminate about
who lives on the land it administers.
However,
if the proposed bill is passed by the Knesset (parliament), it would
give the Jewish Agency the legal backing to prevent any non-Jewish
Israeli from living on land under its control, Yakir told AFP.
"With
the support of the government, the chances are that this bill will be
passed, unfortunately," Yakir said.
"This
regrettable decision by the Israeli cabinet amounts to
apartheid," Kaadan told the Israeli daily Maariv.
"Peace-loving
people, both Arabs and Jews, are struggling to bring people closer
together and strengthen coexistence, and in one moment a government
rises and in one unfortunate decision kills these budding flowers of
peace," he said.
"I
don't know where the common sense and conscience of all those who
supported the acceptance of such a racist decision are."
ACRI,
which has been representing the Kaadan family's case, slammed the
decision, saying the state was prohibited from discriminating against
its citizens in the allotment of public lands.
"The
Kaadan family's battle ... is a legal struggle over the nature of
democracy in Israel, as defined in the Israeli Declaration of
Independence," the organization said in a statement.
"The
treatment of Arab citizens by the state as enemies until proven
otherwise has no place in a democracy. This prejudicial attitude must
not be given expression in the discrimination against citizens based
on their national origin."
Attorney
General and government legal advisor Elyakim Rubinstein urged
ministers not to support the bill when it came before the Knesset,
saying it would widen the rift between Jews and Arabs, the daily
Haaretz reported.
Rubenstein
said the bill was unnecessary, adding that the pursuit of equality
between Jews and Arabs does not run counter to the realization of
Zionism, AFP reported.
The
Supreme Court ruling in the Katzir case was not the end of Zionism, he
added.
The
decision was rejected out of hand as "racist" by Foreign
Minister Shimon Peres and the Labour party, the second largest party
in Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's right-leaning government.
Peres,
Sharon and Labor Defense Minister Binyamin Ben Eliezer all missed
Sunday's vote because of a meeting with the Egyptian intelligence
chief General Omar Soleiman.
Peres
said in a statement that "the Labor party would fight with all
its strength against this racist decision."
The
decision went against the agreement which set up Sharon's coalition
and the government's basic line, which speaks explicitly about full
equal rights for all citizens of Israel, he said.
The
head of the left-wing opposition party Meretz, Yossi Sarid, called it
"a racist stain on Israel."
"No
other government in the democratic world would have adopted such a
law," he said.
Israel
had fought for years against a United Nations general assembly
resolution, passed in 1975 and only rescinded in 1991, which equated
Zionism with racism. Such law will prove that Zionism is very much
equated with racism.