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South African Protestors Demand Severing Ties with "Apartheid" Israel

PRETORIA, March 22 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - More than 1,000 protestors gathered in the center of Pretoria Thursday to mark the country's human rights day by expressing their solidarity with the Palestinians and demanding severing ties with the "apartheid state" of Israel.

Various organizations, including the ANC, Cosatu and the SA Communist Party, urged the government to sever diplomatic ties with Israel by recalling the country's ambassador, reported South African daily newspaper, The Star.

The call was made Thursday, March 21, during a march on the Union Buildings, organized by the Palestinian Action Group (PAG).

In a memorandum, the group also demanded that South Africa institutes sanctions against Israel, end all arms deals with it, and investigate South Africans being recruited into the Israeli occupation army.

The group refused to hand over the memorandum to two officials from the department of foreign affairs, claiming their rank was too low.

"Our government must start taking the struggle of the Palestinian people much more seriously," PAG organizer Naheem Jeenah told the jeering crowd.

Two separate memoranda were also prepared for the U.S. and Israeli governments. The PAG drew parallels between the struggle of South Africans against apartheid and that of Palestinians against "the unlawful occupation of Palestine by the Israelis", The Star reported.

The PAG called on the Israeli government to withdraw from Palestinian refugee camps and occupied territories, called for the introduction of an international force to protect the Palestinians, and urged recognition of the Palestinian state.

Jeenah said the past few weeks had seen more violence against the Palestinian people, "even more than during the 1967 war", The Star said.

ANC MP and member of the parliamentary committee on foreign affairs, Ebrahim Ismail Ebrahim, called Israel a racist state and condemned the "brutal action" by the Israeli occupation army against the Palestinians.

The SACP's Mazibuko Jara said Israel was "nothing more than an apartheid state" supported by "imperialist America". "How long are we [South Africans] going to watch Palestinians being slaughtered?" he asked.

Trade union leader Joyce Pekane, addressing the rally, called for South African support for the Palestinians.

"The South African government coupled with the Arab League must serve as a platform for resolving all outstanding questions relating to the resolution of the Palestinian state," she said, quoted by Agence France-Presse (AFP).

"We must reject the prescriptive proposals that the Zionists, with the support of the United States, have now put forward as a precondition for peace," she added.

Protesters echoed the calls by political and other leaders with banners proclaiming that Israel and Zionism were equal to ethnic cleansing and racism. Protesters also called for the continuation of the Palestinian uprising. One poster called the U.S., Israel and Britain an "axis of evil".

The march went off without incident, but organizers were unhappy that police prevented them from marching to the U.S. and Israeli embassies. Police said they had denied the request because of security concerns. 

The country's human rights day marks the date in 1960 when apartheid regime South African police opened fire on a black demonstration in Sharpeville in which 69 people were shot dead.

The South African demonstration in support of the Palestinian people followed a series of demos held in world capitals against the recent deadly Israeli incursions into Palestinian land. In Tokyo, peace activists held a round-the-clock "funeral procession" at the Israeli embassy Thursday, March 14, calling for the Israeli army's immediate withdrawal from Palestinian areas.

The Japan-based Peace Boat human rights group vowed to maintain its demonstration 24 hours a day until the Israeli occupation army pulls out.

"We have many friends in Gaza, West Bank and Jerusalem, and their lives are in peril even at this exact moment," Peace Boat campaigner Tatsuya Yoshioka said as the protest got under way.

"Let's start here at the Israeli embassy in Tokyo even though we don't know if this voice will reach Prime Minister Ariel Sharon and others responsible for the military strikes," he said. "We will continue 24 hours until the military action ends."

Peace Boat said it planed to rotate its members to continue the walk around the embassy indefinitely.

The protest started with 20 silent participants circling the city block where the Israeli mission stands.

They were carrying a mock coffin covered with a black cloth and a sign protesting the murder then of more than 1, 150 Palestinians in 17 months.

The death toll of the now 18-month-old Intifada has reached 1, 560, most of them Palestinian women, teenagers and children.

Peace Boat said the sign would be constantly updated with the latest death toll.

The death toll actually made it Thursday to 1,526, including 1,178 Palestinians, mostly teenagers and children, and 343 Israelis.

Other activists were carrying a blow-up picture of a boy kissing the blood-smeared head of a woman and of children killed in Gaza.

No immediate comment was available from the Israeli embassy.

Also in France, hundreds of people gathered in central Paris Thursday, March 7, in a demonstration called by left-wing political rights groups in support of the Palestinians.

Carrying banners bearing slogans such as "Stop the massacre in Palestine", the crowd listened to speakers demand the dismantling of Jewish settlements and the dispatch of an international peacekeeping force to the Middle East.

On the same day, in the northern Israeli city of Haifa, some 1,000 Israeli Arabs marched through the city center to protest deadly Israeli incursions in the Palestinian territories.

Protestors, mainly from the Arab Israeli Hadash party, carried signs saying: "The occupation is the terrorist," and "The government is murderous."

Thousands of university students in Cairo, Damascus, Beirut and Amman have -- in the last two weeks -- organized demonstrations against the latest large-scale military operations by Israel in the occupied Palestinian territories, where hundreds of Palestinians have been killed.

Within the same context, African leaders, attending a recent Community of Sahel-Saharan States (COMESSA) summit in Syrte, Libya, condemned Israel's "state terrorism" and pledged their support for Palestinian President Yasser Arafat.

The summit, in a final statement, said COMESSA "firmly condemns Israel's state terrorism and calls on the international community to take immediate measures to exert pressure on the occupation force and lift the blockade imposed on President Arafat."

Russia has also condemned Israeli violence against Palestinians, saying it was fast and presented "a very dangerous scenario".

Even the United States, Israel’s closest alley, criticized the Israeli army practices against the Palestinians, with U.S. President George W. Bush describing them Thursday, March 14, as “not helpful”.

 

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