Bulletin March 2013

The Jordan Valley

P10300781 300x168 Bulletin March 2013

The aim behind travelling to the Jordan Valley was to observe and research the standard of education and infrastructure of institutions. We visited the villages of Fasayal, Zubeidat and Al Ka’abineh. With 95% of the Jordan Valley classified as Area C and under complete Israeli military control it is greatly neglected and therefore there is a stark contrast with education in Area A & B.

The school in Al Ka’abineh has 70 students – a basic structure made of tin and concrete it has 6 demolition orders, with inadequate sanitation facilities and lacking in library or IT facilities. The school highlighted the major obstacle faced by Palestinian schools in the area of obtaining permits to build permanent structures.

The village of Fasayal is divided into Area B & C and has a school with 150 students built without permit. In recent years it has increased its capacity with more classrooms meaning students are taught grade-specifically. However they are still unable to take the Tawjihi for which they have to travel to Jericho.

The village of Zubeidat has a preschool that is solely funded by the women who run it and admission fees. Due to the high rate of unemployment and low wages in the region, many parents cannot afford the fees. They have insufficient teaching resources for the 40 kids. Many of the children don’t continue to further education due to the lack of job opportunities at the end- instead working in the settlements. Those who do, move closer to An-Najah University because of movement restriction and often don’t return due to the lack of employment opportunities.

There is also a disparity between the education of girls and boys; parents prefer daughters not to have to travel because of fear of harassment faced from settlers and soldiers.

Ranaa

 

Divestment abroad: UCR and UCSD

The last couple of months have seen interesting developments on West Coast of the United States at the University of California. Both UC Riverside and UC San Diego’s student councils have followed in UC Berkeley’s footsteps by voting to divest from Israel. While the votes have not produced binding legislation, they show a strong indication that there is a movement to support the Palestinian cause.

The Right to Education Campaign offered a letter of support to the UC San Diego campaign informing them of the ways in which the Israeli occupation affects students here in Palestine from travel restrictions and checkpoints to arbitrary arrest by Israeli Occupying Forces.

While UC Berkeley, Irvine, Riverside and now San Diego have all successfully divested, Stanford University formed a notable exception in rejecting a proposal to divest from Israel, instead passing a separate resolution expressing its firm stance against investment in companies that cause “substantial social injury.” While this is not the idea outcome, it does indicate a level of awareness of the students at Stanford to the injustice.

The successes within the University of California are a great sign of growing awareness and we hope that more universities will follow in their footsteps.

Isabel

 

Research into British Universities’ Complicity in Israel’s Occupation

R2E have been working on a database of British universities’ complicity in the occupation, as part of a new project with the BDS national committee. Freedom of Information requests were sent to all British Universities, with almost a hundred replying with information about their investment portfolios. As was to be expected, several Universities have attempted to avoid transparency and rejected the request on a technicality, which could be challenged in future. The FOI requests revealed that British Universities are investing their money in a range of banks and corporations which profit from or aid the occupation economically, including arms firm BAE Systems who supply Israeli F16s with components that have been used against Palestinian universities, and G4S, the security company who equip Israel’s prisons were Palestinian students are regularly detained. This information will be collated and eventually published to encourage British students to consider their own complicity with the occupation and to provide resources for them to successfully push for divestment on their campuses.

James

 

Birzeit University Student Prisoners

Recently, we have conducted several interviews with students who have spent time in military detention. The information gathered from these students will be made available for Addameer prisoner rights group, to create profiles of ex-prisoners. One of those students, Na’el, spoke powerfully about how imprisonment had affected his education: ‘I was supposed to be in university from 2005 until 2009, but because of the arrest, I was not able to finish my education on time.’ He explained that this policy was a frequent tactic of the occupation, affecting many students, including three of his brothers, ‘as a family we experienced arrests nine times. The same way – the same violence and fear’. With around 40% of Palestinian men and 20% of all Palestinians detained since 1967, unlawful imprisonment (often for months without trial as Administrative Detention) has been a tactic the Israeli occupation uses to stifle political dissent against other features of the occupation. Student politics is effectively criminalized by military orders, and many members of student councils have been arrested as a result for ‘belonging to an illegal organisation’. Israel is forcing students to depoliticise as a strategy to entrench the occupation, whilst such imprisonments (there are currently around 100 BZU students are detained) has detrimental long-term effects on Palestinian education.

James

 

Military courts and Hassan Karajah

Though collaboration with Addameer, the prisoners support group, we were able to attend hearings at Israeli military courts for Hassan Karajah, a human rights activist working for Stop the Wall, who has worked with the Campaign and is also a Birzeit University graduate. There are currently 91 Birzeit students in Israeli prison, with 24 of those yet to be charged.

We have managed to attend several of Hassan’s hearings both at Jalameh detention centre near Haifa and at Ofer. He was held in solitary confinement between his arrest on January 23rd and his most recent hearing on March 6th. As well as this, he was interrogated for up to fourteen hours a day by the same interrogators responsible for Arafat Jaradat’s death.

Hassan was charged on March 6th with:

1)      Membership in an “illegal organisation” – based on his membership in student government organisations during his time at Birzeit University, and renting out DJ equipment to a group that used it to celebrate an anniversary of the DFLP.

2)      Contact with an “illegal organisation” – based on allegations he remained in contact with a member of Hizballah after a trip t Lebanon in 2012.

While these charges are clearly trumped up, they are enough to keep Hassan detained. He has another hearing on April 9th.

Hassan’s case is a further example of the further trail that Palestinians face for simply getting an education and taking part in student life, as his arbitrary detention goes to show several years after his graduation.

Isabel

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UCSD vote to divest from Israel

University of California San Diego (UCSD) succeeded in passing a motion to divest from Israel after a vote on Wednesday 13th March. The motion was passed 20-12 with one abstention. This had come after successful divestment votes across California at UC Riverside, UC Irvine and UC Berkely.

Although the vote is non-binding, it does highlight the popular support for Palestine and divestment.

The Right to Education Campaign has issued a letter in support of divestment.

Birzeit University Right to Education Campaign calls upon UCSD to respect human rights and support divestment from Israel.

As the student government of UCSD calls a vote on divestment from Israel, we, the students and volunteers at Birzeit University’s Right to Education Campaign, support the call for UCSD to divest from Israel and the call to review University of California holdings in all companies that profit from occupation, siege, blockade and apartheid imposed upon the Palestinian people.

There are several areas which severely hinder the right to education across the West Bank. Freedom of movement and danger of imprisonment are two major issues which students face on a daily basis.

It is not possible for students from Gaza to attend Birzeit University. They require permits from the Israeli government which have been denied. There were previously 300 students studying at Birzeit from Gaza, however the number is now 5, all of whom have specific visa permissions: they are all exceptions to the rule.

The Apartheid Wall does not keep to the 1967 Armistice Line; instead it slices through Palestinian land, creating what is known as the ‘Seam Zone’. Inhabitants of the Seam Zone must pass through the main check point into the West Bank from East Jerusalem, Qalandia, adds approximately two hours to every journey. Before the checkpoint, travel between Jerusalem and Ramallah (Birzeit University is close by) took 15 minutes. It now takes one or two hours, depending on traffic and the mood of the Israeli Occupation Forces (IOF) stationed there.

Companies such as Hewlett Packard and Motorola Solutions supply technology that is used within checkpoints, either for communication or providing biometric monitoring and other systems helps to support the degradation of Palestinians on a daily basis.

As well as general restrictions on travel, students tend to stay and study closer to home. This is more often the case for female students, as their families are more worried about them; however through not being able to travel freely across the West Bank for fear of arrest, or not being able to get back to their family limits the exchange of knowledge within Palestine.

It is not just students who are affected by Israeli restrictions on movement. Professors who wish to teach at Birzeit but do not hold a Palestinian ID card must re-enter the country every three months to renew their visas. There is no guarantee that they will be able to regain entry, thereby disrupting the learning of their students. Some professors have been known to hold classes via Skype until they have been able to re-enter.

The Israeli authorities classify many student organisations with ties to political parties illegal. As a member of one of these groups, you run the risk of arrest. Several student council presidents have been arrested under this law. As well as this, students are often arrested for as little as attending a student meeting or distributing flyers. There are currently 29 Birzeit University students in Israeli detention. Charges are rarely released immediately and interrogation can go on indefinitely. Prisons are often staffed by G4S, a British/Danish company that specialises in security.

Companies such as Lockheed Martin, Caterpillar Inc., General Electric, Northrop Grumman, Raytheon, Silicon Graphics, Terex Corporation, United Technologies, and Valero Energy Corporation are all involved in arming the forces that suppress Palestine and block the right to education.

Therefore, the students and volunteers of Right to Education Campaign at Birzeit University call on you to support the resolution of the University of California of San Diego Corporate Accountability through Divestment from Corporations Profiting from the Illegal Occupation, Siege, and Blockade of Palestine.

Yours sincerely,

The Right to Education Campaign at Birzeit University

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Press Release: Birzeit students protest presence of British government on campus

On Tuesday 5th March at 12pm, British Consul General Sir Vincent Fean met with Birzeit University President Khalil Hindi to discuss the opinions of Birzeit students regarding the UK-Israel relationship and its impact on the Palestinian people. Fean was also slated to give a lecture at 1pm, which he cancelled when Birzeit students gathered to protest his presence as a representative of the British government.

The students state that their protest was not directed at the individual, who was unharmed, but at the British government, which has failed to fulfil its self-proclaimed duty to support the Palestinian people.

Following the First World War, the Balfour Declaration of 1917 was the first step that Britain took to use its ‘best endeavours’ to create a ‘Jewish National Home’ inside the state of Palestine. This was duly supported by what is commonly known as the British Mandate, which states, under Article 2:

‘The Mandatory shall be responsible for placing the country under such political, administrative and economic conditions as will secure the establishment of the Jewish national home, as laid down in the preamble, and the development of self-governing institutions, and also for safeguarding the civil and religious rights of all the inhabitants of Palestine, irrespective of race and religion.’[1] (Emphasis added)

The students would like to draw attention to initial leaning of the British Government in favour of Israel, and its continued support (through, among other events, the Suez Crisis) of that country.

Although under the British Mandate, the British government was responsible for ‘safeguarding the civil and religious rights of the inhabitants of Palestine’[2] their continued failure to support Palestine has always been a contentious issue within the country – especially coupled with the British government’s failure to vote in favour of supporting a Palestinian State at the recent UN vote, choosing instead to abstain.

The British government’s unconditional material support of the Israeli regime – through arms sales, for example – renders irrelevant any piecemeal attempts to provide humanitarian aid to Palestine; indeed, it is ongoing military aid to Israel that sustains the humanitarian crisis in Palestine.[3] Only severing trade and “security” relations with Israel would tackle the root of the crisis facing Palestinians – a crisis that is fundamentally political in nature, not humanitarian.

The students of Birzeit University’s Right to Education Campaign call on the British Government to:

  • Support the Palestinian people in their struggle to uphold their most basic human rights;
  • Apologise for the 1917 Balfour Declaration, acknowledging its devastating and ongoing impact on the Palestinian people;
  • Impose economic and military sanctions on the state of Israel until it complies with international law.

 

 



[1] The League of Nations, The Palestine Mandate, http://avalon.law.yale.edu/20th_century/palmanda.asp#art20

[2] Ibid

[3] http://www.caat.org.uk/resources/countries/israel/israel-arms-briefing-2011.pdf

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Sabbatical’s Israel junket sparks war of words at EUSA

The bitter and divisive conflict between Israel and Palestine threatened to engulf Edinburgh University Students’ Association last week, after it emerged that a senior student leader at the union accepted an all-expenses-paid five-day trip to Israel courtesy of the Union of Jewish Students, which saw her meet with members of the Israel Defense Forces and visit a controversial Jewish settlement in the Palestinian Territories.
Emma Meehan (pictured, above), EUSA’s vice-president for societies and activities, was part of a UJS-organised delegation which flew to Jerusalem on Wednesday 4 January on what one source described as a “fact-finding trip”, but which critics have been quick to label a “propaganda” mission.

The group, comprising Labour party-aligned student representatives from around the UK and led by UJS campaigns officer Dan Sheldon, have been heavily criticised by pro-Palestine campaigners in the UK and abroad after it emerged that they met with Captain Barak Raz, an Israeli Defence Forces officer who serves as the military’s spokesman for the West Bank. The delegation is also understood to have visited Gush Etzion, a controversial group of Jewish settlements in the West Bank.

Liam O’Hare, president of Edinburgh Students for Justice in Palestine, told The Journal he was “horrified” that Ms Meehan had chosen to join the trip, which he said was “designed to whitewash the continued ethnic cleansing of Palestinian people.”

He said that her participation “has brought the union into disrepute and outraged students from across the political spectrum.

“SJP condemns in the strongest terms the involvement of one of our elected sabbatical officers in this Zionist propaganda trip, and will investigate raising this in all possible forums.”

But Ms Meehan defended her decision to travel with the group, saying that the delegation’s purpose was to “learn more about the history of the conflict and prospects of future peace and reconciliation.”

She told The Journal: “We met with a wide variety of people, including a spokesperson of the IDF and an Israeli government, as well as Palestinian activists and Israeli Arabs.

“In every case we challenged the people we met on the many contentious issues surrounding the debate, from settlements to evictions.”

Ms Meehan has hit back at her critics, accusing them of “closing lines of communication”. She added: “I firmly believe that we need to provide opportunities on campus for students to understand the true complexity of the conflict… condemning students for developing an understanding of the conflict is both intimidating and damaging to campus relations as a whole.”

Ms Meehan’s presence on the trip is seen as particularly controversial because of EUSA’s links with the student body of Birzeit University, a leading Palestinian higher education institution. In 2005, EUSA members voted to twin the association with both the Birzeit student council and the Palestinian grassroots organisation Right to Education.

Noting the recent passage of a EUSA student council motion mandating the union’s executive to “work towards forming closer links with their peers at Birzeit”, Mr O’Hare commented that “instead of doing what student council has mandated her to do, Emma is instead meeting with and giving credibility to representatives of institutions which deny Palestinian students the right to education.

“It is utterly shameful,” he added.

In a statement released to The Journal, the Birzeit University Student Council said they were “very disappointed and shocked” to learn of the trip.

“As students at Birzeit University we were looking forward to working towards forming closer relations and links with EUSA,” they said. “However, Emma’s participation in a politically motivated mission which sole aim is to whitewash Israel’s crimes and the suffering of the Palestinians is disgraceful.”

Accusing Ms Meehan of taking “a political stance”, the council further accused her of showing “a blatant disregard for the history of student activism for human rights at Edinburgh University”, and called upon “the other sabbatical officers, and the wider student body [to] distance themselves from this shameful trip and condemn Ms Meehan for taking part.”

Some of Ms Meehan’s closest colleagues have expressed muted concern over her participation. Mike Williamson, EUSA vice-president for academic affairs, told The Journal: “Anyone who knows my politics knows I’m no fan of Israel, and I certainly wouldn’t have gone if I’d been asked to.”

But Mr Williamson stopped short of openly criticising his fellow sabbatical officer, commenting that although he was “very concerned” that the group had met with IDF spokespeople, it is “the electorate’s job, not mine, to scrutinise Emma’s actions, and she hasn’t broken any rules that I know of.”

Ms Meehan has sought to stress that she travelled in a private capacity, saying: “I took annual leave to attend this trip, and my attendance was of no cost to EUSA.”

However, Mr O’Hare has criticised this claim as naive, remarking that while “those on the trip may claim they are taking part in a private capacity… they received the invitations because of their involvement in student politics and this completely free trip is undoubtedly aimed at influencing decisions made in both current and future roles.”

It is unclear at this stage what repercussions the row might have for Ms Meehan. However, SJP sources have indicated that they intend to attempt a censure motion at the next meeting of EUSA’s Student Council.

Daniel Sheldon, the UJS campaigns director who led the trip, told The Journal that the union has run trips like this one for “many decades”, and that they involve discussions with “a wide variety of activists, educators and journalists from across the political spectrum – Israeli and Palestinian. Nothing is off limits, and the tough questions get asked.

“It’s important for Jewish students that student officers gain a better understanding of the conflict, as the conflict often plays out in a very negative way on our campuses.”

He attacked the boycott tactics favoured by pro-Palestinian groups like SJP, saying: “UJS campaigns for freedom, justice and equality for Israelis and Palestinians through two states for two peoples. We believe this will be achieved through dialogue and building bridges – for instance, educational trips such as these – not boycotts.”

Ms Meehan is not the first EUSA sabbatical officer to visit the region. In 2009, then-president Adam Ramsay travelled to Palestine with his sabb colleagues Guy Bromley and Naomi Hunter. In 2008, his presidential predecessor Josh MacAlister also visited Israel.

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