Cumin v Minto public debate: recording available

On October 3, David Cumin (Israel Institute of NZ) and John Minto (Palestine Solidarity Network Aotearoa), met in a highly anticipated debate over Differing Perspectives of Israel. 

Held at the University of Auckland, it attracted a full house of some 170; so full that people filled the area around the podium.

Well moderated by Rosslyn Noonan, NZ’s former Human Rights Commissioner, the deep feeling of each debater’s supporters threatened to break out into chaos at times. 

Minto idealistically promoted a one-state solution where both Arab and Jew enjoyed the rights of democratic citizenship in peace. 

Cumin supported a two-state solution where both peoples could seek self-determination.  Having said that it looked like he didn’t believe this had much chance of ever succeeding as Arab leaders continue to seek a “river to the sea” solution.

The first public debate on Israel in many years, it served as a release valve for many of the pent up emotions evoked by the issue. 

Hopefully there will be further loan opportunities for public discourse, each one perhaps more focused on different aspects of the many-facted issue. 

A video recording of the event and each debater’s opening remarks may be found here.

NZ, Israel and UNRWA w/ Stephen Hoadley | 95BFM

Associate Professor Stephen Hoadley, University of Auckland

NZFOI: After interviewing John Minto, 95BFM was criticized for a lack of balance in their interview of John Minto. In response to that criticism, the station interviewed Associate Professor Stephen Hoadley, a lecturer in International Relations from the University of Auckland.

You can listen to it here.

Israel goes back to elections as Netanyahu fails to form coalition | Jerusalem Post

Benjamin Netanyahu

NZFOI: Just a reminder that Israel goes back to the Polls next month…

Exactly one month after the 21st Knesset were sworn in, a majority of the Knesset voted late Wednesday (May 29) to disperse themselves and initiate an unprecedented repeat election on September 17.

It was the first time in Israeli history that a candidate for prime minister failed to form a coalition after being given the task by the president after an election.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told the Likud faction ahead of the vote that he had not succeeded in reaching a compromise with Yisraeli Beytenu leader Avigdor Liberman on the controversial haredi (ultra-Orthodox) conscription bill, and that he had also tried unsuccessfully to woo MKs from the opposition to join his government.

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Jennifer Lopez Knocks it out of Hayarkon Park | Jerusalem Post

NZFOI: Jennifer Lopez performed in Tel Aviv to a crowd of nearly 60,000, despite considerable pressure from pro-BDS supporters to stop the concert. Here is the Jerusalem Post’s review of her performance.

Jennifer Lopez is a name known around the world for a reason. J-Lo’s put in the work, and it shows as anyone who attended her ‘It’s My Party’ concert on Thursday at Tel Aviv’s Park Hayarkon can attest.

The Bronx-born actress, singer, dancer, fashion designer, producer and businesswoman turned 50 on July 24 and is celebrating the milestone with a 38-show tour, six of which are in international cities beginning with Tel Aviv. It was the first time Jenny from the block has performed in the Holy Land.

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The tragedy of the Palestinian Diaspora | The Independent

NZFOI: not much has changed since 2009.

It is a cynical but time-honoured practice in Middle Eastern politics: the statesmen who decry the political and humanitarian crisis of the approximately 3.9 million Palestinians in the Israeli-occupied West Bank and in Gaza ignore the plight of an estimated 4.6 million Palestinians who live in Arab countries.

For decades, Arab governments have justified their decision to maintain millions of stateless Palestinians as refugees in squalid camps as a means of applying pressure to Israel.

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Advertising Standards Authority rules against complaint against Pro-Israel Advertisement

On May 14, 2019 the “For The Protection of Zion Trust” sponsored a full page newspaper advertisement in all the major newspapers of New Zealand. The advertisement was headed “At 71 Israel as a Jewish state is justified” and labelled “Advertisement”. It advocated for the right of Jewish people to live in Israel.

R Malone, complained to the Advertising Standards Authority, saying:  “This advertisement is promoting the creation of an apartheid state where non-Jewish are considered to be sub-human citizens . I feel this is a breach of human rights as everyone should be allowed to exist in the country they were born in without fear persecution.”

The Chair ruled there were no grounds for the complaint to proceed.

In the chair’s ruling, it states:

“The Chair noted the Complainant’s concern the advertisement is promoting the creation of an apartheid state.

The Chair said that the advertisement fell into the category of advocacy advertising. Rule 2 (e) of the Advertising Standards Code allows for expression of opinion in advocacy advertising. Under Rule 2(e) the following must apply:

• Advocacy advertising must clearly state the identity and position of the advertiser
• Opinion in support of the advertiser’s position must be clearly distinguishable from factual information
• Factual information must be able to be substantiated

The Advocacy Principles, developed by the Complaints Board in previous decisions that considered advocacy also applied. These say:

1  That section 14 of the Bill of Rights Act 1990, in granting the right of freedom of expression, allows advertisers to impart information and opinions but that in exercising that right what was factual information and what was opinion, should be clearly distinguishable.

2.  That the right of freedom of expression as stated in section 14 is not absolute as there could be an infringement of other people’s rights.  Care should be taken to ensure that this does not occur.

3. That the Codes fetter the rights granted by section 14 to ensure there is fair play between all parties on controversial issues.  Therefore, in advocacy advertising and particularly on political matters the spirit of the Code is more important than technical breaches. People have the right to express their views and this right should not be unduly or unreasonably restricted by Rules.

4.  That robust debate in a democratic society is to be encouraged by the media and advertisers and that the Codes should be interpreted liberally to ensure fair play by the contestants.

5.  That it is essential in all advocacy advertisements that the identity of the advertiser is clear. 

The Chair confirmed the advertisement from the “For the Protection of Zion Trust” was an advocacy advertisement which promotes the right of Jewish people to live in Israel. She said that the Advertiser was clearly identified. 

The Chair referred to a precedent decision, 11/109, about a newspaper advertisement headed “Top Five Lies about Israel”, which was ruled No Ground to Proceed. The Chair said in her view, that advertisement was an advocacy advertisement, and while the opinions in it may be robust, such expression of opinion was allowable under the Code. The Chair acknowledged there are differing views about the topic as discussed in the advertisement complained about, but this case was similar to that of the precedent decision. Robust expression of opinion is allowed, because the Advertiser is clearly identified, and their position is clear.

The Chair said the advertisement before her had been prepared with a due sense of social responsibility required and ruled it was not in breach of Principles 1 and 2 or Rules 1 (c) or 2(e) of the Advertising Standards Code.”

Source

DOCEDGE FESTIVAL: “GAZA”: A REVIEW

 – A slanted take on life there

You would have thought that the collaboration between a Northern Irishman and his Republican counterpart (Garry Keane and Andrew McConnell) would yield a truthful insight into Gaza, that tiny 40km by 11km strip. They, after all, know what it’s like to come from different sides of a conflict, the importance of showing life accurately and should well know how “The Troubles” ended. Alas no. The documentary brief as outlined in the Doc Edge festival, was to show real life in Gaza, not just shapshots of war. In that they do in part, but without crucial explanation of key elements and all set to a very emotive score. It’s a story that began when Andrew McConnell went to Gaza to photograph surfers, so the sea plays a key role.

What we see is a collection of vignettes on the lives of different inhabitants and events that happen. The cast of characters is extremely varied with a great deal of emphasis on children who roam about and the role of the sea in their varied lives. We meet a taxi driver, a fisherman, a frustrated tailor, a man with three wives and 40 children, a theatre director, a vain lifeguard, a wealthy family with a sensitive child, a handicapped rapper, a paramedic et al. Thematically the documentary explores how people cope, living in what former British PM David Cameron described as an “open air prison” with unemployment standing at 50%, only 4-5 hours of power a day and undrinkable water.

What makes this documentary poignant is the UN has declared Gaza uninhabitable by 2020 – well that’s next year. Many watching this documentary will miss the points being shown; especially as it ends with a targeted Israeli attack and the consequent injuries and destroyed buildings invalidating the stated purpose. Meantime here are some questions unanswered:

  1. Why is there no reference to the impact of the Eqyptian border closure?
  2. Why does Israel get the blame for this situation not of their making? They withdrew.
  3. Why is there a refugee camp in Gaza, aren’t they all the same people?
  4. Where is the money coming from for food and supplies if there is no work?
  5. Why are women wearing the Hijab when they didn’t previously?
  6. Why aren’t some of the children going to school?
  7. Why only 4-5 hours of power?
  8. Who is responsible for fixing the utilities?
  9. Why does Hamas engage in indiscriminate shooting in the streets?
  10. Why are they handing out sweets to the crowds after the prisoner is released?
  11. Rubbish is everywhere. Yet people are sitting around playing cards, not cleaning up things? Don’t they care for their country? Is it someone else’s responsibility?
  12. Why are there posters of Yasser Arafat?
  13. Why aren’t bombed buildings fixed so people can go and live there. Isn’t that why they need concrete and building materials, so where is it going? Tunnels perhaps?
  14. Are all fishermen innocent people just catching fish?
  15. Why are they burning tyres and harming their health on the Israeli border alone?

By ending with an Israeli bombing and its aftermath, the documentary can only lead you to blame Israel for all Gazan woes.  Clearly, misleading.

About the Author:  Joanna Moss is a writer, researcher and the NZFOI Wellington Regional Coordinator.

Minister apologises to Israel over dodgy map | NZ Herald

NZ Minister of Immigration, Iain Lees-Galloway

The Immigration Minister has apologised to Israel’s ambassador after an Immigration New Zealand map caused a diplomatic incident by appearing to label Israel “Palestine”.

Israel’s Ambassador to New Zealand, Itzhak Gerberg, was left offended this week by an online INZ fact sheet about Palestinian refugees he said “completely ignored” his country and used pre-1967 borders to depict the region.

“This official paper of New Zealand incites hatred of the State of Israel as well as anti-Semitism,” he wrote to Immigration Minister Iain Lees-Galloway, describing the accompanying language as “abusive”.

In a reply posted by the ambassador, Lees-Galloway apologised for offence caused and said immediate action had been to take the diagram down.

“I can assure you the fact sheet did not reflect New Zealand Government policy and has been removed,” he wrote.

“The map was clearly inaccurate and did not label the State of Israel as it should.”

Foreign Minister Winston Peters on Thursday described the incident as a “rather careless and shoddy mistake”.

“The way it was handled was an affront to the Israeli people … It started out from innocence,” Peters told a Parliamentary Select Committee.

Deputy Prime Minister Winston Peters has described the map as a
Deputy Prime Minister Winston Peters has described the map as a “careless and shoddy mistake”. Photo / Mark Mitchell
He later told reporters a minister-to-minister apology could also be in order.

Ministry of Foreign Affairs secretary Chris Seed added a new procedure to check maps would be taken up.

“It was a human error. There was nothing untoward about it, so we are trying to understand where the map itself came from,” he said.

Israel Institute of New Zealand director Ashley Church this week called for an investigation.

“The most immediately obvious of the errors was a map labelling the whole of modern-day Israel as ‘Palestine’,” he said.

“This is incredibly offensive and the equivalent of New Zealand Immigration displaying a map of the United Kingdom which removed Scotland and Wales and referred to the entirety of the British Isles as England.”

An INZ spokeswoman said the document was meant to give additional information about the humanitarian situation in Palestine and New Zealand’s refugee programme.

New Zealand has long supported a two-state solution to the Palestinian-Israeli conflict.

Tensions between New Zealand and Israel soured in 2016, when New Zealand co-sponsored a United Nations Security Council resolution in 2016 condemning Israel over continued settlement of the West Bank – a resolution the Labour Party supported but New Zealand First did not.

Israeli’s ambassador was recalled for about six months during the stoush.

Source

Tel Aviv company to supply robots to New Zealand Defense Force | Jerusalem Post

Roboteam will supply a family of robots that operate on a wireless mesh network, a communications network based on radio nodes controlled from a single control unit.

Tel Aviv-based tactical ground robotic system developer Roboteam has won a tender to supply the New Zealand Defence Force (NZDF) with dozens of remotely controlled robots, the company announced on Wednesday.

While the value of the deal has not been specified, it is estimated to be worth millions of dollars. Roboteam was awarded the bid through its partnership with Trakka Tech, an Australian provider of solutions for critical mission requirements.

Roboteam or supply family of robots that operate on a wireless mesh network, a communications network based on radio nodes controlled from a single control unit.

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No, Israel isn’t a country of privileged and powerful white Europeans | LA Times

Mizrahi Jews

Along with resurgent identity politics in the United States and Europe, there is a growing inclination to frame the Israeli-Palestinian conflict in terms of race. According to this narrative, Israel was established as a refuge for oppressed white European Jews who in turn became oppressors of people of color, the Palestinians.

As an Israeli, and the son of an Iraqi Jewish mother and North African Jewish father, it’s gut-wrenching to witness this shift.

I am Mizrahi, as are the majority of Jews in Israel today. We are of Middle Eastern and North African descent. Only about 30% of Israeli Jews are Ashkenazi, or the descendants of European Jews. I am baffled as to why mainstream media and politicians around the world ignore or misrepresent these facts and the Mizrahi story. Perhaps it’s because our history shatters a stereotype about the identity of my country and my people.

Jews that were expelled from nations across the Middle East have been crucial in building and defending the Jewish state since its outset.

Israel, the world’s only Jewish state, was not established for just one type of Jew but for all Jews, from every part of the world — the Middle East, North Africa, Ethiopia, Asia and, yes, Europe. No matter where Jews physically reside, they maintain a connection to the land of Israel, where our story started and where today we continue to craft it.

The likes of Women’s March activist Tamika Mallory, Temple University professor Marc Lamont Hill and, more recently, Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-Mich.) falsify reality in their discussions of Palestinians’ “intersectional” struggle, their use of the term “apartheid” to characterize Israeli policy, and their tendency to define Israelis as Ashkenazi Jews alone.

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