Israel-Embassy-Sponsored Scholarship Should Be Terminated Kristin Crowe | Salient

NZFOI: This article describes Student for Justice in Palestine’s (SJP) campaign to have an Israeli government academic prize withdrawn. It is a step toward mounting further pressure on the Victoria University of Wellington (VUW) to adopt BDS. Salient is the VUW weekly student magazine.

On Thursday, 16 May, Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP) held a meeting at Berrigan House to protest a scholarship for essays on the Israeli State—a state whose political systems they say are inherently “racist” and “brutal”.

The Embassy of Israel Prize in Political Science and International Relations is listed on Victoria’s website through the Department of History, Philosophy, Political Science and International Relations. The $250 scholarship is awarded to one student per year on the merit of an essay on one of the given topics—including ”Israel and the Middle East”, ”Israel’s bilaterial relations with its neighbours”, and ”Israel’s democracy in the context of the Middle East”. The winner is selected by the Head of Department, and the winning essay “may be provided” to the Ambassador.

In the wake of a century of fighting between Israelis and Palestinians, US interventions have failed to produce peace. Israel’s continued presence in Gaza and the West Bank—including building settlements illegally in Palestinian territory, restricting the flow of commercial goods to Palestine, and denying Palestinians the right to vote—has sparked an international protest movement. Proponents are calling for boycotts, divestment, and sanctions (BDS) against the Israeli state.

Many universities in the US, Canada, and New Zealand have SJP groups which promote BDS on their campuses. Victoria is not currently participating in BDS protest, and maintains ties with Israeli universities. Lecturers from these universities have appeared on Kelburn campus, drawing criticism.

SJP at VUW are calling for the university to terminate the prize, calling VUW’s partnership with Israel “unjust” because the political climate in Israel is “directly comparable” to Apartheid South Africa.

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New Zealand Jewish Council accuses Green Party MP of ‘antisemitism’ | Stuff

Golriz Ghahraman

Green Party MP Golriz Ghahraman has been accused of antisemitism by the New Zealand Jewish Council.

The MP has come under fire after responding to a tweet on Thursday which suggested Mary and Joseph, the mother and father of Jesus according to the New Testament, were refugees. 

“They were literally Palestinian refugees. And she (Mary) normally had her hair covered because that’s what modesty looked like in her culture…but let’s keep fighting about what race mermaids are,” Ghahraman tweeted. 

New Zealand Jewish Council spokesperson Juliet Moses said calling Mary and Joseph Palestinian refugees was disrespectful to the Jewish community.

“Ms Ghahraman, by refusing to acknowledge that Jesus was Jewish, including when many people pointed out her error, is continuing to erase that connection, a favourite tactic of those who aim to delegitimise the modern day Jewish presence in the land,” she said. 

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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

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

Immigration New Zealand “fact sheet” erases Israel and distorts history | Shalom Kiwi

Immigration NZ fact sheet deletes Israel, becomes mouthpiece for Palestinian Arab expansionism, implicitly recognizes a State of Palestine and undermines NZ Government two-state foreign policy — NZFOI

Immigration New Zealand’s ‘State of Palestine Refugee Quota Factsheet’ presents a one-sided, distorted and politicised narrative of the Israel/Palestine conflict and totally erases Israel from the map.

The fact sheet is on the Immigration New Zealand’s website and its purpose is to inform people about Palestinian refugees coming to New Zealand.

It is entitled ‘State of Palestine’, even though Palestine is not officially recognised as a state by New Zealand or by most western nations. In addition, the map in the document shows the whole of sovereign Israeli territory as “Palestine”.

The geography of the map is so inaccurate that it does not even include the West Bank in what it calls “The State of Palestine” – it simply replaces Israel (according to pre-1967 borders) with “Palestine”.

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Update 18 June 2019: The fact sheet has been withdrawn and is no longer available on the Immigration NZ website. National MP Simon O’Connor has promised to investigate the matter.

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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NZ votes against Israel in WHO resolution with false accusations | UN Watch

Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus (above), Director-General of the World Health Organization, blames Israel for violating the health rights of Palestinians and Syrians in the Golan in a report which was adopted by the World Health Assembly on May 22, 2019.

Intriguingly New Zealand decided to vote in favour of this resolution. Its recent voting history at the UN, in relation to Israeli issues suggests that the New Zealand government has turned from a founding supporter of Israel to one of its most active opponents. New Zealand must re-think its root cause analysis. How many Holocausts must humanity endure before it realises the necessity for a Jewish homeland where all Jews may live without fear of subjugation, persecution and eradication? — NZFOI

GENEVA, May 22, 2019 — The annual assembly of the UN’s World Health Organization today voted 96 to 11 for a resolution, co-sponsored by the Arab bloc and the Palestinian delegation, that singled out Israel over “Health conditions in the occupied Palestinian territory, including east Jerusalem, and in the occupied Syrian Golan.”

Hillel Neuer, Executive Director of UN Watch, condemned the delegates’ abuse of the UN body as a forum to target Israel.

“Out of 21 items on the meeting’s Agenda, only one—Item No. 14 against Israel—focused on a specific country. There was no agenda item or resolution on any other country, including Syria, where hospitals and medical infrastructure have suffered devastating bombings by Syrian and Russian forces; Yemen, where 19.7 million people lack access to health care service due to the current crisis; or Venezuela, where the health system has collapsed, causing millions to flee the country,” said Neuer.

“Today’s resolution is a fantastic lie. The UN reached new heights of absurdity by enacting a resolution which accuses Israel of violating the health rights of Syrians in the Golan, even as in reality Israeli hospitals provide life-saving treatment to Syrians fleeing to the Golan from the Assad regime’s barbaric attacks,” he said.

“Shame on France, Belgium and Sweden for encouraging this hijacking of the annual world health assembly, and diverting precious time, money, and resources from global health priorities, in order to wage a political prosecution of Israel, especially when, in reality, anyone who has ever walked into an Israeli hospital or clinic knows that they are providing world-class health care to thousands of Palestinian Arabs—including last week to Palestinian leader Jibril Rajoub—as well as to Syrians fleeing Assad,” Neuer added.

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Law against hate speech helped Hitler’s rise | NZ Herald

Hate Speech Laws passed to suppress the Nazis, ironically paved the way for Nazis to burn books and do away with others who opposed them

Controversy around recently-cancelled talks in New Zealand raised important questions about free speech. Ostensibly it was threats of violence that led to speakers being “de-platformed” but there is a strong whiff of political bias. Either way, accusations of “hate speech” have been raised, and some commentators have suggested that we need laws against the expression of hateful ideas.

This is an argument that has been implicitly put forward by the Human Rights Commission with a special emphasis on “religious hate speech directed at Muslim New Zealanders” and is predicated on the assumption that we need to protect people from harmful words, much like we outlaw harm caused by physical violence.

There is no good evidence that offensive language or challenges to ideas, however provocative or unreasonable, creates such severe harm as to require legislation. However, there is reason to argue that direct threats or speech that incites direct violence should be illegal — and it is already prohibited under our existing laws (along with reasonable restrictions on defamation, and breaking contracts by sharing information or plagiarising). Advertisement

Yet, even with such a seemingly objective test as inciting violence it is even difficult to determine what is and is not speech that incites violence. For example, the Human Rights Commission did not think that shouting “…bash the Jewish, cut their heads off…” in an Auckland protest was worthy of investigation, let alone prosecution.

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CHRISTCHURCH, Sunday 2pm: “Denial”

Deborah Liptstadt

On Sunday in Christchurch we will be screening the movie “Denial”, the fascinating story of how a British court found David Irving guilty of being a fraudulent Holocaust denier after accusing historian Deborah Lipstadt of libel after she called him out.

Here’s an article by Lipstadt commenting on Anti-Semitism in the US today.  However, there are themes here that should resonate with New Zealand readers. 

The NZ government’s silence regarding the recent Gaza rocket attacks, and not calling out BDS actions in New Zealand as anti-Semitism show how conflicted our government’s attitudes are in relation to Israel.

The screening will be on Sunday, May 19, 2pm, Northwood Villa Clubrooms, Northwood Villa Crescent, Northwood, Christchurch 8051. Please bring a plate of finger food for afternoon tea.  We’d be grateful if you refrained from bringing any pork and/or seafood products.  

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Bless Israel NZ 2019 Video Available

Nations Bless Israel held their nationwide event last Sunday. 

Around sixty communities from all over New Zealand connected in to collectively participate in the event via a livestream.  H E Ambassador Gerberg and Rt Hon Alfred Ngaro attended the event. 

Since its first event two years ago, the movement has started extended its reach overseas, with events planned in seven other countries.

For those unable to attend, the event can be viewed by clicking this link