EU issues second document blasting Israel
05/15/2012 22:26
Document critiques Israel for anti-democratic bills, anti-Arab discrimination, not prosecuting settler violence.
European Union flags in Brussels Photo: Thinkstock/Imagebank
For the second day in a row, the European Union issued a document that had some
harsh words for Israel, saying a spate of “potentially discriminatory or even
anti-democratic bills” were tabled in the Knesset, and blasting Jerusalem for
not prosecuting those responsible for settler violence.
The criticism
came in an annual document summarizing the political and economic situation in
Israel as part of the EU’s review of its partnership with other countries, known
as the European Neighborhood Policy.
Regarding the Knesset bills the EU
deems problematic, the report stated that while the democratic process ensured
that many of the bills would not become law, “their number, and the scant effort
made by their proponents to hide the fact that they were intended to benefit or
target specific individuals or organizations, is worrying. These bills tend to
antagonize relations with the Arab minority, complicate the space in which civil
society organizations of one side of the political spectrum operate, attempt to
rein in the Supreme Court and potentially infringe on the freedom of
speech.”
While saying that the IDF recently stepped up interventions
against settlement violence, the report said the overwhelming majority of cases
filed with the Israel Police against such attacks were closed without
indictment.
In addition, the report found “media freedom, freedom of
expression and freedom of assembly remained problematic in the occupied
Palestinian territory in 2011.”
It also said Palestinian economic and
social rights remained “hampered by Israeli restrictions on the freedom of
movement,” and that “the risk of forced displacement of Bedouin communities
increased.”
Furthermore, the report said that “progress on the situation
of the Arab minority was limited.”
It also said women’s rights in the
country “have become the subject of increasing debate as a result of a more
aggressive attitude on the part of the ultra-Orthodox groups.”
On the
plus side, the report said Israel had a “good performance” in the fight against
corruption, and continued to protect the independence of the
judiciary.
One diplomatic official said that the report reflected more on
the EU than on the realities on the ground. It is all a question of focus, the
official said.
To illustrate his point, the official said that if one
wanted to paint Europe in a negative light, he could write a report underlining
the rise of radical right-wing parties and interpreting that to mean that the
fabric of European life was in danger. On the other hand, one could instead also
write a report showing how the European framework, so painstakingly cobbled
together after World War II, survived even during a time of severe economic
strain.
What was problematic about the EU report, he said, was that it
chose to highlight and focus in on the negative aspects of the country.