The new right-wing Strong Israel Party, established by National Union MKs Arieh
Eldad and Michael Ben-Ari, held a march in the Arab village of Musmus on
Tuesday, protesting illegal Arab construction.
Meanwhile, the Arabs in
the village called a strike, and hundreds of residents arrived at the village’s
entrance, calling for the Jewish marchers to leave, according to
reports.
There was a large police presence at the protest, but no major
incidents were reported.
In an interview with The Jerusalem Post, Eldad
said his aim was to use acts like the march as a “tool, just as the Left used
the Sasson Report as a tool to destroy Jewish settlements.”
The 2005
Sasson Report – commissioned under former prime minister Ariel Sharon and headed
by attorney Talia Sasson – concluded that the government was funding settlements
that were illegal. Sasson later ran in elections as part of Meretz.
In
2012, the Levy Report, headed by former Supreme Court justice Edmund Levy, came
to the opposite conclusion, that settlements were legal.
Eldad said the
aim of the march had been to survey Musmus for illegal building and register all
law-breaking that Arab citizens did. He said the police had only allowed his
group to go 200 meters into the village, then forced them to turn
around.
He added that his party was initiating a national plan to monitor
Arab law-breaking.
The Strong Israel cofounder said he hoped to create a
new report that would document illegal Arab building, such as the “50,000
illegal units in the Negev, 20,000 in the Galilee, and around 5,000 in
Jerusalem. There are also thousands of others here and there.”
Besides
the issue of illegal Arab building, one of the main themes of his party’s
campaign is that Arab citizens are not fulfilling their national
responsibilities, such as paying taxes and serving in the army.
Eldad
declared that the government “is closing its eyes and is not trying to enforce
the law on the Arabs, and we will demand that it does.”
To do so, he
said, “we need raw data in order to go to the Supreme Court.”
He vowed
that “[the] law will be applied equally to Jews and Arabs.”
Balad MK
Jamal Zahalka, however, came out strongly against the Strong Israel march,
saying that the “police shouldn’t permit them to hold
demonstrations.”
“Why isn’t Europe tolerating racism, [but] it is being
tolerated here in the Holy Land?” he demanded. “'I met with the police in the
region and told them not to permit this [march] because it could lead to an
escalation, especially on the eve of the elections.”
Eldad’s party, he
said, was a racist Kahane group. “There are laws against racism in
Israel, and they should be activated,” he declared, noting that in “most
democratic countries in the world, [hate speech] isn’t in the framework of
‘freedom of speech’ and should be punished.”
The Balad MK claimed that
the 1,000 Arabs from Musmus and surrounding villages who participated in
Tuesday’s counter-protest were demonstrating “not only about this, but about
racist policies and laws that have passed over the past four years.”
He
warned that the situation was causing a “dangerous deterioration,” and called
for “a strong reaction in Israel against racism.”
Zahalka went even
further, however, suggesting that this was not just a domestic issue and that
the international community “should intervene in internal racism
cases.”
He said his party was working on combating racism and “explaining
to the world” what was going on in Israel.
Comparing the situation to the
Austrian government’s inclusion of controversial politician Jörg Haider, who was
accused of neo-Nazism and anti-Semitic remarks, he said that “international
pressure” was necessary, “like the pressure that was put on the Austrian
government of Haider. This group is more extreme than Haider’s was.”
|