Friday, 16 August 2019

Tlaib won't visit West Bank under 'oppressive' Israeli conditions

US congresswoman says she will not be silenced and treated 'like a criminal' after receiving permission from Israel.
US Congresswoman Rashida Tlaib said she will no longer visit the Occupied West Bank [File:Rebecca Cook/Reuters]
US Congresswoman Rashida Tlaib said she will no longer visit the Occupied West Bank [File:Rebecca Cook/Reuters]
US congresswoman Rashida Tlaib has said she will no longer visit the occupied West Bankunder the "oppressive conditions" required by the Israeli government, who hours earlier said they would allow her entry on "humanitarian" grounds.
Tlaib, who is of Palestinian origin, tweeted her decision on Friday, a day after the Israeli government barred her and her fellow congresswoman Ilhan Omar from entering over their support of a boycott movement seeking to pressure Israel to end its rights abuses against Palestinians.
Under a controversial Israeli law, backers of the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement can be denied entry to Israel.
Following the move to bar the two Muslim congresswomen, Israel's Interior Minister Aryeh Deri said he had decided to allow Tlaib to make a "humanitarian visit to her grandmother" in the West Bank, but only after the legislator had sent him a written pledge "to respect conditions imposed by Israel".
Tlaib had "promised not to promote the cause of the boycott of Israel during her stay", in the letter to Deri sent overnight, the ministry said in a statement. 
But in the tweet on Friday, Tlaib said her grandmother would not want her to visit on the conditions. 
"Silencing me and treating me like a criminal is not what she wants for me It would kill a piece of me. I have decided that visiting my grandmother under these oppressive conditions stands against everything I believe in - fighting against racism, oppression and injustice," she said.  
The US-born Tlaib, 43, draws her roots to the Palestinian village of Beit Ur al-Fauqa in the occupied West Bank. Her grandmother and extended family still live in the village.
Israel's widely condemned decision to bar the legislators' trip came after US President Donald Trump, a close ally of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, attacked Tlaib and Omar, alleging that they "hate Israel and all Jewish people, and there is nothing that can be said or done to change their minds".
"It would show great weakness" for Israel to allow them in, he wrote on Twitter.
Tlaib and Omar have repeatedly said their criticisms of Israel's government are based on policy differences and are not directed at Jewish people.
On Thursday, following Israel's announcement that it was denying them entry, Tlaib called the move "a sign of weakness" while Omar said it was "an insult to democratic values" but unsurprising given the record of Netanyahu's policies against Palestinians and his alignment with "Islamophobes" like Trump.
Israel's move was also denounced by the BDS movement as "McCarthyite", as well as by politicians and advocacy groups.
"Like all prolific human rights abusers, Israel wants to impose a blackout on the reality in occupied Palestine and prevent Congresswomen Tlaib, Omar from having direct contact with the Palestinian people, who are subject to Israel's cruel regime of colonisation, oppression, and land grab," Miftah, the Palestinian group cosponsoring the planned trip, said.
"This ban is a clear case of discrimination and hostility based on political views and ethnic background, deserving of moral indignation and unequivocal condemnation in Palestine and the United States."

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