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Hisham B. Sharabi Memorial Lecture: Apartheid and Occupation under
International Law with John Dugard
Monday, March 30, 2009
http://www.thejerusalemfund.org/ht/display/ContentDetails/i/5240/pid/897
Edited Transcript of Remarks by Professor John Dugard
Transcript No. 311 (30 March 2009)
While international law tolerates military occupation, it does not
approve it, specifically one that has continued for over 40 years as in
the case of Israel’s occupation of Palestinian territory. Furthermore,
during that time, Israel has introduced two other elements—colonialism
and apartheid. Although there are many similarities between apartheid
as it was applied in South Africa and Israel’s policies and practices
in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, the systems are not identical.
There are features of the Israeli regime in the occupied territory that
were unknown to South Africans. This year’s Hisham B. Sharabi Memorial
Lecture was delivered by Professor John Dugard.
The Palestine Center
Washington, D.C.
26 March 2009
John Dugard:
Thank you very much for your invitation to speak today. I am very
honored. It’s a great occasion for The Jerusalem Fund, and I’m really
pleased to be part of this memorial lecture. As Samar told you, I’ve
just recently been to Gaza, but I can’t speak freely about my visit to
Gaza. I was part of a mission established by the League of Arab States
to investigate violations of human rights and humanitarian law in
Gaza. We visited at the end of February for a week, and we’re still
writing the report. So at this stage, I cannot really comment on our
findings. You will appreciate that any attempt to attach
responsibility to Israel is a sensitive issue and is bound to result in
considerable criticism. So, we want to do a very careful job in
preparing our report.
But what I can say is that I have been visiting Gaza twice a year since
2001, and I have on previous occasions witnessed evidence of horrendous
bombings and killings and house destructions. But the most recent
attack surpassed all the others. There were more killings--1,434
deaths of which 288 were children, 121 women--and it’s estimated that
of the 1,400 over 900 were civilians. Of course, the Israeli
government disputes this, but I think this is largely because the
Israeli government tends to view anyone over the age of 16 as a
potential terrorist. And certainly, the Israelis view policemen as
militants whereas in fact policemen are, under international law,
classified as civilians. And one must remember that the opening salvo,
which was very much like an attack on Pearl Harbor, was an attack
directed at a police parade in which fifteen new recruits were killed.
It’s not only the number of deaths but also the manner of killing. We
spoke to a number of eyewitnesses who spoke about the way in which
their parents, children had been shot in cold blood between their eyes
by a member of the IDF [Israeli Defense Forces] at fairly short range.
I find it very difficult to believe some of these stories, but they
have now been confirmed by members of the IDF. You may have read that
at a military academy in Israel there was an open discussion about the
conduct of the war, and many members of the IDF spoke with some horror
about the way in which their fellow soldiers had behaved.
Also, some of the weaponry used was bound to cause unnecessary
suffering. There was the use of white soft phosphorous which Israel
has conceded it used and the use of flechettes. Both these weapons
when used in densely populated areas do cause tremendous suffering.
And then, there was the destruction of property that we witnessed.
What was extraordinary was the number of minarets of the mosques that
had been shot out. It was quite clear that members of the IDF were
simply having fun targeting minarets because they serve no security
purpose. And then, there was the case of the Al-Wafa Hospital which in
bold letters has “HOSPITAL” on the front, and there was a shell that
had gone right through the letter “H.” So, it was quite clear that
they were deliberately targeting a hospital. And then, there was the
Islamic University which was partially destroyed. Allegedly, its
laboratories were being used to manufacture armed weapons. And then,
there was the American School, which was hardly a Hamas target, which
had been flattened. And then, of course, factories and businesses had
been destroyed. Again, one couldn’t easily describe them as Hamas
targets. So, the destruction of property and the killings were really
very distressing. But as I say, we are dealing with issues of
accountability and responsibility, and we would have to wait until our
report is completed.
Let me just say on the subject that I’ve been really disappointed about
the international response to the conflict in Gaza. The secretary
general of the United Nations has initiated a limited inquiry into the
bombing of U.N. property, but it goes no further. The secretary
general of the United Nations did visit Gaza. I think he was the first
one ever to have visited Gaza, but he carefully refrained from speaking
to any of the victims or visiting any of the destroyed property other
than U. N. premises. This created quite an impression, poor
impression, in Gaza itself. There has been a request from 16
distinguished international lawyers and peace activists to create a
proper independent inquiry commission. An approach has been made to
the Security Council, but that doesn’t seem to be getting anywhere.
The Human Rights Council has mandated the establishment of a commission
of inquiry, but the Human Rights Council is having difficulty
persuading people to join that commission. So, it seems that the
commission established by the League of Arab States may well be the
only independent commission of inquiry to examine this situation.
Today, I’m not going to talk about Gaza. I’m going to talk about
occupation and apartheid. The mere comparison with apartheid is a very
sensitive issue. I appreciate that. I should just mention this
connection, it’s a subject that is likely to be raised in the Durban
Review Conference in Geneva later this month or I think it’s the middle
of April. There’s also a study being made of the comparisons by the
South African Human Sciences Research Council, and that study group
will publish its report on the subject, a fairly lengthy report running
to about 300 pages, in London in May and in South Africa in June. So,
this is a very topical issue even though it is regarded as offensive in
certain quarters.
I will be speaking about occupation and apartheid. Let me begin with
the subject of occupation. The Palestinian territory is clearly
occupied territory. There’s no question about this as far as the
international community is concerned in respect to the West Bank.
Israel has argued that since 2005 when it withdrew its settlers and its
military force from Gaza itself that it has seized to be an occupied
territory, but the International Committee of the Red Cross and I think
the whole of the international community, with the possible exception
of the United States, rejects this argument. They take the view that
Gaza is effectively occupied by Israel because Israel has control of
its land borders, its sea space, its air space and it conducts military
incursions fairly regularly into the territory. I think the United
States’ position, announced by [former U.S. Secretary of State]
Condoleezza Rice, was that it was a quite hostile entity. One doesn’t
quite know what that means. But one hopes that the [U.S. President
Barack] Obama administration will make it clear that it regards Gaza
and the West Bank as occupied territory.
Military occupation is a regime that is tolerated by international law.
It’s not approved. In terms of the Fourth Geneva Convention which
regulates the conduct of the occupying power, the occupying power is
obliged to care for the welfare of the occupied people and, in
particular, to ensure that medical facilities and educational
facilities are respected and fostered. But, of course, we all know
that Israel just ignores this obligation because in Palestine the
international donor community is largely responsible for the welfare of
the Palestinian people. It’s quite clear that international law does
not contemplate a lengthy period of occupation, a prolonged occupation
in this case running to over 40 years. The Israeli government tends to
take the view that the longer the occupation, the less the obligations.
But I think the general accepted view is that the exact opposite
applies.
So, Israel is in occupation. But over the past 40 years, we’ve seen
the addition of two other elements. That is colonialism and
apartheid. And this tends to aggravate the status of the Palestinian
territory. I don’t think there’s any question about colonialism in the
Palestinian territory, particularly in the West Bank since settlers
withdrew from Gaza in 2005. We have nearly half a million Jewish
settlers in the West Bank. This number is growing despite promises by
successive Israeli governments that they will stop settlements. It’s
interesting that constructions are taking place in some 88 of the 149
settlements in the West Bank. The growth rate in the settlements is
4.5 [percent] compared with 1.5 [percent] in Israel itself. It’s
important not only to look at settlements but also at territory in the
West Bank that is set aside for military purposes and as nature
reserves. And someone can say that roughly 38 percent of the West Bank
is off limits to Palestinians. So, there is a form of colonialism in
the West Bank, and colonialism is not tolerated by international law.
It’s clearly unlawful. Not only do settlements constitute a form of
colonialism, but they also violate the Geneva Convention. So, that’s a
clear illegality on the part of Israel.
The other element that has been introduced is that of apartheid. And
it’s important to stress that apartheid is not only illegal in South
Africa itself but it’s also been declared to be unlawful in
international law. In 1973, there was a convention on apartheid
adopted by the United Nations. Briefly, this convention provides that
the infliction on members of a racial group of serious bodily or mental
harm, inhumane or degrading treatment, the deliberate creation of
conditions preventing the full development of a racial group and so on
by denying to such a group basic human rights and freedoms when such
acts are committed for the purpose of establishing and maintaining
domination by one racial group of persons over any other racial group
of persons and systematically oppressing them. So, [there] is a
definition, a general definition of apartheid. This definition has now
been transferred to the Rome Statute of the International Criminal
Court, and the crime of apartheid is seen as a species of crime against
humanity. So, it’s quite clear that apartheid is unlawful under
international law. Israel, of course, argues that its policies do not
constitute apartheid. It claims that there’s no racial discrimination
in its practices or policies. It argues that the purpose of its
occupation is simply to maintain law and order pending a peace
settlement. It’s not to maintain domination of one group over another.
I think it’s important to stress that there are major differences
between apartheid as it was applied in South Africa and the policies
and practices in the occupied territories. The systems are clearly not
identical. But there are many similar features. I would just like to
speak about what I regard as the three dominant features of apartheid
in South Africa and examine the extent to which they apply in the
Palestinian territory. First of all, there was what was known as
“grand apartheid”; that was territorial separation. Then, there was
what was incorrectly described as “petty apartheid,” which was racial
discrimination. And then thirdly, there were the security laws.
Well, how does Israel feature in respect of “grand apartheid”? Are
there Bantustans in the West Bank? And I think the answer to this
question is yes. We do see territorial fragmentation of the kind that
the South African government promoted in terms of its Bantustan
policy. We see, first of all, a very clear separation being made
between the West Bank and Gaza. But within the West Bank itself, we
see a separation to essentially three or more territories and some
additional enclaves with a center, north and south. And it’s quite
clear that the Israeli government would like to see the Palestinian
Authority as a kind of Bantustan puppet regime. So, there are
similarities of that kind.
Then one comes to so-called “petty apartheid”--discrimination. There’s
abundant evidence of such discrimination. There are, of course,
separate roads for settlers and for Palestinians. And let me hasten to
add that in South Africa we never had separate roads for black and
white. There’s the discrimination in the Seam Zone. That is the area
between the Green Line and the Wall. Israeli nationals are free to
enter the Seam Zone, but Palestinians require permits and they are
seldom granted permits.
Then, there’s the whole question of building rights. As you know,
under Israeli law, houses may not be built by Palestinians in East
Jerusalem or in Area C of the West Bank--and that constitutes most of
the West Bank--without permits. And permits are not granted in most
cases, an overwhelming majority of cases, with the result that there’s
tremendous demolition of houses for so-called administrative reasons.
And we see that happening at present in Jerusalem. So, these are
housing demolition practice policy, which is also similar to that which
occurred in South Africa.
Fourthly, there is freedom of movement. In South Africa, we had a past
law system which required all blacks to carry documents and to justify
their existence wherever they happen to be. And they were prevented
from entering urban areas without special permission. So, serious
restrictions were placed on freedom of movement. But I think it’s true
to say that even more serious restrictions are imposed upon
Palestinians. We have over 600 checkpoints within the West Bank
itself. It’s rather strange that Israel argues that it has built a
so-called security barrier to keep suicide bombers out of Israel but
then, in addition, it erects these checkpoints. And I tend to take the
view that the sole purpose of the checkpoints is to discriminate and to
humiliate.
Fifthly, there’s the subject of family reunification. Again, this is a
blatantly discriminatory practice. As you know, Palestinians living in
Israel are not allowed to bring their spouses to Israel if they are
from the Occupied Palestinian Territory and members of the Palestinians
in the Occupied Palestinian Territory are not allowed to bring in
foreign spouses either. So, we do have a discriminatory system.
The third feature of apartheid was its security apparatus. In order to
maintain white control, the South African authorities introduced
Draconian security laws, which resulted in the detention and
prosecution of a large number of political activists. But, of course,
the same thing happens in Israel. We now have some 11,000 Palestinian
prisoners in Israeli jails. And there are very serious allegations of
torture of detainees and prisoners.
So what is the major difference? The major difference I see between
South Africa’s apartheid system and what prevails in the Occupied
Palestinian Territory is that the South African apartheid regime was
more honest. We had a rigid legal system which prescribed in great
detail how discrimination was to occur and how it was to be
implemented. There was an obsession with detail and legality in much
the same way that Nazi Germany discriminated. It was open but at the
same time it was honest. In the case of Israel, it is concealed.
There’s a lovely story told by Shulamit Aloni, a former minister of
education in Israel, of an occasion in which she confronted a member of
the IDF who was arresting a Palestinian for driving on a settler road
and for confiscating [his identification] card. She said to him, “But
how is he to know that this is a road for the exclusive use of
settlers? There is no notice to that effect.” And he said, “Of course
Palestinians know or they should know.” He said, “What do you want us
to do? Do you want us to put up signs saying Palestinians only,
settlers only and then everyone will say that we are an apartheid state
like South Africa?” And so, there is this concealment of
discrimination. So, there are differences.
I suppose you’re going to ask me the question, which regime was worse?
I find it difficult to answer this question as a white South African
because, although I lived in South Africa throughout the apartheid
period, I was obviously not subject to the discriminatory laws that
were leveled and aimed at blacks. But what is interesting is that
every black South African that I’ve spoken to who has visited the
Palestinian territory has been horrified and has said without
hesitation that the system that applies in Palestine is worse. And
there are a number of reasons for this.
I think, first of all, one can say there are features of the Israeli
regime in the occupied territory that were unknown to South Africans.
We never had a wall separating black and white. I know it’s called the
apartheid Wall, but that’s really a misnomer because there was no wall
of that kind in South Africa. And as I’ve said, there were no separate
roads. These are novel features of Israel’s apartheid regime.
Secondly, the enforcement of the regime is much stricter. We have
repeated military incursions into the West Bank, let alone Gaza. Gaza
tends to attract most of the attention, but there are regular raids
carried out by the IDF into the West Bank and arrests are made and
Palestinians are shot and killed. And what is interesting is that in
South Africa, political activists were tried by the regular criminal
courts of the land in open proceedings. Whereas in Israel,
Palestinians are tried by military courts which have emergency rules
and regulations inherited from the British, but they are not proper
courts.
I think perhaps the most important distinguishing feature is that there
are no positive features about Israel’s apartheid. The South African
apartheid regime did attempt to pacify the black majority by providing
it with material benefits. And so schools were built; universities
were built; hospitals and clinics were built by the apartheid regime.
Special factories were built in the black areas in order to encourage
workers to work in the African areas. So, there was a very positive
side, although it was a materialistic side, to the apartheid order.
Whereas in the case of Israel’s apartheid, Israel makes virtually no
contribution to the welfare of the Palestinian people. It leaves it
all to the donor community. Of course, this also raises the question,
which is debated vigorously in Palestine, about whether it is wise for
the donor community to bail Israel out. Whether it would not be wiser
just to withdraw and let the whole world see how nasty the Israelis are
in Palestine. But that’s a separate question.
Let me just conclude by making some comments on the response of the
international community because this is another area of great
difference. You’ll recall that the apartheid regime was vilified
internationally in the United States, in the West and throughout the
world. States subjected the apartheid regime to sanctions. The United
Nations was active. It also imposed limited sanctions on South Africa.
The international community took the view that apartheid was an illegal
regime and everything should be done to get rid of it. Whereas we know
that in the case of Israel, although there are serious and manifest
violations of international law, no action is taken by western states
or by the international community. We all know the reason. I might
suppose in the States you would say ultimately the strength of AIPAC
[American Israel Public Affairs Committee] and the evangelical lobby,
but I think, in the West, generally it’s feelings of Holocaust guilt,
as if the Palestinians were responsible for the Holocaust rather than
the Europeans. And so, we see a double standard being applied in
respect of Israel. And I think this has serious implications for the
future. One can understand the comments made by [Sudanese] President
[Omar] al-Bashir, “Fine for me to be subjected to an arrest warrant but
what about Gaza?” And this is a plea one hears in the developing world
repeatedly. You ask us to take action against Sudan, Zimbabwe, Burma
for human rights violations. And I believe that action should be taken
against these states. But the developing world said, “Why do you ask
us to take action against these states when you yourself are engaged in
the protection of Israel?”
It’s very difficult to know what’s going to happen in this situation.
I’m fairly disappointed about the United Nations. The General Assembly
and the Human Rights Council have very little powers. The secretary
general of the United Nations is timid, shall we say. The Security
Council is hampered by the veto, and the Quartet, whose very origin is
suspect, is clearly under the control of the United States. In 2004,
the International Court of Justice gave an advisory opinion holding the
Wall as illegal. That has simply been ignored by the Security Council
and the secretary general, the Quartet. There are demands for another
advisory opinion on the question of the consequences of prolonged
occupation coupled with apartheid and colonialism. But again, such an
opinion, even if given, is likely to be ignored.
But I think there are some hopeful signs in respect of movements in
civil society. We do see the question of action against Israel over
Palestine being raised on university campuses, in church and in trade
unions. I do tend to get the view, get the impression that public
opinion is beginning to shift even though government policies remain
much the same.
Well, let me end there and answer any questions that you may wish to
raise.
Professor John Dugard is former U.N. special rapporteur on human rights
in the Occupied Palestinian Territory and visiting distinguished
professor of law at Duke University.
This transcript may be used without permission but with proper
attribution to The Palestine Center. The speaker's views do not
necessarily reflect the views of The Jerusalem Fund.