The BDS Thread (Boycott, Divestment, & Sanctions)

RLENT

Veteran Expediter
I wonder if the dynamics would change if they brought those (blank...can't remember the name) large machines that convert arid desert air in to water. Basically the size of a semi trailer. Our military used them in Iraq. I guess they are pretty good at the amount of gallons they produce. Not a cure-all but something to take the edge off?
Dave,

It might be useful - on an emergency basis - in Gaza certainly, where a substantial portion of the population is suffering from long-term, ongoing chronic health effects due to water issues (among other things) That assumes, of course, that the Israelis would even allow it into Gaza. (The Palestinians don't control their own borders - in either Gaza ... or the West Bank)

But remember: between Gaza and the West Bank we're talking about 4 1/2 million people.

The reality is that unless and until Israel stops it's (illegal) blockade of Gaza and allows sufficient materials to go into Gaza to improve the civilian infrastructure (and then if Israel can then manage to withhold itself from destroying it ... after it's been (re)built), and allocates sufficient water to Gaza, the overall situation - which is dire - will not likely improve. This has been, and remains, a long-standing, known problem as the excerpts from the following white paper from 1995 shows (and Israel - under international law - actually is the responsible/culpable party)

This - along with the fact that Israel will allow Palestinians into Gaza but will not let them out - is why I have referred to it as "slo-motion genocide":

Anthropologist Anna Bellisari argues that the routine consumption of contaminated or saline water by Gaza Palestinians contributes to deterioration of the overall health of the population:

The water crisis is very costly to Palestinians not only in the agricultural and industrial sectors, but especially in terms of public health, which depends largely upon adequate, safe supplies of domestic water. Water shortages and pollution are responsible for a major portion of the acute and chronic infections widespread throughout the Occupied Territories, and are likely to cause permanent health damage to a large segment of the population.

This conclusion is supported by a recent World Bank report, which suggests that inadequate and contaminated water supplies contribute to the high incidence of gastrointestinal and parasitic infections found in Gaza. There are no studies that provide decisive proof, but preliminary evidence suggests a causal link between scarce and contaminated drinking water and Gaza's high levels of infant mortality, infectious disease, hypertension, and other health-related problems. ...

Some experts think that high salt concentrations are already producing adverse health effects: "Gaza physicians are convinced that salty water is responsible for the high incidence of kidney and liver complaints among Gaza residents." Salinity has also been linked to hypernatremia, thought to be responsible for a large percentage of "crib deaths" and early brain damage. In recent years, nitrate contamination of Gaza's drinking water has increased rapidly: in 1987, 84 percent of Gaza's drinking water wells were considered suitable for drinking in terms of nitrate levels; by 1994, not a single safe well remained. Elevated nitrate levels are also suspected of contributing to infant mortality by causing acute anemia or "blue baby disease." Severe cases can result in anoxia (oxygen deprivation) and death. Nitrates have also been linked to cancer and to increased incidence of spontaneous abortion, both in humans and in animals.

Gaza Palestinians are exposed to high fluoride concentrations in their groundwater and also in the fish and the tea that are staple foods. When consumed in large amounts, fluoride is toxic and contributes to ulcers, kidney failure, soft-tissue calcification, and skeletal and dental fluorosis. The effects in Gaza of groundwater chemical pollution from fertilizers, pesticides, and herbicides are hard to establish, because data on concentrations and health impacts are not available. However, studies in the West Bank show that absorption through the skin or ingestion of such chemicals can damage the nervous system. Similar products and practices are used in Gaza, so it follows that similar impacts may be present there. While aquifer concentrations are probably not high enough to produce extreme results, we should not rule out serious health effects because of sustained lowlevel exposures.

The most prevalent and serious health problem in Gaza is infectious disease caused by waterborne bacteria, viruses, and parasites. These diseases largely result from poor personal hygiene and inadequate sewage disposal, which are, in turn, exacerbated by insufficient water for washing and waste removal. Moreover, open sewers are common in urban areas. Thus in November 1994, heavy rains caused sewage to mix with freshwater supplies, producing an outbreak of cholera in Gaza City, with fifty cases and one death in a week.

Although this outbreak received widespread attention, infectious disease is common in Gaza: "The Union of Palestinian Medical Relief Committees, which operates clinics in the Gaza Strip and in the West Bank, reported that three-quarters of all clinic patients suffered from infectious diseases, which were responsible for percent of all childhood deaths." Intestinal parasites are prevalent. Researchers at Birzeit University found that 50 percent of Gaza children suffered from roundworms. However, according to Bellisari, these infections are often considered to be a fact of life rather than a pressing health concern, so many people may not seek treatment. Fungal infections and various other skin conditions due to poor personal hygiene are also common. These diseases are worst in refugee camps, where poor sanitation is magnified by overcrowding.

The World Bank estimates that 7 percent of Gaza's GNP is allocated to health concerns, but there is little sign of improvement in overall population health.102 According to Bellisari, without clean and ample water supplies, disease will recur as fast as it is treated, and resources will remain focused on symptoms and not on prevention. Thus, Gaza's health care system will remain overburdened, producing strain on the limited resources of the PA and frustration among patients and health care workers. ...
Second page of white paper the quotes above are pulled from:

The Case of Gaza, Part 2

First part:

The Case of Gaza, Part 1
 
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RLENT

Veteran Expediter
Screwed again:

OPINION/EDITORIAL

How “historic” Israel-Jordan water deal leaves Palestinians high and dry

Clemens Messerschmid and Muna Dajani The Electronic Intifada 4 February 2014

World media recently lauded a new project, backed by the World Bank, that will allegedly “save” the Dead Sea and prove that peace is possible through cooperation to manage natural resources. But the scheme only threatens to make an already disastrous situation worse, as well as robbing Palestinians of their right to water.

The Dead Sea, the fabled salt lake bordered by Jordan, present-day Israel and the occupied West Bank, is shrinking at an alarming rate of around 1.5 meters per year. As a result, hotels built right at the shoreline just a few years ago are now dozens of meters from the water’s edge.

Environmental assessment studies show that some of the damage done — for instance to the Eastern Aquifer Basin — is already irreversible. To slow and reverse this catastrophe, Israel and Jordan proposed in 2002 to build a 180-kilometer canal to replenish the Dead Sea with water from the Red Sea. They claimed — falsely — that the project would prevent the destruction of the Dead Sea, but the plan never addressed the most obvious and direct cause: the diversion of the upstream waters of the Jordan River, which feed the salty lake, mainly by Israel.

As a consequence the natural flow of the Jordan River — the body of water in which Christian tradition holds that Jesus was baptized — has dropped from 1,350 million cubic meters (mcm) per year of fresh water to the Dead Sea, to a mere 20 mcm.

That is just two percent of its original flow. And even this sad remainder is mostly made up of raw sewage and brine — salty water — injected by Israel south of Lake Tiberias. Additionally, Israel’s Dead Sea industries — and on a smaller scale Jordan’s — extract potash (used for fertilizer) and other minerals from the southern end of the lake. This large-scale mining operation is greatly accelerating the disappearance of the Dead Sea. Palestinians, meanwhile — although they share the Dead Sea’s shore — have never been allowed to share in the region’s mineral wealth, nor to draw fresh water from the Jordan.

Devastating environmental consequences


On 12 December 2013, Israel, Jordan and the Palestinian Authority signed a memorandum of understanding in Washington. This deal should not be confused with the plans long floated by the World Bank for a Red Sea-Dead Sea mega-project.

The new deal outlines much smaller initiatives to develop a desalination plant located in Aqaba, Jordan’s port on the Red Sea. This would produce fresh water which would be sold to the adjacent city of Eilat in present-day Israel.

The agreement also includes a general suggestion for the construction of a pipeline to transport the desalination brine, a byproduct of the process, from Aqaba to the ever-diminishing Dead Sea. This component is as of yet only an option. The alternative would be to dump the brine into the Gulf of Aqaba whose fragile coral reefs could suffer devastating damage as a result.

In “exchange” for the Aqaba-Eilat deal, Israel would export more water to Jordan in the Lake Tiberias area, in the north, although the source of this extra water is as of yet unclear and it may require further treatment in Jordan.

The cost for the Aqaba desalination project is conservatively estimated at $400 million, while the World Bank’s notorious Red Sea-Dead Sea Canal project was estimated to cost well over $10 billion.

The World Bank’s scheme — officially known as the Red Sea-Dead Sea Conveyance Project (RSDSCP) — would, Palestinian groups and water experts warn, do irreversible environmental damage and help Israel further dispossess Palestinians of their water rights. However, Israel, and especially Jordan and the World Bank advertise the Aqaba desalination and water swap deal as a “pilot scheme,” or even as a first stage to test the environmental impact of adding the mix of Red Sea water and desalination byproducts to the Dead Sea.

It is clearly an effort to attract funding for their old RSDSCP.

Palestinians excluded


It should be emphasized that Palestinians are excluded from both the Aqaba and the Tiberias deals. Palestinian requests to be included in the northern supply scheme were brushed off by Israel. Hence, this project is purely a bilateral deal between Israel and Jordan. A side deal, however, involves potentially selling additional water to the Palestinians.

This water would come from as yet undisclosed sources out of the “Israeli system” — most probably not fresh water, but prohibitively expensive desalinated water from the Mediterranean Sea. Thus the riparian rights of Palestinians — the right to use the water because their territory borders on the banks of the Jordan and the shores of the Dead Sea — are exchanged for the opportunity to subsidize Israel’s mushrooming desalination industry.

Ironically, the Israeli chemical and petroleum conglomerates heavily involved in this industry include the Israeli Dead Sea works responsible for much of the environmental destruction in the region.

Falling short


The planned Aqaba plant would provide only moderate amounts of desalinated water (30-40 mcm per year) to Jordan, which is suffering from acute water shortages. Meanwhile, neighboring Eilat, which already has twice the domestic water consumption rates of the rest of Israel, would get a similar amount.

On the other hand, the Aqaba plant would only channel some 200 mcm per year to the Dead Sea, falling far short of reversing or even stopping the drastic declines in the lake’s water levels — while risking further damage to the region’s unique ecology.

Today, instead of international pressure to reverse the decades-long diversion and mismanagement of the Jordan River — which caused the unfolding environmental catastrophe — both Jordan and the Palestinian Authority are signing deals to make this untenable situation permanent. Their scheme also ignores the concerns — and rights — of the other riparians, Lebanon and Syria.
Neither the governments making the agreements, nor media lauding their plan, have seriously examined its consequences or the alternatives.

Nor do they question the conventional wisdom that more water is needed in a desperately parched region with a rapidly growing population.

Israel’s water surplus


The modest amount of water Jordan would gain from Israel in the north would be scarcely enough to meet the needs of the growing population, especially when there is an influx such as the hundreds of thousands of refugees from Syria currently in the country. As noted, Palestinians, would likely only get access to Israeli desalinated water at very high cost.

Neither Jordan nor the Palestinians would gain any increase in their share of Jordan River waters under this deal, only cementing a grossly unfair status quo in which Israel diverts the lion’s share.

Indeed the structure of the deal is very revealing: during the past decade, Israel has developed into a regional water power with a large water surplus. This is due to its large-scale desalination and waste water re-use, in addition to its long-standing total control over all freshwater resources in historic Palestine.
Israel therefore does not “need” water, let alone more water: it now has a reverse interest of exporting and selling water. It will, in effect, be selling to the Palestinians and Jordanians water supplies that ought to be theirs by right.

No wonder Israel’s energy and water minister Silvan Shalom hailed the deal as an ”historic agreement that realizes a dream of many years and the dream of [Zionism founder Theodore] Herzl.”

No gain for Palestinians


There are many contradictions in the different press releases and statements on the December deal. It would appear that all the parties have an interest in keeping the terms of this memorandum a secret.

Israel has good reason to celebrate this scam as an historic breakthrough — for their interests, however, rather than for peace. So do the Americans who have little else to show for their “peace process” efforts.

Cash-strapped, water-poor Jordan is desperate for any additional water and banks on the hope that the “peace and cooperation” packaging will attract international donors to pay the enormous infrastructure costs.

The Palestinians, however, have nothing to gain, which makes it even more baffling why the Palestinian Authority presents it in a positive light.

Why would Palestinians need to lend legitimacy to the false promise that this was a regional water deal, when it is simply deepening their dependency on the occupier under unfavorable terms and risks that continue to strip them of their historic water rights? Of course, under the occupation, Palestinian leaders have little or no access to badly needed additional water sources.

But why is this deal not disclosed and discussed in public? Why does the PA so mistrust the people it is supposed to represent? Instead, once again the PA is placing Palestinian fate into the hands of Israel, the United States and the World Bank?

Palestinian authorities ignore Palestinians


In October 2013, Palestinian organizations from the water sector voiced their fervent opposition to the World Bank’s Red Sea-Dead Sea canal mega-project. They urged the PA and the Palestine Liberation Organization to condemn and halt all forms of cooperation with the World Bank scheme and its partners.

In return, the Palestinian Authority, represented by the Palestinian Water Authority, ignored and completely excluded them from consultations and decisions and surprised them with the new Aqaba-Tiberias agreement.

Finally, why did the PA feel compelled to sign a deal where none of its demands, let alone strategic “historic” interests were even remotely addressed or met? Could it be that, once again, as so often before, the PA was coerced into signing?

With Israel and Jordan’s king strongly backing the deal, PA leader Mahmoud Abbas would have felt himself under intense pressure not to spoil the desalination exchange.

The Israel-Jordan-Palestinian Authority water deal exemplifies the features common to all the other agreements signed during the “peace process”: it sacrifices Palestinian rights on the altar of Israeli and foreign interests, accommodates the unjust status quo and repackages further dispossession and discrimination as steps toward “peace.”

Clemens Messerschmid is a German hydrogeologist whohas been working since 1997 in Palestinian and international water projects throughout the West Bank and Gaza Strip. Currently he is affiliated with Rosa Luxemburg Foundation in Ramallah while working towards a doctorate in hydrogeology.


Muna Dajani is a Palestinian environmental researcher and activist based in Jerusalem and works on environmental and water rights, activism and social impacts of climate change.
How 'historic' Israel-Jordan water deal leaves Palestinians high and dry | The Electronic Intifada
 

RLENT

Veteran Expediter
Israeli Amira Hass of Haaretz today offers some insight and analysis - along with sardonic wit - into the really big problem that Israel faces with respect to its ongoing water theft:

... it can't be legitimately framed and justified in a (theoretically "morally righteous") context of "security" ...

Some snippets from the article (some emphasis mine, ellipsis indicate omitted content):

Water torture for the Palestinians

Water discrimination is another tool being used to wear down the Palestinians socially and politically.

By Amira Hass | Feb. 18, 2014 | 1:47 AM

Why is the Israeli establishment so bent on denying the existence of water discrimination? Because this time the Israeli establishment cannot wrap it in the usual security excuses it resorts to with other sorts of blatant discrimination.

When it comes to the water situation, the Israeli propaganda machine and its helpers, the Zionist lobbies in the Diaspora, are in big trouble. As was clearly shown when the German Martin Schulz had the audacity to inquire in the Knesset – that den of traffickers in the Holocaust – if the rumor he had heard was true [he queried whether Israelis were allotted four times as much water as Palestinians].

The systematic discrimination in water allocations to the Palestinians is no false rumor. Israelis’ water welfare is not dependent upon it, but without it the whole settlement enterprise would be way more expensive, and perhaps even impossible to sustain in its current and planned scope.

No wonder Habayit Hayehudi, the party most identified with the settlers, reacted so furiously to Schulz’s remarks and walked out of the Knesset.


Water discrimination is another governmental tool being used to wear down the Palestinians socially and politically. ...


The reality of disjointed Palestinian enclaves that Israel is creating is emerging – through a different patchwork of laws and to different extents on either side of the Green Line – from the seizure of land and water sources, and the denial of freedom of movement.

The religion of security, which is used to justify the land theft, checkpoints and blockade, has yet to come up with an explanation for why a Palestinian child is entitled to less water than a Jewish child.


What can the public diplomacy experts say? That in Jenin the average per-capita allocation is 38 liters for home consumption, because the city is a stronghold of Islamic Jihad, which threatens our small country? That in the summer there is no regular water supply because the Shin Bet security service is busy uncovering cells of armed militants, and that in Gaza, more than 90 percent of the water is unfit for drinking because the Hamas chiefs are planning terrorist attacks in the West Bank?


Even the Jewish communities most dedicated to Israel will have a hard time justifying the discrepancies. And so the establishment has come up with a four-part plan of attack:


1. Bombard the media with partial and faulty statistics; ...

(Full article at link below)

Water torture for the Palestinians - Haaretz

BTW - my apologies: I am not able to post a link to CAMERA's hasbara hit-piece on this one ... due to the late hour and time differences, it appears that their Israeli handlers not have yet been been able to formulate a response to tell them what to say, and of course CAMERA hasbarats are still safely tucked away in their beds, blissfully unaware of today's media PR disaster that awaits them ...
 
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RLENT

Veteran Expediter
Reported 2 hours ago from Ma'an News Agency:

138 Irish academics pledge to boycott Israel

Published today (updated) 20/02/2014 17:00

BETHLEHEM (Ma'an) -- More than 130 Irish academics have signed a pledge to boycott Israeli institutions in the latest move from the international campaign for the academic boycott of Israel.

The 138 signatories, who hail from a diverse variety of academic fields, pledged "not to engage in any professional association with Israeli academic, research and state institutions ... until such time as Israel complies with international law and universal principles of human rights."

The pledge was organized by the activist group Academics for Palestine and includes signatories both in the Republic of Ireland as well as Northern Ireland, which is controlled by the United Kingdom and has been the site of intermittent national conflict for nearly a century.

The pledge was launched on the occasion of the visit of major Israel and Palestinian supporters of boycott, divestment, and sanctions of Israel to Ireland to launch the group "Academics for Palestine."

"Israeli society has been united in its denial and rejection of international law and UN resolutions on the 1967 occupation. For five decades it had shunned the international community on these and many other issues," Israeli scholar Professor Haim Bresheeth told an audience on Wednesday at Queen's University in Belfast.

He added: "It is time for the international community to shun Israeli society through BDS."

Palestinian academic Ghada Karmi also took park in the event, stressing that BDS does not target individual Israeli citizens but institutions.

(Article continues at link below)
138 Irish academics pledge to boycott Israel | Maan News Agency
 

RLENT

Veteran Expediter
Israeli Roy Isacowitz offers some thoughts on "the new anti-semitism" and his own personal predicament ... after recently finding out after some 40 (?) odd years that he is, apparently, an anti-Semite:

Bibi has turned me into an 'anti-Semite'

Now that Israel's prime minister has defined boycott supporters as 'classical anti-Semites in modern garb,' I'm trying to get used to my new identity.

By Roy Isacowitz | Feb. 19, 2014 | 7:47 PM

I’ve spent the last couple of days battling to come to terms with the fact that I’m an anti-Semite.

It’s not an easy thing to accept for someone who has been Jewish since birth, has lived in Israel for over 40 years and who likes to believe that he doesn’t have a racist bone in his body. In fact, it’s a real blow.

But it must be true because Prime Minister Netanyahu said it was – and we all know that Bibi would never play fast and loose with the truth on matters as sacred as anti-Semitism and the Holocaust.


To be specific, Netanyahu described supporters of a boycott against Israel, of which I am one, as “classical anti-Semites in modern garb.” In the past, the prime minister said earlier this week, “anti-Semites boycotted Jewish businesses - and today they call for the boycott of the Jewish state.”


Case closed. Everyone who supports a boycott against Israel as a means of pressuring it to drop its insane and suicidal dominion over the Palestinian people is a classical anti-Semite. Not an ordinary, run-of-the-mill kind of anti-Semite, note, but a classical one – the type who flips through the Protocols of Zion before turning out the light at night and believes that Jews use Christian blood in baking their matzot.


It’s also worth noting that the government’s boycott law specifically includes any “area under Israel’s control,” which means that even refraining from drinking Golan wine is a sure sign of anti-Semitism. So, the next time you want to check the place of origin of a packet of parsley in the supermarket, think again. Next thing you know, you’ll be spray-painting swastikas on walls.


It’s like drugs, this anti-Semitism stuff. You start with something small, like avoiding herbs from Gush Etzion, and before you know it you’re foaming at the mouth and mainlining Mein Kampf. Or arguing that disinvestment might prompt Israeli businessmen to pay a little more attention to what’s going on in their back yard.


Same thing, really; anti-Semitism is anti-Semitism. Only a proto-anti-Semite would look for nuances in the filth and the muck. Luckily, we have our sharp and unerring prime minister to fend off the danger and keep us on the straight and narrow. Only he knows how fiendishly devious the anti-Semites really are.


It’s going to take me time to get used to being a classical anti-Semite. It’s like discovering in my sixties that my biological father was actually Himmler or that I was mistakenly swapped with another baby at birth. (I wonder if he also turned out to be an anti-Semite.) An entire lifetime of self-discovery needs to be scrapped and the process begun again from scratch.


Not that it was entirely unexpected, to be honest. I understood relatively early on that the progressive, non-racial Judaism I imbibed with my mother’s milk (what was in that **** milk, for Christ sake?) was very far from the Judaism that drives Israel. So, pretty much from the start, I’ve been a bit of a Jewish sore thumb in Israel; an anachronism among my exclusivist and revanchist fellow Jews.


But I never thought of myself as an anti-Semite. A non-mainstream Israeli, certainly; a non-Zionist, probably – even, perhaps, a quasi-self-hating Jew. But never an anti-Semite.


Now, thanks to the prime minister, I have seen the light. I’m too old and too set in my ways to change my politics, so I’m just going to have to get used to being an anti-Semite and make the best of it. Learn to love my anti-Semitic self, as contemporary pop-psychology would have it.


And I’m pleased to say that there do seem to be some glimmers of illumination, if not exactly hope. For one thing, we anti-Semitic boycotters seem to be souring the mood of the prime minister and his cohorts. There’s no doubt that they’re concerned by all this boycott stuff - very concerned, even - and concerned Jews should make an anti-Semite happy, I guess. I’m still a novice anti-Semite, so I don’t really know. But the signs are good.


Then there’s the odd, niggling doubt I’ve had on occasion about my political positions – like on Iran, for example. To me, Netanyahu has always seemed to have a Strangelovian obsession with nuking Iran, but I’ll admit to moments during which I’ve questioned whether perhaps he knows more about what’s going on than I do; he is the prime minister, after all.


Now, I no longer have to worry. As an anti-Semite, I can trash the Jewish prime minister without qualm or conscience. After all, if being pro-Israel means being as intellectually dishonest as the prime minister is, then being an anti-Semite is probably a step up.
Bibi has turned me into an 'anti-Semite' - Opinion Israel News - Haaretz
 
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RLENT

Veteran Expediter
Looks like Loyola University is the first Catholic University to have their student government pass a resolution calling on the university to divest from companies that are profiting from Israel's occupation of Palestine - by a landslide vote, with no one voting against, no less.

From Sixteen Minutes To Palestine:

Divestment passes at Loyola University Chicago

MARCH 18, 2014 BY SAMI KISHAWI

Last updated 10:17 PM CST

Loyola University Chicago's student government passed a resolution Tuesday evening to divest from corporations profiting from Israel's occupation.

The resolution, introduced by Loyola's Students for Justice in Palestine, passed by a landslide vote, with 26 student senators voting in favor, none voting against, and two choosing to abstain.

The resolution urges the university administration to withdraw investments from eight corporations complicit in Israel's occupation of the Palestinian territories, including Caterpillar, SodaStream, Veolia, and Hewlett-Packard.

The divestment resolution itself faced no opposition, according to students and community members present at the hearing. The only major hurdle faced by student organizers was a proposed amendment to edit the formatting and visual layout of the resolution. The content was not changed.

This evening's turn of events makes Loyola University Chicago the first Catholic university and the first university from the state of Illinois to pass divestment.

Loyola's divestment success is one of three divestment hearings that occurred simultaneously across the nation.

At the University of Michigan, the Central Student Government voted to "table, indefinitely" a divestment bill presented by student representatives of campus group Students Allied for Freedom and Equality. Over one hundred students and supporters in attendance began to chant in protest of the student government's decision.


In Phoenix, AZ, Students for Justice in Palestine at the Arizona State University also introduced a divestment bill for a first-read. It, too, was tabled indefinitely, but student organizers intending to present the resolution for a vote on April 1.


It is worth noting that no resolutions were rejected this evening.


This article will be updated as more information is made available.
Divestment passes at Loyola University Chicago - Sixteen Minutes to Palestine

More coverage:

Loyola University Chicago student union passes resolution to divest from Israeli occupation
 

RLENT

Veteran Expediter
Also from San Diego State University SJP, from late yesterday:

Students for Justice in Palestine - SDSU

We are so happy to share that SDSU's Student Diversity Commission board has just passed our divestment resolution almost intact: 11 yes, 3 no, 6 abstain. Now we will be taking the resolution to University Council! Thank you to all those who supported us throughout and those in SDC who have stood on the right side of history. #SDSUdivest #ontoUC #CaliCampusDivest
 

RLENT

Veteran Expediter
Looks like the UNHRC (United Nations Human Rights Council) is set to vote on 5 resolutions against Israel this coming week, including one which calls for boycott and sanctions - from Haaretz:

UN body to vote on settlement-boycott resolution

With Foreign Ministry on strike, Israel does nothing to fight resolution, whose wording seems similar to recent BDS campaigns.

By Barak Ravid | Mar. 23, 2014 | 10:53 PM


The United Nations Human Rights Council in Geneva is scheduled to vote on five anti-Israel resolutions later this week, one of which includes a call to boycott and divestment from West Bank settlements.

The draft of this particular resolution, which is being submitted by the Arab states and the Palestinian Authority, is especially worrisome to Israeli officials because for the first time it includes wording that seems directly derived from recent boycott, divestment and sanction campaigns. Because Foreign Ministry work sanctions have paralyzed Israel's diplomatic activity, no steps were taken to try to soften the wording of the resolutions or block them.

A senior Israeli official said that the resolution is making officials in the Prime Minister's Office very nervous. Though the resolution is not binding, its passage is liable to encourage efforts to boycott Israeli and foreign companies that operate in the settlements.

After Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's aides realized that no one at the Foreign Ministry planned to address the issue, they considered dispatching deputy National Security Council chairman Eran Lerman to Geneva to try to convince the United States and members of the European Union to help soften the resolution. In the end it was decided not to send Lerman because the PM's aides concluded that he would be unlikely to wield much influence. Lerman is not accredited to the UN institutions in Geneva, which means he cannot attend UNHRC debates or even enter the UN compound. He would have been forced to meet Western diplomats in their offices or in local cafes.

The draft resolution as published by UN Watch in Geneva states that the Israeli settlement enterprise makes Israel responsible for serious violations of international law, and calls on UNHRC member nations not to facilitate the continuation of these violations. "The direct or indirect assistance of States and private entities to the settlement enterprise constitute obstacles that have frustrated international efforts for the end of the occupation and fulfillment of the right of self- determination of the Palestinian people," the resolution says.

(Article continues at link below)

UN body to vote on resolution to boycott Israeli settlements - Diplomacy and Defense Israel News | Haaretz
 
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