-Caveat Lector-

Things to come

Israel's probable next government is already flexing its muscles. And it is ringing 
alarms
across the region, writes Graham Usher in Jerusalem



With polls showing the Israeli electorate poised to return a Likud-led coalition for 
the Israeli
elections on 28 January, several decisions this week have underscored its emerging 
political
culture: aggressively nationalist, occasionally messianic and exclusively Zionist. 
Coupled
with the threat of a US-led war on Iraq, it will cast the darkest of shadows across 
the region.

The culture can be gauged from the verdicts so far delivered by Israel's Central 
Elections
Committee, a cross-party panel currently sitting to hear 13 requests to disqualify 
candidates
and parties running for the 16th Knesset, including Israel's three main Arab lists: 
Hadash-
Ta'al, the United Arab List and Azmi Bishara's Balad Party.

The first sign of things to come occurred on Sunday, when the 41-member panel voted to
approve the candidacy of Baruch Marvel. Marvel is the "former" leader of Israel's 
racist Kach
movement, which advocates the transfer of Palestinians from Israel and the occupied
territories and was banned in Israel after one of followers, Baruch Goldstein, shot 
dead 29
Palestinians while at prayer in Hebron's Ibrahimi mosque in February 1994.

Marvel says Kach no longer exists and that he now accepts "the principles of 
democracy",
evidenced by his decision to join Israel's far-right Herut Party (whose platform also 
calls for
"encouraging the emigration" of Palestinians). Twenty-one members of the CEC said they
believed him, including MKs from Likud, the National Religious Party and Shas. The 18
other members did not, including the Labour Party, Meretz, the Arab lists and the
committee's chairman, Justice Mishael Cheshin.

"An examination of the material brought before us shows that Marzel is the leader or 
one of
the important leaders of Kach. There is absolutely no doubt Marzel is [still] 
connected [to the
movement] and ... working for the same disgusting aims as in the past," said Cheshin. 
The
Labour Party has said it will petition Israel's High Court of Justice to overturn the 
decision.

A similar fate awaits Ahmed Tibi, former aide to Yasser Arafat and leader of Israel's 
Ta'al
Party or Arab Party for renewal. On Monday the CEC heard requests for the 
disqualification
of Ta'al, Hadash, the UAL as well as its leader Abdul-Malik Dahamshe. It rejected all 
four but
approved a ban on Tibi because he defines the PLO as a national liberation movement and
supports the Intifada. It was a charge to which he, together with just about every 
other
Palestinian, could only plead guilty.

"I am a new kind of [Israeli] Arab, a proud leader with a homeland," he told the CEC on
Monday. "We are finished with the mukhtars who did everything they were told."

He also charged that the CEC's judgment was not only about his national identification 
but a
ploy to remove any kind of political representation for Israel's Palestinian minority. 
"We have
been kicked out of the community and delegitimised. We are being told we don't have the
right to protest, to hold a different opinion." Tibi will also appeal this 
disqualification before
Israel's High Court of Justice.

So, almost certainly, will Bishara and his Balad Party, currently expected to retain 
its two
seats in the next Knesset.

Last February Bishara was stripped of his parliamentary immunity for speeches in which 
he
hailed Hizbullah's liberation of south Lebanon and defended the right of Palestinians 
to
resist occupation. Based on undisclosed "secret" evidence supplied by Israel's Shin Bet
intelligence service, his Balad Party is now being accused of aiming to destroy the 
state of
Israel, aiding "enemies of the state" and "inciting" Arabs to rebellion. Unlike Tibi's
disqualification, Israel's Attorney-General Elyahim Rubinstein backs Bishara and 
Balad's
exclusion.

For this reason, Bishara's lawyers and supporters believe it will be approved. They 
also see
the "sedition" charges as a smokescreen. The real motive is political, they insist. 
Bishara and
Balad have become the leading advocates of national rights for Israel's Palestinian 
minority
and of the call for transforming Israel from being a Jewish state into a state for all 
its citizens.
Less than three years ago, Bishara expressed such views from the floor of the Knesset.
Clearly, what was tolerated then to the Israeli consensus is tolerable no more.

If Bishara is disqualified and he and Tibi lose their appeals to High Court, the 
impact on the
Palestinians participation in the elections could be dramatic. Parties like Hadash 
insist
participation is crucial, if only prevent the expected Likud majority becoming an 
absolute
landslide. But many Palestinians see a boycott as the only response to a state that 
appears
bent on denying them any form of independent national representation. In this at least 
they
agree with an editorial on Tuesday in Israel's leading Yediot Aharonot newspaper:

"The message [from the CEC] has already been sent," it said. "For the Jewish political
system, Arab representatives are illegitimate."

� Copyright Al-Ahram Weekly. All rights reserved

Al-Ahram Weekly Online : 2 - 8 January 2003 (Issue No. 619)
Located at: http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2003/619/re1.htm
A<:>E<:>R
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Forwarded for your information.  The text and intent of the article
has to stand on its own merits.  Therefore, unless I am a first-hand
witness to any event described, I cannot attest to its validity.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, this material
is distributed without charge or profit to those who have
expressed a prior interest in receiving this type of information
for non-profit research and educational purposes only.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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