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Sunday May 23, 2010 6:52 PM (EST+7)
TIBI INTERVIEW: Lieberman is a 'pure racist'


Read more: Israeli-Arabs, ‘48 Palestinians, discrimination, Ahmad Tibi

RAMALLAH, May 23 (JMCC) - A Los Angeles Times interview with Israeli-Arab lawmaker Ahmed Tibi on being a Palestinian citizen in Israel.


You've been saying recently that racism in Israel has gone mainstream, moving from the fringes of society into the halls of government, even accusing Israel's foreign minister and interior minister of being racists. Those are pretty sweeping statements.

Look at what [Israeli Foreign Minister] Avigdor Lieberman and his party are saying and doing. Their motions and proposed laws are pure racism. The so-called loyalty motion demands that we be loyal to Zionism and to Israel as a Jewish state or we won't be allowed to be a candidate for the Knesset or receive our budget allocation from the state. They say Arabs should be transported to the Palestinian Authority....

This is a fascist campaign. Lieberman is the equivalent of Jean-Marie Le Pen from France and [the late] Joerg Heider from Austria. But there is one difference. They are all are racists. All conduct a policy of hatred. But Heider was an indigenous politician who was racist against foreigners. Here we are talking about an immigrant politician [Lieberman was born in Moldova] who is racist against the indigenous [Palestinian] people....

In what way don't Jewish and Arab citizens have equal rights?

There is discrimination in every field of life except one. There is one man, one vote. In elections, all are equal. But in budget allocation, industry, education, land, religious places, employment there are huge gaps between the Jewish majority and the Arab minority. Just visit a couple of towns. You'll see Jewish cities are very civilized. Arab towns are being strangulated. There has not been one new Arab town in Israel since 1948, but there have been hundreds of [Jewish] settlements.

The state land authority [in many cases has been] allowed to hire or purchase land only for Jews. Non-Jews are not allowed. And we are talking about land that was ours in the past and confiscated. In the early 1950s, we owned 80% of the private land. Now we own 3% of the private land.

We are 20% of the population, but only 6% of the employees in the public sector. This is a built-in discriminatory policy. There is not one Arab official employed in a high-ranking [departmental] post, no legal advisor, no director-general.

If elections are fair and you have one-fifth of the population, isn't it partly your own fault that Arabs haven't been able to gain more political clout? You only have about 10% of the Knesset seats. Arab political parties are small and divided. Other, much smaller minority groups in Israel have done a much better job at organizing and exerting influence.

We [Palestinians] are not the same. There are differences in parties and ideologies. There is an idea to bring all parties together on one list. I support that idea. But we didn't succeed. It's our fault.

Secondly, half of our voters don't participate in the [national] election. There are a lot of reasons, but mainly frustration with the system. We should do more to improve and increase the percent of Arabs taking part....

What have you been able to deliver for Arab constituents in terms of tangible benefits or protections? As an Arab MK, can you even get a bill passed?

During the last Knesset, I passed four [laws]. Before that, I passed another four or five. But it's very difficult for an Arab MK to pass even one motion. Mine were all universal laws that were good for both Jews and Arabs, about medical issues, environment, anti-corruption. But if I brought a law on the issue of land allocation or cessation of discrimination, it would immediately be brought down.

I tried it three months ago with a motion that said simply the allocation of land by the state should be equal for all citizens. I didn't mention Jewish or Arab citizens. Automatically the vast majority of the Knesset voted against me. Any motion with the principle or word equality will fail. There is not one basic law in the Knesset talking about the value of equal rights. Every Knesset I try to pass it.

As an opposition figure, do you see part of your role to provoke, to criticize, to prod?

To enlighten. To concentrate focus on issues. I'm not that easy to ignore. If [my critics] ever succeed in ignoring me, that's the day I will no longer stay in the Knesset.

Read the entire interview at the Los Angeles Times...
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