Oct 24, 2010

#BDS: Guns N’ Roses: An Opportunity to Untie your Hands

Dear Guns N’ Roses,
The Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel (PACBI) was dismayed to read reports that you are considering performing in Israel later this year [1]. PACBI, supported by an overwhelming majority of Palestinian civil society and, in particular, by almost the entire community of Palestinian cultural workers [2], views such a performance in Israel as a form of complicity in whitewashing Israel's occupation, apartheid and war crimes. More importantly, your upcoming performance would violate the appeal of the Palestinian Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement [3] which urges people of conscience throughout the world to isolate Israel until it ends its colonial and apartheid oppression of the Palestinian people, as was done to the apartheid regime in South Africa.
Based on your music, most notably your song, “Civil War,” you must surely be aware that music cannot rise above politics or be detached from moral responsibility. Otherwise, why attempt to reach the hearts of millions through a protest song against war? Perhaps more powerfully, “Civil War” was about a type of war that defined the coming age, as the 1990s saw the breakup of a bipolar world and the proliferation of smaller, less tractable civil wars. People all over the world heard your words, and none more clearly than your fans in South Africa who called for an end to apartheid…and succeeded!
In 2004, PACBI, inspired by the triumphant cultural boycott of apartheid South Africa, and supported by key Palestinian unions and cultural groups, issued a call for the academic and cultural boycott of Israel. PACBI appealed to international artists to refuse to perform in Israel [4] or participate in events that serve to equate the occupier and the occupied [5] and thus promote the continuation of injustice. Following this, in 2005, Palestinian civil society called for an all-encompassing Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) campaign based on the principles of human rights, justice, freedom and equality [6]. The BDS movement is asking artists to heed our call until “Israel withdraws from all the lands occupied in 1967, including East Jerusalem; removes all its colonies in those lands; agrees to United Nations resolutions relevant to the restitution of Palestinian refugees rights; and dismantles its system of apartheid." [7]
In this climate of persistent oppression and racist subjugation, you should ask yourself whether you wish, by performing in Israel, to be complicit in whitewashing the following violations by Israel of international law and Palestinian rights:
- A brutal and unlawful military occupation of the West Bank (including East Jerusalem) and Gaza Strip. Israel restricts Palestinians’ freedom of movement and of speech; blocks access to lands, health care, and education; imprisons Palestinian leaders and human rights activists without charge or trial; and inflicts, on a daily basis, humiliation and violence at the more than 600 military checkpoints and roadblocks strangling the West Bank. All the while, Israel continues to build its illegal wall on Palestinian land and to support the ever-expanding network of illegal, Jewish-only settlements that divide the West Bank into Bantustans.

- A growing system of Apartheid towards the Palestinian citizens of Israel, with laws and policies that deny Palestinian citizens the rights that their Jewish counterparts enjoy. These laws and policies affect education, land ownership, housing, employment, marriage, and all other aspects of people's daily lives. In this way, Israeli democracy, for Jews only, is as much a myth and as “ironic” as Chinese democracy. [8]

- A denial of the internationally recognized right of return for Palestinian refugees who were ethnically cleansed in 1948 in the process of forming an exclusivist Jewish state. Israel also continues to expel people from their homes in Jerusalem and the Naqab (Negev). Today, there are more than 7 million refugees, still struggling for their right to return to their homes, like all refugees around the world.

Israel openly uses artists, musicians and other cultural workers as part of a campaign to Brand Israel [9], a campaign that has been launched by the Israeli government and promoted by institutions throughout the country and abroad in order to whitewash Israel’s violations of international law and project a false image of normalcy. But after Israel’s war of aggression against Gaza in December 2008 and January 2009, which left 1,400 Palestinians dead [10], predominantly civilians, and led the UN Goldstone Report to declare that Israel had committed war crimes [11], and after the flotilla massacre, many international artists have refused to conduct business as usual with a country that places itself above international standards. Elvis Costello [12], Gil Scott Heron, Carlos Santana, Devendra Banhart, and the Pixies are but a few of the artists who have refused to perform in Israel in the past year. In his decision not to play, Devendra Banhart said,

Unfortunately, we tried to make it clear that we were coming to share a human and not a political message but it seems that we are being used to support views that are not our own. [13]

Maxi Jazz (Faithless front-man) had this to say as he maintained his principled position not to entertain apartheid,

While human beings are being willfully denied not just their rights but their needs for their children and grandparents and themselves, I feel deeply that I should not be sending even tacit signals that [performing in Israel] is either 'normal' or 'ok'. It's neither and I cannot support it. It grieves me that it has come to this and I pray everyday for human beings to begin caring for each other, firm in the wisdom that we are all we have. [14]

The call for BDS has also been supported by prominent and devoted anti-racist activists around the world, from South African Archbishop Desmond Tutu [15] to best-selling African-American author Alice Walker. If you are still unconvinced because of a claim that a cultural boycott of Israel would infringe on freedom of expression and cultural exchange, then we recall for you the judicious words of Enuga S. Reddy, director of the United Nations Center against Apartheid, who in 1984 responded to similar criticism voiced against the cultural boycott of South Africa saying:

It is rather strange, to say the least, that the South African regime which denies all freedoms... to the African majority... should become a defender of the freedom of artists and sportsmen of the world. We have a list of people who have performed in South Africa because of ignorance of the situation or the lure of money or unconcern over racism. They need to be persuaded to stop entertaining apartheid, to stop profiting from apartheid money and to stop serving the propaganda purposes of the apartheid regime. [16]
Back to your lyrics; you once said, perhaps in a cynical moment, “My hands are tied” as the war goes on, and “you can’t trust freedom when it’s not in your hands; when everybody’s fighting for their promised land.” We are providing a way for you to untie your hands, to not sit idly by, or worse, support the war, occupation and apartheid. Equally important, you must know that we do not fight to liberate a promised land, but rather, to liberate a people. Can you really sing such words in such times in Israel?
You may be particularly interested to know that, as part of its illegal and criminal siege of Gaza, Israel has prevented not only various types of medicines, candles, books, crayons, clothing, shoes, blankets, pasta, tea, coffee and chocolate, but also musical instruments from reaching the 1.5 million Palestinians incarcerated in the world’s largest open-air prison [17]. Can you entertain such a state with a clear conscience?
Can you stand on that stage giving legitimacy to the oppressor when the title song of your new album is an emotional gesture to Tibet and a China free from oppression?
To perform in Israel is to support this oppressive and racist power and ignore a people’s non-violent struggle for freedom. We therefore ask that you do not play in Israel.

Respectfully,

PACBI

#BDS: Joint Statement on Anti-Defamation Leagues “Top 10” List

On October 14th, the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) named Students for Justice in Palestine on
its list of the “Top 10 Anti-Israel Groups in America,” claiming that “SJP chapters regularly
organize activities presenting a biased view of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, including mock
‘apartheid walls’ and ‘checkpoint’ displays.” As members of several student groups working for
justice in Palestine, we affirmatively state that the ADL’s characterization of our campus
educational efforts and activism about Israeli injustices against Palestinians as “biased” is a
disingenuous and misguided attempt to vilify students that criticize Israel’s occupation, which
denies Palestinian human rights and self-determination. In this statement, we clarify our
principles and invite the ADL to reconsider its categorical silence on egregious Israeli human
rights violations by joining the movement for freedom, equality, and justice in Palestine.
Students for Justice in Palestine groups have developed independently as students across the
country seek to raise awareness about the Israeli government’s violations of human rights. Our
groups represent constituencies of students, faculty, staff and community members from diverse
ethnic, religious, national, and political backgrounds including many Jewish and Israeli members
who have been continually ostracized by organizations like the ADL. Our organizations work
independently of one another, but collectively, we are united in our belief in justice, freedom and
human rights for the Palestinian people. We are unified by our purpose of confronting these
wrongs that cause so much death and suffering.
The ADL shields Israeli policy by invoking the “complexity of the conflict” without ever
illuminating it. As students we have a definite responsibility to use the tools of knowledge at our
disposal to penetrate that complexity; “to speak truth and to expose lies” and “to analyze actions
according to their causes and motives and often hidden intentions,” to quote social critic Noam
Chomksy.1 Complexity can never be an excuse for complacency. In that vein, groups like the
United Nations Human Rights Council, Human Rights Watch, and Amnesty International have
affirmed in painstaking detail Israel’s deplorable human rights record and systematic
intransigency. By educating ourselves, our campuses and our communities about what the Israeli
government inflicts upon the Palestinian people within the occupied territories, inside Israel, and
beyond, we can begin to identify the problems that cause this injustice. United States foreign aid
to Israel – which numbers in the billions every year – is chief amongst the issues enabling
Israel’s continued occupation and racism. As students in America, therefore, our duty is threefold:
to apply our academic rigor to learn the truth, to educate and hold our communities
accountable for support given in our name, and to lobby our government to end its diplomatic
cover for Israeli injustice.
Palestinians have the right to fight for their freedom and to resist the occupation and colonization
of their indigenous lands. Therefore, we are committed to non-violent activism that promotes
education, civic and political organization to promote the Palestinian struggle for freedom. Many
of our organizations have responded favorably to a 2005 call from over 170 civil society
organizations within Palestine for activists to stand in solidarity by promoting the Boycott,
1 Noam Chomsky, “The Responsibility of Intellectuals,” The New York Review of Books,
February 23, 1967 available at http://www.chomsky.info/articles/19670223.htm
Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) movement. We see this method as an important and practical
tool that students can use to express solidarity with the Palestinian struggle for freedom. We also
believe it illuminates the behind-the-scenes relationships, economic and otherwise, that enable
Israel’s behavior and that can be used to urge our communities to be accountable to the ways in
which they may unwittingly support the occupation.
We are inspired by the international movement against South African apartheid—which
successfully ended only 16 years ago—and we aim similarly to bring an end to the system
imposed by Israel on the Palestinians. As in the South African movement, the BDS call has been
endorsed by many conscientious citizens of Israel, including Arabs and Jews, as well as
numerous social justice and peace activists around the world. Among the luminaries supporting
the call for solidarity are Nobel Peace laureates like Archbishop Desmond Tutu, co-drafter of the
UN Universal Declaration of Human Rights Stephane Hessel, distinguished professors, jurists,
authors, intellectuals, and artists.
Ultimately, we locate ourselves in a legacy of social justice movements working at the grassroots
for a free and just world. The ADL itself started this way a century ago. We suspect that the
ADL, high on its perch among the political elite, has lost sight of its founding values. It opposed
the South African anti-apartheid movement and engaged in massive spying on private American
citizens. It recently abandoned its belief in religious freedom by condemning Muslim Americans
hoping to build an Islamic community center in lower Manhattan. The same day it attacked SJP,
the ADL honored Rupert Murdoch, the media mogul who owns Fox News Network, one of the
most despicable purveyors of hatred against Muslim, Arab, Latino, Black, and queer
communities in our time. These are not the actions of an organization with a moral compass that
points in the direction of justice.
We will continue to work for a just peace where Palestinians are free in their homeland and
equals to Jewish Israelis. We invite the ADL to reflect and to choose to build this world, rather
than to stop it.
Students For Justice in Palestine Group Signatories
Arizona State University, Students for Justice in Palestine
Bard College, International Solidarity Movement
Bates College, Students for Justice in Palestine
Benedictine University, Students for Justice in Palestine
Boston University, Students for Justice in Palestine
Brandeis University, Students for Justice in Palestine
Brown University, Students for Justice in Palestine
Clark University, Students for Palestinian Rights
Columbia University, Students for Justice in Palestine
Cornell University, United for Peace and Justice in Palestine
DePaul University, Students for Justice in Palestine
Florida International University, Miami, Students for Justice in Palestine
Georgetown University, Students for Justice in Palestine
George Washington University, Students for Justice in Palestine
Hampshire College- Students for Justice in Palestine
Harvard College- Palestine Solidarity Committee
Harvard University- Alliance for Justice in the Middle East
Illinois Institute of Technology- Students for Justice in Palestine
Loyola University Chicago- Middle East Student Association (MESA)
Macalester College- Macalester Students United for Palestinian
Equal Rights
Massachusetts Institute of Technology- Palestine@MIT
New York University- Students for Justice in Palestine
Northeastern Illinois University- Students for Justice in Palestine
Northeastern University- Students for Justice in Palestine
Northwestern University- Students for Justice in Palestine
Ohio State University- Committee for Justice in Palestine
Purdue University- Students for Justice in Palestine
Rutgers University- BAKA: Students United for Middle Eastern
Justice
School of the Art Institute of Chicago- Students for Justice in Palestine
St. Xavier University- Students for Justice in Palestine
Suffolk University- Students for Justice in Palestine
Temple University- Students for Justice in Palestine
Texas Christian University- Students for Justice in Palestine
The Pennsylvania State University- University Park, Students for Justice in Palestine
Tufts University- Students for Justice in Palestine
University of Arizona- Students for Justice in Palestine
University of California, Berkeley- Students for Justice in Palestine
University of California, Davis- Students for Justice in Palestine
University of California, Hastings College of the Law- La Raza Law Students Association
University of California, Hastings College of the Law- Middle Eastern Law Students Association
University of California, Los Angeles School of Law- Law Students for Justice in Palestine
University of California, Los Angeles- Students for Justice in Palestine
University of California, Riverside- Students for Justice in Palestine
University of California, San Diego- Students for Justice in Palestine
University of California, Santa Barbara- Students for Justice in Palestine
University of California, Santa Cruz- Committee for Justice in Palestine
University of Chicago- Students for Justice in Palestine
University of Connecticut- International Relations Association
University of Florida, Gainesville- Students for Justice in Palestine
University of Florida- Students for Justice in Palestine
University of Illinois at Chicago- Students for Justice in Palestine
University of Maryland, Baltimore- Students for Justice in Palestine
University of Massachusetts, Boston- Students for Justice in Palestine
University of Michigan- Students Allied for Freedom and Equality
University of Pittsburgh- Students for Justice in Palestine
University of South Florida- Students for Justice in Palestine
University of Southern California- Students for Justice in Palestine
University of Texas, Austin- Palestine Solidarity Committee
University of Washington, Seattle- Students for Justice in Palestine
Wellesley College- Justice for Palestine
Yale University- Students for Justice in Palestine

Oct 23, 2010

#BDS:Learn, boycott, divest, sanction

You too can help fight Israeli apartheid

With the peace talks between Israel and the Palestinian Authority close to failure because Israel has refused to stop expanding its colonization of the West Bank, those of us committed to the human rights of the Palestinian people must look toward the future. I am a member of Tadamon!, a Montreal-based Middle East solidarity collective. Tadamon! aims to take the most effective action possible to support Palestine in its struggle for freedom and self-determination. That is why we are active participants in the movement for Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) against Israeli apartheid and are helping to organize a conference to support and expand the BDS movement this weekend, October 22 to 24 in Montreal.

So, what is BDS and why does Tadamon! support it? Boycotts, divestment, and sanctions are three tactics used to achieve the goal of forcing Israel to respect international law and grant the Palestinians their right to independence, self-determination, and return to their ancestral land. The movement began in 2005 when a coalition of Palestinian civil society groups sent out the call for BDS. The movement models itself on the international non-violent movement that helped end the apartheid regime in South Africa.

The three tactics are largely self-explanatory. The sanctions component aims to pressure governments to sanction Israel, as they would any other country that repeatedly committed war crimes and ignored UN resolutions. The divestment section aims to encourage corporations, unions, universities, and other organizations to cut their ties with Israeli, primarily by selling stock in Israeli companies and cutting off economic relationships with the Israeli government. Tadamon! is most active in the boycott part of the movement. The boycott is multifaceted, and includes everything from supporting a boycott of Israel-made goods, such as Ahava beauty products (which are made in an illegal Israeli settlement near the Dead Sea), to encouraging artists and academics not to perform concerts or attend conferences in Israel.

#BDS: ترحيب بمقاطعة إسرائيل أكاديميا

رحب الاتحاد العام للكتاب والأدباء الفلسطينيين، بقرار مجلس جامعة جوهانسبرغ بجنوب أفريقيا، الداعي إلى عدم الاستمرار في علاقة طويلة مع جامعة بن غوريون الإسرائيلية.
وجاء في بيان الاتحاد -الذي تلقت الجزيرة نت نسخة منه- أن قرار جامعة جوهانسبرغ بإعطاء الجامعة الإسرائيلية مهلة ستة أشهر "لإنهاء تواطئها مع جيش الاحتلال (الإسرائيلي) ووضع حد لسياسات التمييز العنصري ضد الفلسطينيين يشكل خروجاً ملموساً عن موقف العلاقة المعتادة الذي حكم الاتفاقات بين هاتين المؤسستين حتى وقت قريب".
وأهاب الاتحاد بجامعة جوهانسبرغ أن "تكمل تحررها من الإرث العنصري بحسم قرارها دون مهل زمنية، أو اشتراطات تلطفية، لمقاطعة كافة الجامعات الإسرائيلية" مؤكدا أن "مؤسسات الأكاديميا الإسرائيلية هي جزء من التكوين الاستعماري الصهيوني".
وتابع أن هذه المؤسسات "متورطة، كمؤسسات وأفراد في توجيه سياسات التمييز العنصري لدولة الاحتلال، وتبريرها، وشرعنتها على الساحة الدولية، وممارسة العنصرية بشكل سافر على الطلبة العرب فيها".
في نفس السياق أثنى الاتحاد على "التحرك المسؤول الذي قام به مجلس اتحاد نقابات الجامعات الفلسطينية، على كافة المستويات في الأكاديميا الفلسطينية" باتجاه مقاطعة إسرائيل أكاديميا وثقافيا.
وأكد أنه "لا يعبر فقط عن موقف مجاميع الأكاديميا الفلسطينية، بل تتبناه مجاميع الوسط الثقافي الفلسطيني وتدعمه، وتؤكد على فحواه الداعية إلى الالتزام الكامل بالقرارات الثابتة لمجلس الاتحاد ومجلس التعليم العالي بعدم التعاون أو الانخراط في أي مشاريع مشتركة مع الجامعات الإسرائيلية بشكل مباشر أو غير مباشر، بشكل فردي أو مؤسساتي".

#BDS: Strauss to sell water filters to China

Israeli water filter producer signs partnership agreement with Chinese electronic giant; companies to invest $10 million each during first stage of project

Penetrating the Chinese market: Strauss Water Group has signed a partnership agreement with the Chinese Haier Electronics Group to produce and market home water filters.

According to the agreement, Haier will start to produce the appliances and market them in China as of next year.

The new water filters will be produced based on the Maze water purifying technology, developed in Israel by scientists from Hebrew University and the Weizmann Institute.

#BDS: Rabbi defends Israel at Doha conference

WJC's Schneier responds to Palestinian sheikh's claim that Israel 'illegally occupying' and 'Judaizing' Jerusalem

During the 8th Doha Conference of Inter-Faith Dialogue, World Jewish Congress Vice-President Rabbi Marc Schneier defendedIsrael against a diatribe by Sheikh Taysir al-Tamimi, the chief Islamic judge of the Palestinian Authority, who said Israel was "illegally occupying" and "Judaizing" Jerusalem.

Rabbi Schneier declared that "Jerusalem represents Jewish hopes and dreams. For millennia, we have prayed toward Jerusalem. We pray at the Western Wall, we mourn the destruction of our Temple 2,000 years ago, and we tell each other 'Next year in Jerusalem'. Jerusalem has always been the capital of the Jewish state, ancient or modern. It is therefore an insult to all of us to accuse us of illegally occupying the city.

"At the same time, we respect that Jerusalem is a holy place for Christians and Muslims as well. We know that the status of Jerusalem is at the forefront of peace talks, but denying the other side's right to bethere is wrong and counter-productive," the rabbi added.

#BDS: BBC’s ‘Top Gear’ car show races through Israel

British car show Top Gear is filming an episode in Israel this week, and hosts Jeremy Clarkson, Richard Hammond and James May are sure to learn a little about driving in a country where commuting is a blood-sport and road signs confound at breakneck speedBritish car show Top Gear is filming an episode in Israel this week, and hosts Jeremy Clarkson, Richard Hammond and James May are sure to learn a little about driving in a country where commuting is a blood-sport and road signs confound at breakneck speed..

#BDS: AHAVA boycott campaign brings out protesters and counter-protesters in Brooklyn Heights highlighting the controversy around Israeli settlement products


NEW YORK CITY – On October 26th, Brooklyn For Peace, CODEPINK NYC, Adalah-NY, Jews Say No!, Jewish Voice for Peace, and other local groups will bring the Stolen Beauty Ahava boycott campaign to Brooklyn for a third time. Local activists, some dressed in spa attire, and others wearing monster masks to convey the message that Occupation is an Ugly business, will gather on Montague Street to tell Ricky’s NYC: No More Ahava Cosmetics. At last month’s demonstration, counter-protesters also gathered outside Ricky’s, some of them opposing the boycott with a “buycott” of Ahava goods, highlighting the controversy around Israeli settlement products.
Since August 2009, local activists have been trying to pressure Ricky’s NYC, a family-owned chain that sells cosmetics and sundries, to stop carrying products made by the Israeli cosmetics manufacturer Ahava Dead Sea Laboratories because of the Ahava’s illegal practices. In July 2010, Brooklyn for Peace organized the first Ahava protest in that borough outside Ricky’s on Montague Street. The July 9th and September 28th protests sparked great interest and controversy in the community, and there is expectation that the third demonstration will be even more of an event.

#BDS: Preview: NS interview with Mike Leigh

The director explains his refusal to visit Israel and says he received "exhortations not to go" from within the country.
Earlier this week, I interviewed the director Mike Leigh, whose new film Another Year is one of the main attractions at the current London Film Festival. The full interview will appear in a forthcoming issue of the NS, but here's an excerpt where Leigh explains his recently-publicised decision not to attend a film teaching event in Israel, in protest at the country's loyalty oath bill.ays that his decision was not taken lightly:
I was going to go and give workshops at the film school [the Sam Spiegel Film & Television School in Jerusalem]. I agreed to go with great misgivings, for all the obvious reasons, but there is a very committed guy who runs the school. He persuaded me, I allowed myself to be persuaded [to go] in solidarity with what undoubtedly are very committed film-makers. But the truth is that just after I agreed to do that, there was the flotilla, then [settlement] building began again on the West Bank and then we have the loyalty oath.
I have become increasingly uncomfortable, I really felt that I simply had to join [the cultural boycott]. I have been a signatory to Jews for Justice in Palestine and various other things for a number of years. In the end you can go and indulge in comfortable cultural activity but just less distance from that activity then we are from the centre of Guilford, probably nearer [the interview took place in central London], it's hell on earth in Gaza and it's not acceptable. And that's the bottom line.

#BDS: Dutch Company Face Criminal Charges For Building Separation Wall

Human rights group Al-Haq have initiated criminal proceedings against a Dutch construction company for supplying equipment used to build the Separation wall and settlements. A complaint has been lodged with the state prosecutor, who pending the results of a police raid on Riwal’s headquarters in Holland, may pursue criminal convictions.

Al-Haq hold video and photographic evidence of Riwal machinery being used to construct sections of Israel’s Separation Wall and a building inside the settlement of Ariel. They claim to have sworn witness statements for these sightings.

Such construction would violate the International Criminal Court of Justice statute of 2004, ruling that the Wall is illegal. All settlements in the West Bank, of which is Ariel is the largest, are also illegal under international law. The Dutch Ministry of Justice have forbidden companies from involvement, making Riwal liable to punitive measures. Riwal have been under investigation since 2006.

#BDS: Tell Georgia State University to end its relationship with the Israeli police force

US Campaign member group Movement to End Israeli Apartheid-Georgia (MEIAG)needs your help to demand Georgia State University shut down its Georgia International Law Enforcement Exchange (GILEE) program.

The GILEE program facilitates training exchanges between Georgia police departments and others around the world, their strongest relationship with the Israeli police force. High ranking police officials (and other public employees) from across Georgia partake in annual delegations to Israel to learn "counter-terrorism" techniques from the
International Institute for Counter Terrorism in Herzliya, Israel. Likewise, Israeli police travel to Georgia to learn drug enforcement tactics.

See below for MEIAG's call to action, and to learn how you can tell Georgia State University to end its implicit relationship with Israel.

#BDS: Harvard student government condemns Peretz fund and calls for an investigation on the decision to honor him

Harvard’s Undergraduate Council voted overwhelmingly yesterday in favor of a bill calling on President Drew Faust “to establish a commission of concerned faculty, students and administrators to investigate” the decision to honor Martin Peretz. The Undergraduate Council is the representative body of Harvard’s more than 6,700 undergraduate students.
The “Student Response to Peretz Fund Act,” passed by a vote of 26-7-4, was presented to the student government by the Harvard Islamic Society, the Black Students Association, Latinas Unidas, the Society of Arab Students and the Progressive Jewish Alliance.
Leaders of these groups met with Harvard President Drew Faust earlier this month, and requested that the administration investigate the decision to honor Peretz. When Faust made clear that she was not willing to investigate the decision, student leaders decided to bring the matter to the Undergraduate Council.

#BDS: 8 countries absent from OECD tourism conference

BETHLEHEM (Ma'an) Norway, Canada, Ireland, the UK, Sweden, Iceland, Turkey and South Africa will not be present at the OECD tourism conference to be held in Jerusalem this month despite objections from the Palestinian Authority, Palestinian civil society groups said Thursday.

The controversy comes amid attempts by Israel to use the conference to further its territorial claims on Jerusalem and in response to concerns raised by Palestinian and international civil society, as well as Palestinian officials, that the conference would serve to whitewash Israel's violations of international law.

Some of the eight countries have explained their withdrawals were political in nature.

Norway and Turkey condemned comments made by Israeli politicians in the run-up to the conference. The Swedish delegation to the OECD referred campaigners to EU policy on the status of Jerusalem and hinted their stance was an attempt to assert the policy.

In a blow to the credibility of the conference at which officials were to discuss tourism policy, a majority of invited countries did not send tourism ministers but sent low-ranking officials instead.

The Greek delegation to the OECD told campaigners during telephone calls that no officials from Athens would make the trip and that Greece would merely be represented by a staff member from the Greek tourist information center in Tel Aviv. The Czech Republic is the only EU country to send political representation.