Archive

November 2021

Browsing
File photos of geolocation software developed by Intel. (Photo: Intel Free Press)

The NSO developments and the terrorist designations were two separate stories involving Israel, or so most people thought. However, just days ago we found out that they are very much connected.

Palestinians take part in a protest against the Israeli decision to declare six Palestinian human rights groups as "terror organizations", in Gaza City on November 10, 2021. (Photo: Mahmoud Nasser/APA Images)

I work for one of the leading Palestinian human rights organizations, Al-Haq, which was recently declared a “terrorist organization” by the Israeli regime along with five prominent civil society organizations in Palestine. Friends and acquaintances keep asking me how it feels to be a member of a “terrorist organization”. I always respond by saying: it seems like we’re doing something right.

Israel’s designation of 6 Palestinian civil society organizations as terrorist was an “act of tyranny” aimed at the “backbone” of Palestinian society, but the designation is “completely shattered at the moment, completely in shatters” due to widespread repudiation of the so-called evidence against the groups, says Israeli human rights attorney Michael Sfard. And the U.S. has the power to make Israel back down. But the State Department has said it’s studying the evidence.

Munther Amira carries a Palestinian flag and a poster reading "From Ferguson to Palestine, #BlackLivesMatter, #PalestinianLivesMatter" during a 2016 protest in the occupied West Bank. (Photo courtesy of Munther Amira)

Zionists are working hard to decouple the struggle for racial justice in the United States from Palestinian liberation, but the movements are intertwined through shared experiences of state violence and a legacy of joint struggle.

U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell met with Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat inside Arafat's besieged headquarters in the West Bank town of Ramallah on April 17, 2002. In a two-hour meeting with Powell, Arafat demanded that the international community and the Bush administration work to break his isolation by the Israelis. (Photo: AP/ Palestinian Authority)

Neta Golan recounts the day in 2002 when Colin Powell visited a besieged Yasser Arafat in his presidential compound in Ramallah during the Second Intifada, as international solidarity activists tried to protect the Palestinian leader from Israeli attack.