Empowering Egypt's economy: IFC, World Bank spearhead private sector growth, development initiatives    QatarEnergy acquires stake in 2 Egyptian offshore gas exploration blocks    Al-Sisi inaugurates restored Sayyida Zainab Mosque, reveals plan to develop historic mosques    Shell Egypt hosts discovery session for university students to fuel participation in Shell Eco-marathon 2025    Chad faces growing food insecurity crisis amidst multiple challenges, UN warns    Germany's Lilium, Swiss firm expand to France    UNICEF calls for increased child-focused climate investments in drought-stricken Zimbabwe    S. Korea plans $7.3b support package for chip industry – FinMin    WHO warns of foodborne disease risk in Kenya amidst flooding    Egypt's CBE offers EGP 60b in T-bills on Sunday    CBE sets new security protocols for ATM replenishment, money transport services    EGP slips against USD in early Sunday trade    SoftBank's Arm to develop AI chips by 2025    Hurghada ranks third in TripAdvisor's Nature Destinations – World    Elevated blood sugar levels at gestational diabetes onset may pose risks to mothers, infants    President Al-Sisi hosts leader of Indian Bohra community    China in advanced talks to join Digital Economy Partnership Agreement    Japanese Ambassador presents Certificate of Appreciation to renowned Opera singer Reda El-Wakil    Sweilam highlights Egypt's water needs, cooperation efforts during Baghdad Conference    AstraZeneca injects $50m in Egypt over four years    Egypt, AstraZeneca sign liver cancer MoU    Swiss freeze on Russian assets dwindles to $6.36b in '23    Climate change risks 70% of global workforce – ILO    Prime Minister Madbouly reviews cooperation with South Sudan    Egypt retains top spot in CFA's MENA Research Challenge    Egyptian public, private sectors off on Apr 25 marking Sinai Liberation    Debt swaps could unlock $100b for climate action    President Al-Sisi embarks on new term with pledge for prosperity, democratic evolution    Amal Al Ghad Magazine congratulates President Sisi on new office term    Egyptian, Japanese Judo communities celebrate new coach at Tokyo's Embassy in Cairo    Uppingham Cairo and Rafa Nadal Academy Unite to Elevate Sports Education in Egypt with the Introduction of the "Rafa Nadal Tennis Program"    Financial literacy becomes extremely important – EGX official    Euro area annual inflation up to 2.9% – Eurostat    BYD، Brazil's Sigma Lithium JV likely    UNESCO celebrates World Arabic Language Day    Motaz Azaiza mural in Manchester tribute to Palestinian journalists    Russia says it's in sync with US, China, Pakistan on Taliban    It's a bit frustrating to draw at home: Real Madrid keeper after Villarreal game    Shoukry reviews with Guterres Egypt's efforts to achieve SDGs, promote human rights    Sudan says countries must cooperate on vaccines    Johnson & Johnson: Second shot boosts antibodies and protection against COVID-19    Egypt to tax bloggers, YouTubers    Egypt's FM asserts importance of stability in Libya, holding elections as scheduled    We mustn't lose touch: Muller after Bayern win in Bundesliga    Egypt records 36 new deaths from Covid-19, highest since mid June    Egypt sells $3 bln US-dollar dominated eurobonds    Gamal Hanafy's ceramic exhibition at Gezira Arts Centre is a must go    Italian Institute Director Davide Scalmani presents activities of the Cairo Institute for ITALIANA.IT platform    







Thank you for reporting!
This image will be automatically disabled when it gets reported by several people.



British scholar defends move to 'reconsider' links with Israeli institutions
Published in Daily News Egypt on 28 - 05 - 2008

CAIRO: In its annual report, issued yesterday, Amnesty International says that the human rights situation in the Occupied Palestinian Territories (OPT) remains "dire .
The report says that over 550 military checkpoints, illegally-constructed settlements and the large swathes of land seized in order to construct the 700 km separation wall have deprived Palestinians of "their source of livelihood and restricted access "to their workplaces, education and health facilities.
International community diplomatic pressure on Israel is non-existent or at best, ineffective: 1.5 million Gazans continue to live under the blockade imposed by the Israeli government last June, and serious abuses of Palestinian rights by Israel continue with seeming impunity.
Critics point to President George Bush's Knesset speech as evidence of this.
Bush praised Israel's "defiance of the threats to its existence while neglecting the illegal seizure of land, extrajudicial killings and discrimination of which rights groups accuse Israel.
In the face of the international diplomatic community's intransigence, or indifference, it is perhaps little surprise that Palestinians on the ground are seeking out new tactics to raise awareness of their circumstances.
In 2004 Palestinian academics launched the Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel (PACBI) inspired by the boycott of apartheid South Africa.
Boycott or reconsider
Philip Marfleet, a reader in Social Sciences at the University of East London, who is active in the campaign for an academic boycott of Israel spoke to Daily News Egypt about the evolution of the boycott campaign in the UK.
Marfleet was in Cairo last week to attend part of the Spring Festival celebrations, particularly the Ahadaf Sweif lecture.
He is a member of the British University and College Union (UCU), the UK's largest association of academics working in further and higher education, which was scheduled to vote Wednesday, on a resolution that asks members to consider "the moral and political consequences of links with Israeli institutions.
Marfleet says that the British boycott movement was linked to the PACBI campaign.
"PACBI has campaigned internationally for academics and people in the sphere of culture broadly defined to not participate in institutional events, or maintain institutional links, with Israel.
"PACBI argues that Israeli freedoms - academic freedoms and the freedom to participate in cultural activity - has been bought at the expense of Palestinian's denial of those same freedoms.
"They also argue also that they have tried every means to create more space for Palestinian cultural activity, but that everything they do is inhibited by the occupation, he said.
At its founding conference in May 2007 the UCU debated a resolution on the appropriateness of links between British universities and colleges and their counterparts in Israel, which was passed two to one.
"There was a storm of protest, Marfleet said.
Defending the campaign
"The newspapers were full of statements by Israelis and prominent Zionist activists declaring that this was a new wave of anti-Semitism which - rather than being associated with the anti-Semites of old on the extreme right - was associated with new anti-Semites among left-wingers and liberals.
Marfleet suggests that the strength of reaction to the proposed boycott is indicative of the central role that educational institutions occupy in Israel.
"Israeli universities are very important to the fabric of Israeli society and to the occupation.
"Carefully researched material reveals the links of Israeli universities to the army. They house strategic research institutes which do a lot of the type of thinking behind military initiatives. Many high-profile Israeli academics are closely identified with the planning and execution of the occupation strategy, Marfleet says.
The resolution was overturned when a legal opinion suggested that an academic boycott of Israel might fall foul of the British Race Relations Act, and may lay the UCU open to charges of misuse of funds, which explains the carefully nuanced language of the resolution voted on Wednesday.
Marfleet says that proponents of the boycott reacted angrily.
"People were absolutely furious that what they saw as a completely legitimate discussion about a military occupation in solidarity with Palestinian academics should be subject to a legal judgement, which appeared to close off independent discussion, he said.
During the May 2007 meeting UCU members also voted to invite a delegation of Palestinian academics who toured British university campuses in order to explain the circumstances in the occupied territories in April 2008.
Marfleet says that their testimonies demonstrated the extent to which "everyday educational life is not possible in the OPT .
"Every single Palestinian university faces problems getting its students into the university. Every single day, the vast majority of students and staff have to try and pass roadblocks where they are routinely detained.
"If they're able to get to class they run the risk of military invasions, killings and assassinations on campus, closures and arbitrary arrest. Very often the Israeli army enters campuses and whisks students away from classrooms and student residences.
"In addition, because the Palestinian economy is being strangled by the Israelis, these are institutions which live precariously. They don't have the finances and resources to maintain the basics of higher education.
Reject the boycott
Opponents of the academic boycott of Israel reject it as being both ineffective and harmful.
Reader in law at the University of East London John Strawson suggests on the Engageonline.org.uk website (a forum for opponents of the academic boycott of Israel) that "boycotts of universities always undermine academic freedom, which must be seen as undesirable. . Exchanging ideas, debating issues, working on common projects, collaborative publishing ventures are valuable in and of themselves.
Strawson also suggests that academics have little influence in the political arena and that "working with people positively seems far more likely to help create conditions that will end the occupation than the negative boycott. The boycott is a call to do nothing about the occupation at all.
Marfleet rejects this.
"That would be a strong argument if only there was evidence to show that linkages between Palestinian and Israeli academics and students have produced any tangible results, Marfleet explained.
"We've had the occupation for 40 years and the predicament of Palestinian institutions is worse than it's ever been.
"Importantly, the number of Israeli academics who have staked out a position which is publicly critical of what is going on and have mobilized to do anything about it is insignificant.
The Cairo debate
This position is shared by Dr Sharif Almusa, an associate professor of political science at the American University in Cairo.
"Talk about academic freedom doesn't really hold where there is an occupation and Palestinians simply cannot exercise their academic freedom, Almusa said.
"The equivalent of academic freedom for Palestinians is the ending of the occupation.
On May 14, the American University in Cairo's Senate (a meeting of tenured staff) passed a resolution (58 for, 42 against) condemning Israel's "systematic measures that strangle Palestinian academic development and supporting "the growing voices of global civil society organizations and prominent individuals calling for various forms of boycott of Israel.
In 2006 a group of Israeli scholars were invited to AUC as part of a conference, provoking a furious reaction from some students and staff and sparking off a debate on the policy of normalization.
While at the diplomatic level Egypt re-established political and economic links with Israel after the Camp David Accords, the majority of Egyptians remain firmly opposed to normalization.
The AUC's Board of Trustees, which ratifies Senate resolutions, rejected the resolution, stating that, "AUC does not take positions on political issues, and "because academic freedom is a fundamental value of the university, the board voted to neither accept nor approve the Senate s resolution.
Almusa rejects their reasoning.
"We are a university and should be political. As an American university in the middle of Cairo, AUC cannot in any case escape the political.
He also suggests that the Board of Trustees are "disconnected from Egypt and do not represent the AUC community.
The UCU resolution proposes the "grey-listing of the Ariel College of Judea and Samaria, which Marfleet says has been constructed on land seized from three Palestinian villages about 15 miles north of Ramallah.
"It is a bastion of the most conservative settler thought. What we have discovered is that although its ambition is to provide intellectual leadership to the settler movement, it actually draws most of its students from Israel. Over 70 percent of students come from greater Tel Aviv.
Marfleet says that Ariel College is emblematic of the way in which Israeli academic institutions are implicated in the occupation and denial of Palestinian rights.
"This is an institution built illegally, in territory under military rule. The vast bulk of the students and the staff daily come from major Israeli towns on roads prohibited to Palestinians.
"This institution is a startling example of the way in which the process of colonization facilitates the activities of Israeli universities while denying them to Palestinian institutions, and in fact operating a parallel universe.


Clic here to read the story from its source.