Israeli rights group protests ‘apartheid’ during Biden trip

A billboard saying “Mr. President, this is apartheid” is posted by an Israeli human rights group in Bethlehem on Wednesday, July 13, 2022. (AP)
Short Url
Updated 15 July 2022
Follow

Israeli rights group protests ‘apartheid’ during Biden trip

  • B’Tselem says Israel serially abuses Palestinians’ human rights
  • Billboards put up in West Bank ahead of US president’s visit to Ramallah

LONDON: Israeli human rights group B’Tselem is protesting against the country’s “apartheid” system during the visit of US President Joe Biden. 

He arrived on Wednesday as part of a tour of the region — his first since becoming president. Arriving in Tel Aviv, Biden described the US-Israeli relationship as “bone-deep.”

B’Tselem has put up banners in the Palestinian cities of Ramallah and Bethlehem ahead of his visit to the Israeli-occupied West Bank, reading: “This is apartheid.” Biden is due to meet Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas on Friday in Ramallah.

Hagai El-Ad, executive director of B’Tselem, said the US has repeatedly permitted Israel to violate human rights, adding: “When the (US) attitude changes, so will the (Israeli) regime.”

Other rights groups, including Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International, also accuse Israel of apartheid against the Palestinian people, something the Israeli government denies. 

In a report published in February, Amnesty said Palestinians are treated as an “inferior racial group and systematically deprived of their rights,” forced to live with “cruel policies of segregation, dispossession and exclusion which amounts to crimes against humanity.”

It added that Palestinians are subject to “massive” land and property confiscations, unlawful killings, “forcible transfers” and movement restrictions.

Druze: the great survivors
How the world's most secretive faithhas endured for a thousand years

Enter


keywords

Israel to reopen Jordan border crossing for passage of aid and goods

Updated 3 sec ago
Follow

Israel to reopen Jordan border crossing for passage of aid and goods

JERUSALEM: Israel is set to reopen the Allenby Crossing with Jordan to the passage of goods and aid on Wednesday, an Israeli security official said on Tuesday.
The border crossing has been closed to aid and goods since September, when a driver bringing humanitarian aid to Gaza opened fire and killed two Israeli military personnel before being killed by security forces.
The security official said the crossing would have tightened screening for Jordanian drivers and truck cargo, and that a dedicated security force had been assigned to the crossing.
The Allenby Bridge is a key route for trade between Jordan and Israel and the only gateway for more than 3 million Palestinians in the Israeli-occupied West Bank to reach Jordan and the wider world.
The crossing reopened to passenger traffic shortly after the attack, but had remained closed to aid trucks. The UN says the crossing is a major route for bringing food, tents and other goods into Gaza.