PM Trudeau: Blaming victims and exonerating war criminals undermines the fight against racism; by: Khaled Mouammar
An open letter from Khaled Mouammar a prominent activist Palestinian Canadian to Justin Trudeau, Prime Minister of Canada
PM
Trudeau: Blaming victims and exonerating war criminals undermines the fight
against racism
The
Right Honourable Justin Trudeau,
Prime
Minister of Canada
One
can only commend your government’s initiative to hold the antisemitism and
Islamophobia summits and your commitment to stand up for hatred and
intolerance in all its forms.
I
am a Palestinian refugee who was forced to leave my country in 1948 and have
not been allowed since then to return to my homeland because I am a Christian.
Yet any Jew, like Irwin Cotler Canada’s Special Envoy, or convert to Judaism,
like Annamie Paul of the Green Party, may move there and become a citizen.
You
stated at the Antisemitism Summit that Canada is committed to the
two-state solution and supports peace and security for both Israel and the
Palestinians.
The
Palestinians are under Israeli occupation and have no state and no army, while
Israel is a state that possesses nuclear weapons and whose military is more
powerful than Canada’s military.
In
your speech you referred to the recent violence in East Jerusalem, the West
Bank, Gaza and Israel and laid the blame on the Palestinian victims who have
been suffering for decades under an oppressive and illegal Israeli military
occupation.
Your
statement ignored the fact that the violence was triggered by Israel’s plan to
illegally evict nearly 1500 indigenous Palestinians from Sheikh Jarrah and
Silwan neighbourhoods of East Jerusalem and illegally replace them with Jewish
colonists. This was followed by the Israeli police attacking and arresting
hundreds of worshippers at the Al-Aksa Mosque compound during the Holy Month of
Ramadan and setting fire to the compound.
By
glossing over the actions of the Israeli police in East Jerusalem and the West
Bank, the attacks by armed mobs against Palestinian citizens in Arab-minority
cities in Israel, and the heavy bombardment of residential areas in Gaza by the
Israeli army, you appear to place no value on the lives of the 256 Palestinians
who were killed, including 66 children and 40 women, and the 2000 who were
wounded, of whom over 600 were children and 400 women.
Furthermore,
between June 2014 and June 2021, 3,395 Palestinians were killed by the Israeli
military forces - 2,941 in the Gaza Strip and 435 in the West Bank - including
804 children and 374 women. Over the same time period, at least
104,486 Palestinians have been injured, mostly as a consequence of tear gas
inhalation, rubber bullets, live ammunition, tear gas canisters, physical
assault, and air-launched and surface-launched explosive weapons. Yet
none of these assaults and crimes against the Palestinian people warranted any
mention in your speech.
Canada’s
Charter enshrines fundamental freedoms and equal rights for all citizens
regardless of their religion, race, ethnicity, gender or political opinion.
I
was therefore baffled to hear you say that Canada has shared democratic values
with Israel - a state that Human Rights Watch found has laws and policies that
grant superior rights to its Jewish citizens over its two million Christian and
Muslim Palestinian citizens, and that denies fundamental freedoms and basic
human rights to the five million Palestinians under occupation in East
Jerusalem, the West Bank and Gaza.
Canada
takes pride in supporting international law and being a strong advocate for a
rules-based international order.
According
to Chapter 1, Article 2 of the Charter of the United
Nations it is illegal for countries to annex occupied territories acquired
by military force.
When
Russia occupied and annexed the Crimea in 2014 and granted
citizenship to the inhabitants, the
UN and international community, including Canada, condemned the move as a dangerous violation of
international law and Canada imposed sanctions within days.
Israel
militarily occupied East Jerusalem in June 1967 and it officially annexed it in
July 1980 and has not so far granted citizenship to the 380 thousand
Palestinian inhabitants; however, Canada has not yet imposed any sanctions on
Israel.
Article 49 of the Fourth Geneva
Convention prohibits an Occupying Power from transferring parts of its own
civilian population into the territory it occupies, and as well prohibits the
deportations of protected persons from occupied territory.
Article
8 of the 1998 ICC Statute, also asserts that the transfer by the
Occupying Power of parts of its own civilian population into the territory it
occupies constitutes a war crime.
As of 2017,
more than 620,000 Israelis live in over 200 settlements in the West Bank.
Of those, 209,270 live in settlements in East
Jerusalem and 413,400 live in other parts of the West Bank.
Canada
is a signatory of the 49th Geneva Convention and the 1998 ICC Statute,
both of which assert Israel is committing a war crime. Yet you have taken no
action against Israel and you proudly state that we share democratic values
with a state that is committing “the crimes against humanity of apartheid and persecution” against
7 million indigenous Palestinians between the Jordan River and the
Mediterranean Sea.
Worryingly,
the repeated reference to Israel in your speech may be interpreted as endorsing
Israel’s false claim that it represents Jews worldwide, which is as
preposterous as former apartheid South Africa claiming that it represented
white Christians worldwide. Such conflation may be exploited by racists and
misguided persons to blame Jews for Israel’s war crimes and its crime
against humanity being committed against 7 million Christian and Muslim
Palestinian subjects.
Disgracefully,
your government’s policy appears to be based on bigotry against indigenous
Palestinians, who are Arabs and predominantly Muslims, and continues to
tolerate and even justify Israel’s racist laws and policies that view
indigenous Palestinians as inferior human beings, thus emboldening Israel to
persecute them with impunity.
Khaled
Mouammar
Ontario, Canada