-
Is Amnesty right about Israeli apartheid?

On February 3, Amnesty International – the world’s biggest and most respected human rights organizations – published a long and detailed report about Israel and its treatment of the Palestinians. It used the A-word to describe the big picture of relations between Jews and Arabs between the river Jordan and the Mediterranean Sea.
Presenting Israel as an apartheid state is highly controversial. The report was greeted by Palestinians and their supporters and angrily condemned by the Israeli government and citizens. Jews across the world viewed it as biased and one-sided and an unacceptable expression of antisemitism.
Israel’s foreign minister, Yair Lapid, rejected the 200-plus page document as “divorced from reality”, saying: “Amnesty quotes lies spread by terrorist organizations.” He also directly accused AI of antisemitism. “I hate to use the argument that if Israel were not a Jewish state, nobody in Amnesty would dare argue against it, but in this case, there is no other possibility,” he added.
Amnesty’s report was the latest in a series by international NGOs. The most important previous one was issued by Human Rights Watch in 2021 though HRW used the term apartheid only in relation to the occupied territories and not pre-1967 Israel within the Green Line borders. That one was preceded by the left-wing Israeli group B’Tselem several months earlier.
“Whether they live in Gaza, East Jerusalem and the rest of the West Bank, or Israel itself, Palestinians are treated as an inferior racial group and systematically deprived of their rights,” declared Amnesty’s secretary general, Agnès Callamard, as she rejected claims of antisemitism. “Israel’s cruel policies of segregation, dispossession and exclusion across all territories under its control clearly amount to apartheid.”
This is not a new accusation. But it remains, as ever, divisive, toxic and a vivid reminder of radically different narratives and practical approaches to this most intractable of conflicts. Apartheid is defined as a crime against humanity under the Rome Statute of the International Court and is largely associated with South Africa.
The report was welcomed by the Palestinian Authority (PA), which said it hoped it would open the way to prosecution of Israel at the International Criminal Court. “The state of Palestine welcomes the report on Israel’s apartheid regime and racist policies and practices against the Palestinian people,” the PA foreign ministry said.
Amnesty’s approach is not perfect as there is no real differentiation between the Palestinians who are citizens of Israel (currently 21% of the population) and the Palestinians in the occupied territories, who live in very different circumstances.
B’Tselem drew criticism when it asserted that Israeli policies had been designed to enforce “Jewish supremacy from the Jordan River to the Mediterranean Sea”. That was part of a growing international trend to redefine the Israeli-Palestine conflict as a struggle for equal rights rather than simply a territorial dispute.
While Palestinians who remained inside Israel lived under military rule until shortly before the 1967 war, those Palestinians now have citizenship, including the right to vote, but still face social and economic discrimination in areas such as the job and housing markets.
Defenders of Israel like to point out that there is one Arab party and a few ministers in the current coalition government as well as Supreme Court judges despite the 2018 nation-state law which defines Israel as the homeland of the Jewish people and downgraded the legal status of Arabic compared to Hebrew.
By contrast Palestinians in the West Bank live – despite a degree of political autonomy under the PA - under Israeli military rule, which includes exposure to the Israeli military justice system, while Jewish settlers on the West Bank are dealt with under Israeli civil law.
The government of Naftali Bennett, committed to “shrinking the conflict” with the Palestinians, was criticized for failing to simply ignore the Amnesty report, preparing to vilify it in advance. Lapid criticized it even before the report was officially published.
Dovish critics say use of the ultra-charged term “apartheid” also has the potential to undermine anti-occupation work by offering the right wing a path to redirect the public conversation away from genuine human rights abuses and into more convenient territory, i.e. antisemitism. That is precisely what has happened in this case.
Previous Israeli prime ministers Ehud Barak and Ehud Olmert also warned that carrying on with the status quo Israel risks being defined as an apartheid state. In 2006 the former US president Jimmy Carter, published a book entitled Peace or Apartheid.
Gideon Levy, the leftist Haaretz columnist, wrote the following in response to the AI report: “The world will say apartheid, Israel will say antisemitism. But the evidence will keep piling up. What is written in the report does not stem from antisemitism, but will help strengthen it.”
Americans for Peace Now got it exactly right: “In such circumstances one should not be surprised when international human rights organizations and the international community treat all the territories under Israel rule – on both sides of the Green Line - as a single political unit. The Amnesty International report should serve as yet another alarm bell and a call to action.”
By Ian Black
You May Also Like
Popular Posts
Caricature
BENEFIT AGM approves 10%...
- March 27, 2025
BENEFIT, the Kingdom’s innovator and leading company in Fintech and electronic financial transactions service, held its Annual General Meeting (AGM) at the company’s headquarters in the Seef District.
During the meeting, shareholders approved all items listed on the agenda, including the ratification of the minutes of the previous AGM held on 26 March 2024. The session reviewed and approved the Board’s Annual Report on the company’s activities and financial performance for the fiscal year ended 31 December 2024, and the shareholders expressed their satisfaction with the company’s operational and financial results during the reporting period.
The meeting also reviewed the Independent External Auditor’s Report on the company’s consolidated financial statements for the year ended 31 December 2024. Subsequently, the shareholders approved the audited financial statements for the fiscal year. Based on the Board’s recommendation, the shareholders approved the distribution of a cash dividend equivalent to 10% of the paid-up share capital.
Furthermore, the shareholders endorsed the allocation of a total amount of BD 172,500 as remuneration to the members of the Board for the year ended 31 December 2024, subject to prior clearance by related authorities.
The extension of the current composition of the Board was approved, which includes ten members and one CBB observer, for a further six-month term, expiring in September 2025, pending no objection from the CBB.
The meeting reviewed and approved the Corporate Governance Report for 2024, which affirmed the company’s full compliance with the corporate governance directives issued by the CBB and other applicable regulatory frameworks. The AGM absolved the Board Members of liability for any of their actions during the year ending on 31st December 2024, in accordance with the Commercial Companies Law.
In alignment with regulatory requirements, the session approved the reappointment of Ernst & Young (EY) as the company’s External Auditors for the fiscal year 2025, covering both the parent company and its subsidiaries—Sinnad and Bahrain FinTech Bay. The Board was authorised to determine the external auditors’ professional fees, subject to approval from the CBB, and the meeting concluded with a discussion of any additional issues as per Article (207) of the Commercial Companies Law.
Speaking on the company’s performance, Mr. Mohamed Al Bastaki, Chairman BENEFIT , stated: “In terms of the financial results for 2024, I am pleased to say that the year gone by has also been proved to be a success in delivering tangible results. Growth rate for 2024 was 19 per cent. Revenue for the year was BD 17 M (US$ 45.3 Million) and net profit was 2 Million ($ 5.3 Million).
Mr. Al Bastaki also announced that the Board had formally adopted a new three-year strategic roadmap to commence in 2025. The strategy encompasses a phased international expansion, optimisation of internal operations, enhanced revenue diversification, long-term sustainability initiatives, and the advancement of innovation and digital transformation initiatives across all service lines.
“I extend my sincere appreciation to the CBB for its continued support of BENEFIT and its pivotal role in fostering a stable and progressive regulatory environment for the Kingdom’s banking and financial sector—an environment that has significantly reinforced Bahrain’s standing as a leading financial hub in the region,” said Mr. Al Bastaki. “I would also like to thank our partner banks and valued customers for their trust, and our shareholders for their ongoing encouragement. The achievements of 2024 set a strong precedent, and I am confident they will serve as a foundation for yet another successful and impactful year ahead.”
Chief Executive of BENEFIT; Mr. Abdulwahed AlJanahi commented, “The year 2024 represented another pivotal chapter in BENEFIT ’s evolution. We achieved substantial progress in advancing our digital strategy across multiple sectors, while reinforcing our long-term commitment to the development of Bahrain’s financial services and payments landscape. Throughout the year, we remained firmly aligned with our objective of delivering measurable value to our shareholders, strategic partners, and customers. At the same time, we continued to play an active role in enabling Bahrain’s digital economy by introducing innovative solutions and service enhancements that directly address market needs and future opportunities.”
Mr. AlJanahi affirmed that BENEFIT has successfully developed a robust and well-integrated payment network that connects individuals and businesses across Bahrain, accelerating the adoption of emerging technologies in the banking and financial services sector and reinforcing Bahrain’s position as a growing fintech hub, and added, “Our achievements of the past year reflect a long-term vision to establish a resilient electronic payment infrastructure that supports the Kingdom’s digital economy. Key developments in 2024 included the implementation of central authentication for open banking via BENEFIT Pay”
Mr. AlJanahi concluded by thanking the Board for its strategic direction, the company’s staff for their continued dedication, and the Central Bank of Bahrain, member banks, and shareholders for their valuable partnership and confidence in the company’s long-term vision.
opinion
Report
ads
Newsletter
Subscribe to our mailing list to get the new updates!