• Basic Questions
  • Zionism
  • The Settlements
  • Apartheid
  • 2022 Amnesty Report
  • Questions For Amnesty
  • Contact Us
  • Actual Apartheids
  • The 'Occupation'
  • Israeli Laws
  • "Disproportionate Force"
  • Sheikh Jarah
  • The Creation Of Israel
  • Security Fences
  • 'Expansionist' Israel?
  • Basic Questions
  • Zionism
  • The Settlements
  • Apartheid
  • 2022 Amnesty Report
  • Questions For Amnesty
  • Contact Us
  • Actual Apartheids
  • The 'Occupation'
  • Israeli Laws
  • "Disproportionate Force"
  • Sheikh Jarah
  • The Creation Of Israel
  • Security Fences
  • 'Expansionist' Israel?

Actual apartheids ignored by Amnesty

Sadly, there is no shortage of genuine apartheids which Amnesty could be campaigning against.




These include:





Racial Apartheid against Black Africans. 



One of the world’s most deadly examples of racism is in Sudan, where native black Sudanese have been enslaved, persecuted and slaughtered by Muslim Arabs.    






 According to the Christian Science Monitor, the “Darfur pogrom is part of a historic continuum in which successive Arab governments have sought to entirely destroy black Africans in this biracial nation … The raison d’etre of the atrocities committed by government-supported Arab militias is the racist, fundamentalist, and undemocratic Sudanese state.”    





 Since 1983, more than two million black Sudanese have been killed, displaced or exiled.        






Ethnic Apartheid against the Kurds. 





Few ethnic minorities in the Middle East have suffered as much repression as the Kurds. 



In Syria in 1962, hundreds of thousands of Kurds had their citizenship taken away or were denied citizenship.   


 


In 2008, the Syrian government issued Decree 49, which expelled Kurds from the country’s so-called “Arab Belt” and dispossessed them of rights to own land.     





The Kurdish Union Party called this an “ethnic cleansing decree … aimed at ending national Kurdish existence.”     In Iran, following the Islamic revolution, the Shiite majority denied the Kurds a role in defining the new constitution, and in 1979, Ayatollah Khomeini declared a holy war against Kurdish political organizations.





Entire Kurdish villages and towns were destroyed, and thousands of Kurds executed without due process.     





 Ethnic Apartheid against Palestinian Arabs. 



For some 40 years Palestinians have been denied citizenship in Syria, Egypt, Lebanon, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and Iraq.     Palestinians have been expelled from many Middle Eastern countries, including Kuwait, Jordan, Libya and Iraq.    




 In Lebanon, Palestinians must live in designated areas, cannot own homes and are barred from 70 occupations.    


 



 By contrast, Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza are self-governing. They have their own government—the Palestinian Authority and Hamas —hold elections (albeit irregularly) and run all aspects of civil society.      





Religious Apartheid against Christians and Jews. 




Persecution, discrimination and attacks against religious minorities, especially Christians and Jews, are rampant in the Middle East.    




 Pressure by radical Islamists has become so great that in the last 20 years some two million Christians have been driven out of their Middle East homelands.     



Christians in the Palestinian territories have dropped from 15 percent of the population in 1950 to just two percent today.      



 In Egypt, two Coptic Christian churches were burned down over the past year, and according to a recent NPR report, Egyptian police commonly stand by and watch as Copts are physically attacked by Islamist vigilantes.     




In Saudi Arabia, Christians and Jews may not be citizens at all.     Some 700,000 Jews have been forced out of Arab nations, effectively extinguishing the Jewish population in the region, except in Israel, the world’s only Jewish state.   




  In the disputed Palestinian territories, Jews are the victims of hate-motivated murders and, according to Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas, Jews will be banned from any future Palestinian state.  



Gender Apartheid against Women. 




A 2002 United Nations report states that “women in Arab League countries suffer from unequal citizenship and legal entitlements often evident … in voting rights and legal codes [and] from inequality of opportunity, evident in employment status, wages and gender-based occupational segregation.” 




In Saudi Arabia, women must walk on separate sidewalks, must be covered from head to toe, and are not allowed to drive or vote in municipal elections. 





Women in many Middle Eastern countries are commonly forced into marriages, the law usually requires absolute obedience to husbands, and millions of girls must undergo genital mutilation.  






Only Israel, among all Middle Eastern nations, guarantees equal civil rights for all its citizens, regardless of race, ethnicity, religion, gender or sexual preference.     





Israel is the only country in the Middle East in which the Christian population is growing.     




Some 1.4 million Israeli Arabs enjoy more rights than citizens in any Arab country.    





Strangely Amnesty doesn't pay any attention to these genuine apartheids.

Copyright © 2022 What You Should Know About Israel - All Rights Reserved.

Powered by GoDaddy

  • Privacy Policy

This website uses cookies.

We use cookies to analyze website traffic and optimize your website experience. By accepting our use of cookies, your data will be aggregated with all other user data.

DeclineAccept