Omar Barghouti
© Carlos Latuff)
Palestinian society has condemned Israel's arrest and interrogation of Omar Barghouti, a co-founder of the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement as the next step in Israel's fight against the BDS movement as a whole.

Israel arrested Barghouti on Sunday, raided his family home in Acre, Israel, held him for 16 hours and released him — however the BDS co-founder has been subjected to daily interrogations with Israeli authorities since then, according to a statement released by the Palestinian Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions National Committee (BNC).

Israeli tax authorities are accusing Barghouti of tax evasion on the sum of $700,000 in alleged hidden income from National Computing Resources, a business he heads in Ramallah, which sells ATM machines and other equipment in the occupied West Bank, as well as income from his book, Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions: The Global Struggle for Palestinian Rights and money he received as speaking fees for speeches.

The BNC on Wednesday released a statement challenging the charges.

"Omar Barghouti, has for years been subjected to intense threats, intimidation and repression by various arms of the far-right Israeli government, particularly after it considered the movement a 'strategic threat' to its entire system of injustice against Palestinians," the movement said in a statement.

In March 2016, Israeli Interior Minister Aryeh Dery threatened to revoke Barghouti residency in Israel. Barghouti, born in Qatar, gained permanent residency through marriage to his wife, a Palestinian citizen of Israel.

"I received information that his life is in Ramallah and he is using his resident status to travel all over the world in order to operate against Israel in the most serious manner," Israeli Daily Haaretz quoted Dery as saying.

"He was given rights similar to those of a citizen and he took advantage of our enlightened state to portray us as the most horrible state in the world," said Dery.


Comment: Yes, but what if the portrayal is accurate?


During the same conference, Israeli Minister of Transport, Intelligence and Atomic Energy Yisrael Katz who called on Israel to engage in "targeted civil eliminations" of BDS leaders with the help of Israeli intelligence, meaning to tarnish one's reputation and character among civil society.

The Minister of Public Security, Strategic Affairs and Minister of Information, Gilad Erdan, also described BDS activists and leaders as threats and called for them to "pay the price" for their work, which he clarified did not mean "physical harm."

A month later, Amnesty International released a statement, calling on Israel to "cease intimidation of human rights defenders and protect them from attacks."

"Amnesty International is concerned for the safety and liberty of Palestinian human rights defender Omar Barghouti and other [BDS] activists, following calls alluding to threats, including of physical harm and deprivation of basic rights, made by Israeli ministers," the report read.

"Barghouti is a founding member and a prominent spokesperson of the BDS movement. He campaigns to hold Israel accountable for human rights and other international law violations and advocates for the use of non-violent means in doing so. He was personally attacked in comments and statements by conference participants including ministers, including by describing him as a threat who should be stopped," the report continued.

Earlier this month, the Israeli Knesset passed a controversial law barring BDS activists from entering the country. The law banned people who call for BDS against Israel, as well as its settlements.


Comment: So much for the self-acclaimed title of being "the only democracy in the Middle East".


A fellow co-founder of the Palestinian BDS movement, Adnan Ramadan, told Mondoweiss that Barghouti's arrest and interrogation was just another step in Israel's strategy against the BDS movement.

"All of this tax evasion business is just an excuse to pressure the BDS movement as a whole, Ramadan said. "In general, it's part of their war against the campaign, but it won't work. They can arrest whoever they want, they can do more than that, but that won't prevent people from continuing to use BDS as a tool in the struggle for Palestinian freedom."

"This kind of targeting won't work simply because the BDS campaign isn't one person or two people or ten people, it's an organized movement of hundreds of thousands of people, if not more than that, who feel strongly about their fight against the occupation and feel strongly about their motivations in resistance," Adnan continued.

Adnan stressed that this move against Barghouti is not the first time Israel has targeted particular BDS activists for their work.

"They have been arresting people since the beginning, and it's all to pressure the people, but the people won't be silent," he said. "Palestinians have been resisting for more than 60 years, Israel can kill people, they can assassinate and detain leaders, but it won't and can't stop the struggle. All they are doing is holding the body of someone inside a wall, but they can't hold ideas, or souls of people who believe in the importance of their role of humanity against occupation and injustice."