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Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu delivers a joint statement with his Greek counterpart Alexis Tsipras in Jerusalem January 27, 2016. REUTERS/Amir Cohen Image Credit: REUTERS

The unbinding nature of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, whose extremist policies have crippled any peace negotiations with the Palestinians, once again emerged this week when he revealed his intention to return Israeli colonists to their usurped homes in Hebron, a prominent Palestinian town in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.

At last Sunday’s cabinet meeting, Netanyahu had arrogantly stressed publicly that his government “supports the (illegal) [colonists]”. The trespassing colonists were removed since Israeli Defence Minister Moshe Yaalon had withheld his required approval of their occupancy of apartments in Hebron, a largely Palestinian town where tensions between Israelis and Palestinians run high. In response, Human Rights Watch, an international non-government United States-based organisation that conducts research and advocacy on human rights, has in a ground-breaking report, titled ‘Occupation, Inc’., recommended an unprecedented step of cutting international aid to Israel by an amount equal to what Israel spends on colonies.

As has been evident in the last four months, Israeli colonies in the Occupied Territories, considered illegal by most countries, including the US, have expanded, prompting raging uncoordinated resistance by young Palestinians. Additionally, an unidentified American is reportedly suing the US Treasury because it is allowing billions of dollars of tax-exempt charitable donations to flow to the Israeli army in support of the expansion of these illegal Israeli colonies.

The lawsuit, disclosed by the Chicago-based the Electronic Intifada, alleges that around 150 nonprofit organisations spend about $1 billion (Dh3.67 billion) a year “to fund the forcible expulsion of all non-Jews” and expand colonies in the Occupied Palestinian Territories.

Martin McMahon, the lawyer for the plaintiffs told the Electronic Intifada that he believes the organisations are violating eight federal criminal statutes and up to six Treasury regulations. One of the three plaintiffs, reported Charlotte Silver, is Palestinian-American author Susan Abulhawa. “I want a court, somewhere, somehow, to hold accountable those who have financed my pain of dispossession and exile, to hold accountable the financiers of Israel’s wholesale theft of another people’s historic, material, spiritual and emotional presence in the world.”

Israel has this week confirmed that it was planning to appropriate a large tract of fertile land in the occupied West Bank, close to Jordan, a move likely, according to Reuters, to exacerbate tensions with western allies and already drawing international condemnation.

United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has denounced the move and Palestinian officials said they would push for a resolution at the UN against Israel’s colony policies.

But what has been most damaging to Israel’s image this week has been a column titled ‘Only international pressure will end Israeli apartheid’ by Amos Schoken, the editor and owner of Haaretz, a liberal Israeli daily.

He wrote: “One people (Israelis) have all the rights and protections, while the other (Palestinians) is deprived of numerous rights and lives under the former’s control. Israel determines the fate and day-to-day life of millions of people who have no influence over its decisions. The government of Israel is the party that will debate whether or not to accept [Israeli army’s] recommendation to ease policies towards the Palestinian [National] Authority and its people. In South Africa, there were similar discussions about easing apartheid for blacks.”

Schoken warned that “this predicament is liable to lead Israel, like South Africa in its time, to banishment from the family of nations”. He went on that this “Israeli apartheid regime is also illegitimate and it is no surprise that the complete identification, which the government is creating between Israeli policy and apartheid, is causing the world to question not only Israel’s control of Palestinians without rights, but also the legitimacy of the state itself and the whole Zionist idea”.

This column comes at an opportune time for the American voters who are exposed to despicable episodes of racism and bigotry, especially those voiced by Donald Trump, the Republican front-runner and some in his clique. America needs to wake up.

George S. Hishmeh is a Washington-based columnist. He can be contacted at ghishmeh@gulfnews.com