South Africa has abandoned its support for a two-state solution

South Africa - Cape Town - 12 November 2023 - A planned gathering in support of Israel on the Sea Point promenade turned violent when pro-Palestine supporters clashed with pro-Israeli supporters. Police used stun grenades, tear gas, and water canons to disperse the crowd. According to the South African Police Service, two firearms were seized and seven people have been arrested. Photographer: Armand Hough / Independent Newspapers

South Africa - Cape Town - 12 November 2023 - A planned gathering in support of Israel on the Sea Point promenade turned violent when pro-Palestine supporters clashed with pro-Israeli supporters. Police used stun grenades, tear gas, and water canons to disperse the crowd. According to the South African Police Service, two firearms were seized and seven people have been arrested. Photographer: Armand Hough / Independent Newspapers

Published Nov 19, 2023

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The demarche against the Israeli ambassador to South Africa is just the latest in a long line of pro-Hamas actions by the SA government. As is becoming ever more apparent, this is no longer about supporting the Palestinians.

Rather, it amounts to unambiguous support for a genocidal organisation that has never deviated from its core aim of violently destroying the state and people of Israel.

By aligning itself with Hamas, South Africa would appear to have de facto abandoned its oft-declared support for a negotiated two-state solution to the Israeli Palestinian conflict.

It is noteworthy that even Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas has recently declared that Hamas’s policies and actions do not represent the Palestinian people, nor the policies, programmes and decisions of the Palestine Liberation Organization.

The SA Jewish Board of Deputies (SAJBD) asks why the only reason for government finally desiring to engage with Israel’s ambassador following the eruption of the crisis appears to be to bully and upbraid him for daring to criticise the pro-Jihadist position its leadership, has taken.

We ask Minister of International Relations and Cooperation Naledi Pandor whether it would not have been appropriate for her to have reached out to the ambassador a month ago following Hamas’s cold-blooded murder of 1 400 Israeli civilians, if not as a matter of policy than simply as a basic act of humanity.

The SAJBD notes that in Parliament yesterday, Minister Pandor declared this to be the last time she would be answering questions about the phone conversation she had last month with Hamas leader Ismael Haniyeh.

Unfortunately for the minister, the SAJBD has no intention of letting the matter drop, especially in light of the Hamas website having given a different version of what was said on that occasion than the one provided by Pandor.

The SAJBD has, accordingly, lodged an application under the Public Access to Information

Act to ensure that the details of what exactly was said during the conversation are clarified and made public.

The unmitigated hostility that The Department of International Relations and Cooperation has displayed towards the SAJBD, the representative voice of SA Jewry, for daring to speak truth to power should also be strongly condemned.

Particularly at this time when anti-Semitism locally and abroad is escalating to ever more dangerous levels, it displays a flagrant disregard for the legitimate concerns of South Africa’s Jewish citizens, leaving them feeling vulnerable and unprotected in the face of real threats to their lives and safety.

* SA Jewish Board of Deputies National Chairperson Professor Karen Milner.

** The views expressed here are not necessarily those of Independent Media.

Cape Argus

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