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Israeli Cabinet passes loyalty bill, Arabs angry

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JERUSALEM: Israel's Cabinet approved on Sunday a bill that would require new citizens to pledge a loyalty oath to a "Jewish and democratic" state, language that triggered charges of racism from Arab lawmakers who see it as undermining the rights of the country's Arab minority.

The measure was largely symbolic, since few non-Jews apply for Israeli citizenship. Nevertheless, it infuriated the Arab minority and stoked tensions with Palestinians at a time when fledgling peace talks are deadlocked over Israel's refusal to extend a moratorium on new building in West Bank Jewish settlements.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the bill reflected the essence of Israel at a time when he said many in the world are trying to blur the connection between the Jewish people and their homeland.

"The state of Israel is the national state of the Jewish people and is a democratic state in which all its citizens - Jews and non-Jews - enjoy full equal rights," he said. "Whoever wants to join us, has to recognize us."

Ahmad Tibi, an Arab lawmaker, called the move a provocation. "Its purpose is to solidify the inferior status of Arabs by law," he said. "Netanyahu and his government are limiting the sphere of democracy in Israel and deepening the prejudice against its Arab minority."

Unlike their Palestinian brethren in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, Israel's Arabs are citizens, with the right to vote, travel freely and collect generous social benefits. But they have long suffered from discrimination and second-class status. Arabs make up roughly one-fifth of Israel's 7 million people.

While the new bill would not force Arab citizens to profess their loyalty, a non-Jewish spouse of any Israeli would have to take the oath in order to receive citizenship.

Israel's Interior Ministry said several thousand people would be affected by the measure, while Adalah, an Arab advocacy group, said the number was about 25,000. The bill presumably would not affect Jewish newcomers, who automatically receive citizenship under Israel's "Law of Return."

Roni Schocken, spokesman for the Abraham Fund, a group that promotes coexistence between Israeli Jews and Arabs, said the new legislation added to what is becoming a "terrifying" atmosphere for Arabs. Efforts are under way in parliament, for instance, to punish groups that recognize the "Nakba," or catastrophe, the term that Palestinians use to describe the suffering caused by Israel's founding.

"It conveys a very strong message that Arabs are second-rate citizens," he said.

The bill, which still needs to pass a wider parliamentary vote, easily passed by a 22-8 margin. Only a handful of ministers, mostly from the centrist Labor Party, opposed it.

It was backed by Yisrael Beitenu, a hard-line nationalist party whose leader, foreign minister Avigdor Lieberman, openly questioned the loyalty of Israel's Arabs during last year's election campaign. The issue helped propel his party to a strong third place in parliamentary elections.

Many Israeli Arabs openly identify with the Palestinians, and in recent years, a small number of Arabs have been charged with spying for Israel's Arab enemies.

In the most controversial proposal, Lieberman called for all citizens, including Arabs, to swear an oath of loyalty to Israel as a Jewish state and wanted anyone refusing to do so to be stripped of their citizenship. That measure, widely seen as anti-Arab, was struck down by a ministerial committee last year.

"Obviously this is not the end of the issue of loyalty in return for citizenship, but this is a highly important step," he said.

The vote came during an impasse in Mideast peacemaking. Just a month after their launch at a White House ceremony, talks between Israeli and the Palestinians have become deadlocked over Israeli settlement construction in the West Bank.

Palestinians say they will not resume negotiations unless Israel extends a 10-month-old slowdown on new housing starts, which ended in late September.

Netanyahu has rejected an extension, but is considering compromises to keep the talks alive. Over the weekend, the Arab League gave the US, which has been mediating talks, another month to resolve the deadlock.

Under heavy international pressure, Netanyahu has been sounding out key Cabinet ministers but does not appear to have a majority for extending the building restrictions.

Lieberman has been a vocal critic of extending the settlement curbs. Netanyahu's decision to bring the bill to a Cabinet vote may be a way to soften Lieberman's opposition to extending the slowdown, though officials have denied there is any connection.
:devil:
Source:- Israeli Cabinet passes loyalty bill, Arabs angry - The Times of India
 
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UK Director Cancels Israel Trip Over Loyalty Oath

JERUSALEM, Oct 18, 2010 - Veteran British film director Mike Leigh has cancelled a working visit to Jerusalem over plans to compel all non-Jewish new citizens to swear a controversial loyalty oath to Israel as a Jewish state.

The 67-year-old director, whose films include "Secrets and Lies" and "Naked", had been due to spend a week at the Sam Spiegel Film and Television School at the end of November, in a visit which would also have seen him visiting Palestinian film students and lecturers.

But one month before his trip, Leigh, who is Jewish, decided to cancel, citing increasing unease with Israel's policies towards the Palestinians -- and in particular, the government's backing of an amendment to the citizenship oath widely criticised as racist.

In a letter sent to Renen Schorr, who heads the Sam Spiegel school, Leigh said he had "always had serious misgivings about coming," particularly after Israel's catastrophic raid on a Gaza-bound aid flotilla in May, which left nine Turkish activists dead.

"Since then, your government has gone from bad to worse," he wrote. "I have become ever-increasingly uncomfortable about what would unquestionably appear as my implicit support for Israel were I to fulfil my promise and come."

Leigh said he had considered pulling out at the end of September, when Israel started building again on occupied Palestinian land following the expiry of a 10-month construction freeze.

But it was the cabinet's backing of a law to compel all non-Jewish new citizens to swear an oath of loyalty to Israel as a "Jewish and democratic state" that pushed him over the edge, he wrote in the letter, seen by AFP.

"And now we have the loyalty oath. This is the last straw," he said, also mentioning Israel's ongoing blockade on Gaza, which prompted the voyage of ill-fated sea convoy in May.

The loyalty oath won cabinet backing just two weeks after the freeze expired, in a move widely seen as targeting Palestinians seeking citizenship after marrying citizens from Israel's Arab minority.

Since settlement building resumed, peace talks have been blocked, prompting furious diplomatic efforts to find a way to salvage negotiations which began just three weeks earlier.
 
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haha.. they are ready to live there, enjoy all the social benefits, but can swear loyalty to thier nation. what a comedy.
 
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Judging from the Palestinian attitude they have been very disgrateful....true they assume themselves as refugees but they should learn a lesson from Arab refugees in neighbouring arab countries. Palestinean refugees in arabs countries are not in any better shape and as recently Iraqi refugees in Syria have been forced to pimp their daughters for a living!
 
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