Brussels’s halfwits, like London’s and Washington’s, 
						never stop rewarding the racist Israeli regime even when 
						it’s poised to grab more Palestinian territory
						
						I had barely finished my rant against the British 
						government for showering new rewards on the Israelis 
						(see “Do 
						Palestinians’ lives matter?”) when the European 
						Union voted to do the same.                                              
						 
						
						The UK-Israel Trade and 
						Partnership Agreement, signed last year, comes into 
						force next January. The government says it loves this 
						relationship and is committed to strengthening it. “We 
						will seek to work with counterparts in the new Israeli 
						government to host a bilateral trade and investment 
						summit in London.” This will “identify new opportunities 
						and collaboration between Israel and the United 
						Kingdom”.
						
						Not to be outdone, the EU has now decided to hand Israel 
						a juicy aviation agreement, the latest in a long line of 
						goodies awarded to the apartheid regime for its crimes 
						against humanity. And that’s after the EU had voiced 
						condemnation of Israel’s latest annexation plan.
						
						Not only that, the European Investment Bank, the EU’s 
						financing institution, has just agreed a €150 million 
						loan for a seawater desalination plant – one of the 
						largest in the world – for Israel “in one of the world’s 
						most water-stressed regions”. So water-stressed that 
						Israel long ago stole the Palestinians’ aquifers and 
						deprived them of access to their own supply. And it made 
						no difference that the criminals were now gearing up to 
						annex even more Palestinian territory.
						
						According to this 
						report 437 MEPs (that’s 62 per cent) 
						from European People’s Party (EPP), the Renew Europe 
						Group (REG) and the European Conservatives and 
						Reformists Group (ECR) voted to ratify the EU-Israel 
						Aviation Agreement even though MEP Clare Daly from 
						Ireland warned that doing so “would be perceived as an 
						upgrade in bilateral relations with the state of 
						Israel”. So who are these confused people?
						
						The EPP, the oldest and 
						largest, says: “We must continue to promote human rights 
						and democracy in our relations with third countries.” 
						So, naturally, they have no objection to promoting the 
						Israeli regime in its policy to permanently deny 
						Palestinians their human rights and self-determination.
						
						The REG would have us believe: “At a time when the rule 
						of law and democracy are under threat in parts of 
						Europe, our group will stand up for the people who 
						suffer from the illiberal and nationalistic tendencies 
						that we see returning in too many countries.” Oh really?
						
						The ECR declares: “We are the voice of COMMON SENSE.”
						
						As if their behaviour wasn’t bizarre enough, these MEPs 
						then held a separate debate with High Representative 
						Joseph Borrell to discuss EU measures to deter Israel 
						from declaring annexation.
						
						The aviation deal builds on a 2013 agreement. Back then 
						scheduled direct passenger flights connected Israel and 
						18 EU member states and the EU was said to be the most 
						important aviation market for Israel, accounting for 57 
						per cent of scheduled international air passenger 
						movements to and from Israel, and that Israel was one of 
						the most important aviation markets for the EU in the 
						Middle East with a strong growth potential.
						
						The aim now is to take EU-Israel aviation relations to a 
						new level. Higher volumes of tourism in both directions 
						will create additional jobs and economic benefits on 
						both sides. Of course, much of the benefit of increased 
						tourism to the Holy Land rightly belongs to the 
						Palestinians if only they were permitted their own 
						airport, but the EU doesn’t seem to care that all 
						visitors to and from the Holy Land are forced through 
						Israel’s Ben Gurion airport – or should we call it Lydda? 
						Thereby hangs an interesting tale.
						
						Growing airline traffic rewards Israeli terror
						
						Strictly speaking, Ben Gurion, near Tel Aviv, belongs to 
						the Palestinians. It was formerly Lydda airport; and 
						Lydda, a major town in its own right during the British 
						mandate, was designated Palestinian in the 1947 UN 
						Partition Plan. In July 1948, after Britain left and 
						Israel declared statehood, Israeli terrorist troops 
						seized Lydda, shot up the town and drove out the 
						population as part of the ethnic cleansing and 
						territorial expansion programme set out in their 
						infamous “Plan Dalet”. In the process they massacred 426 
						men, women and children. A total of 176 of them were 
						slaughtered in the town’s main mosque. See here for 
						the gory details.
						
						Those who survived were forced to walk into exile in the 
						scalding July heat, leaving a trail of bodies – men, 
						women and children – along the way. Israeli troops 
						carried away 1,800 truck-loads of loot. Jewish 
						immigrants then flooded in and Lydda was given a Hebrew 
						name, Lod.
						
						So, Israel has no real right to Lydda/Lod/Ben Gurion 
						airport – it was stolen in a terror raid, as was so much 
						else. And it’s Israeli terror that is being rewarded by 
						increasing airline flights and boosting tourism and 
						trade.
						
						Today the airport is the 
						international gateway to Israel – and indirectly to 
						Palestine. And what happened to Gaza’s airport? The Oslo 
						II Agreement of 1995 provided for one to be constructed. 
						The Yasser Arafat International airport was built with 
						funding from Japan, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Spain, Germany 
						and Morocco, and cost $86 million. Arafat and US 
						President Clinton attended the opening in 1998. Owned 
						and operated by the Palestinian Authority, it was 
						capable of handling 700,000 passengers a year.
						
						In December 2001 Israel destroyed the radar station and 
						control tower, and cut the runway.
						
						Back to the fiasco with the 437 MEPs who plainly don’t 
						give a four-X about adding to the Palestinians’ misery. 
						Aneta Jerska, the coordinator of the European 
						Coordination of Committees and Associations for 
						Palestine (ECCP) says:
						
							
							Those same political groups whom we heard expressing 
							concern about annexation had just made annexation 
							possible by voting in favour of the EU-Israel 
							Aviation Agreement. This is by any standards the 
							pinnacle of the EU’s hypocrisy. European citizens 
							need to see no more crocodile tears from their 
							elected politicians. The EU must impose sanctions on 
							Israel, as member states once did against apartheid 
							South Africa, including a military embargo on 
							Israel, a ban on trade with illegal settlements and 
							the suspension of the EU-Israel Association 
							Agreement. Only by ending “business as usual”, will 
							Israel feel pressure to change its criminal 
							behaviour.
							
							
							https://www.redressonline.com/2020/06/eus-aviation-deal-with-israel-the-pinnacle-of-hypocrisy/