EAT YOUR HEART OUT ABE FOXMAN!

as …. UC Berkeley student senate votes in favor of divestment
ByDina Omar

Early yesterday morning, the University of California Berkeley Student Senate (ASUC) passed a bill to divest from companies that provide military support for the Israeli occupation of Palestine. Debate began the night before at 9:00pm and ended and six hours later when the vote was held at 3:00am. The session was attended by more than 150 students, educators and concerned community supporters, forcing the meeting to be relocated to a larger room. Never before has the senate chambers been so overcrowded, signifying the importance and interest in the issue of Israel-Palestine on the Berkeley campus. Ultimately, the bill passed with 16 senators in favor and 4 against.

During the debate, Rahul Patel, a Student Senator and supporter of the bill from the beginning, said that “In the 1980s the Berkeley Student Government was a central actor in demanding that the university divest from South African apartheid. Twenty-five years later, it is a key figure in shaping a nationwide movement against occupation and war crimes around the world.” He added that “Student Government can be a space to mobilize and make decisions that have a significant impact on the international community. We must utilize these spaces to engage each other about issues of justice worldwide.”

Emiliano Huet-Vaughn, a Ph.D. student in economics, co-author of the bill and a member of Berkeley’s Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP), went to Gaza last July. He explained that the bill was informed by the devastation he witnessed as a result of Israel’s invasion of Gaza last winter, where civilian infrastructure was systematically targeted including schools, mosques, the education and justice ministries, Gaza’s main university, hundreds of factories, livestock, prisons, courts and police stations. Israel’s invasion resulted in the deaths of 1,440 Palestinians, including more than 400 children, and injuring another 5,380 Palestinians in Gaza.

The bill specifies two companies in particular, United Technologies and General Electric. It draws a direct connection between Berkeley’s investments in these companies and their products, used to indiscriminately attack civilians and infrastructure. Shoaib Kamil, a Ph.D. student in Computer Science explained that “We are not pushing for divestment from Israel. This bill is directed at US companies that enable attacks described as ‘war crimes’ in the Goldstone report.”

The Goldstone commission and report, led by respected South African judge Richard Goldstone, was authorized by the United Nations to investigate accusations of war crimes during Israel’s invasion of Gaza. The final report, submitted to the UN Human Rights Council last September, found that both Israel and Hamas committed war crimes and called for both to conduct investigations. However, the Goldstone report was particularly critical of Israel’s actions, especially the deliberate targeting of civilian infrastructure by the Israeli military.

The ASUC has control over their $1.7 million budget and the bill calls for a committee to investigate the investments by the ASUC and the University of California Regents to ensure that no monies are invested in companies that are complicit in war crimes. Divestment will likely be implemented first by the ASUC. However, getting the Regents to recognize and implement the students’ call will be a more difficult task because students have little representation in the Regents’ decisions.

Ibrahim Shikaki, a Visiting Scholar from Palestine, spoke in favor of the bill although he did not feel that it was written from the Palestinian perspective. Shikaki explained that “If this were a Palestinian bill it would have mentioned my grandfather’s land that was stolen from him, or my friend who was shot ten feet in front of me … or my aunt who for weeks was denied travel to Egypt for cancer treatment.”

Mahaliyah Ayla O, a gender and women’s studies major and Jewish member of SJP, voiced her surprise after the bill was passed. Ayla O said “It is not that complicated, we should not support corporations that manufacture weapons to oppress people.”

Last year, the ASUC passed a bill establishing a sisterhood relationship between UC Berkeley and the three universities in Gaza: Al-Aqsa University, Al-Azhar University and the Islamic University of Gaza. With the passage of this divestment bill, Berkeley students are taking a stand against Israel’s human rights violations and war crimes and continue Berkeley’s commitment to being on the vanguard of student activism. In 1986, UC Berkeley was one of the first universities to call for a comprehensive divestment from companies that traded with or had operations in apartheid South Africa.

Dina Omar is a UC Berkeley alumni and a member of Students for Justice in Palestine. She currently works as the Membership Coordinator for the Arab Resource and Organizing Center.


Source
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also see this report….. FROM

ASUC Bill Opposes UC Investment in Israel

Spectators attend the ASUC Senate meeting Wednesday night at which a bill urging UC divestment in companies that have provided Israel with materials used in alleged war crimes was considered.

By Allie Bidwell

The ASUC Senate considered a bill Wednesday night urging the University of California to divest from companies who have supplied the state of Israel with materials used in alleged war crimes.

A final vote, not available as of press time, was expected to be close, and numerous supporters both for and against the bill came to the meeting to voice their opinions. While proponents said the bill is the first step in an expected long-term process to convince the UC Board of Regents to pull total investments of about $135 million from five companies currently supplying Israel with electronics and weapons, opponents contended it unfairly targets Israel.

According to graduate student Emiliano Huet-Vaughn, a member of Students for Justice in Palestine who co-authored the bill, companies such as Hewlett-Packard and General Electric are supplying Israel with the technology necessary to allegedly attack civilian populations in Lebanon, the Gaza Strip and the West Bank.

“Investments in companies militarily and materially helping to support war crimes and helping support systemic long-standing violations of human rights should not be companies the university supports,” he said.

However, senior and former senator John Moghtader, founder and co-president of Tikvah: Students for Israel, opposes the bill. He said it unfairly singles out Israel over other middle eastern nations.

“The bill is based on falsehoods, because, if you read through the text, it talks about alleged Israeli war crimes,” he said. “On a factual level, all the text in the bill doesn’t hold any water and it screams of racism. Why aren’t we talking about Iran or Darfur? Why are we focused on Israel, the one democracy in the middle east?”

Huet-Vaughn said the bill represents opposition to American companies investing in Israel rather than a statement against the Jewish people.

“It’s a misrepresentation to suggest at all that Israel is equivalent to Jewish identity,” he said. “This movement has very many Jewish and very many Israeli supporters.”

Huet-Vaughn said passage of the bill would be only the beginning of a longer process aimed at securing divestment from the companies.

Independent Senator Jonathan Gaurano, one of four ASUC senators-including CalSERVE Senator and Presidential Candidate Eunice Kwon, SQUELCH! Senator and Student Advocate Candidate Emily Carlton and Cooperative Movement Senator Christina Oatfield-sponsoring the bill, said his sponsorship and vote on the bill may change depending on what students say at the meeting.

“The premise is that it’s a divestment, as in boycott, of where the university invests money,” he said. “I did not think it was anti-Israeli at the time I sponsored it. I will hopefully make the right decision based on the facts.”

Huda Adem, an independent senator who represents Muslim students on campus, dropped her sponsorship of the bill before the meeting. She could not be reached for comment as of press time.

4 Comments

  1. Tom said,

    March 21, 2010 at 13:49

    Great, finally something is being done with regards to the madness taking place and the crimes committed against poor civilians.

  2. March 21, 2010 at 14:01

    With purported friends like the Zionist Israelis, forever conducting immoral wars of genocide and proclaiming a twisted religious justification, -America clearly need no more enemies.

    Any university that does not divest its portfolio of Israeli companies is endorsing the credo.

    UC Berkeley, you got this right.

    Don Robertson
    Limestone, Maine

  3. Nadia Ezzelarab-Gill said,

    March 26, 2010 at 17:36

    My e-mails to support the Student Senate, and encourage it to Override the Veto that attempts to silence their brave efforts keep bouncing back. I am using the official e-mail address posted on Berkley’s Web site (Senate@asuk.org). Does anyone have an alternative e-mail address?
    Here is the message I am trying to get through:

    Dear Student Senate at Berkley University:
    Please remain committed to your brave initiative of voting to Sanction companies that contribute to Israeli War Crimes. While the Zionist “lobby” transgresses criminal boundaries to silence you, a world-wide growing movement is behind you. A special thanks to Emiliano Huet-Vaughn and the other brave authors of the divestment bill – and to each of you who voted for divestment!

    Nadia Ezzelarab-Gill, Esq.

  4. noname said,

    April 9, 2010 at 17:16

    Anyone visiting SF in 2110 and seeing all the renamed parks and other structures will believe that gentiles did not participate in civic endeavors. Amazing!