Israeli, Vienna politician slam anti-Israel measure (JERUSALEM POST) By BENJAMIN WEINTHAL, JPOST CORRESPONDENT 07/03/12)
Source: http://www.jpost.com/International/Article.aspx?id=276050
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Green Party deputy Marco Schreuder decries Bundesrat criticism of
Jewish state’s anti-terror policy as ‘one-sided.’
BERLIN – The deputy chief of the Israeli Embassy in Vienna sharply
criticized on Monday the Federal Council of Austria (Bundesrat)
resolution for applying double standards to the Jewish state by
singling out its anti-terror policy for condemnation but ignoring the
policies other nations.
In a telephone interview with The Jerusalem Post on Monday, the
Israeli diplomat in Vienna said “Israel was singled out while people
in Syria are being slaughtered.”
When asked if the resolution passed last week condemning Israel’s
administrative detention of suspected Palestinian terrorists is anti-
Semitic, the deputy chief repeated that the document
unfairly “singles out Israel and is not helpful for peace.”
She expressed frustration and disappointment about the anti- Israel
legislative action.
“We knew about it for the last 10 days. We gave material to various
people. There was nothing much more we could do. This is a problem
for the State of Israel all over Europe,” she continued The diplomat
also cited South Africa, where there are growing anti-Israel
governmental measures.
Speaking from Vienna with the Post on Monday, Marco Schreuder, a
Green Party deputy in the 62-member Bundesrat who was the lone
dissenting voice against the resolution, said that it “is only
directed against Israel and not against other states. It is onesided.”
The Bundesrat is the legislative body for the nine states of Austria
and is a cross section of political parties, ranging from the social
democrats to the conservatives to the greens to the neo-fascist
Freedom Party of Austria.
Schreuder, who has visited the Jewish state and listened to reports
from Israeli parents about undertaking anti-terror measures to
protect their children, noted in detailed explanation on his blog, as
well as in conversation with the Post, that there are other countries
around the world – Ireland, the United States, the United Kingdom and
Australia, for example – that employ administrative detention. He
told the Post that, generally speaking, the debate is legitimate
about terror-prevention measures and striking a legal balance, but
stressed that disparate treatment is being applied to Israel.
Schreuder said in his Bundesrat speech against the resolution that
Israel’s counter-terrorism measure is mainly directed against Hamas.
In a highly unusual move for an Austrian politician, he cited the
anti-Semitic provisions of the Hamas charter – which calls for the
murder of Jews and jihad against the State of Israel – to show his
fellow legislators the lethal threats that the Jewish state faces
from Hamas.
Many German and Austrian politicians downplay the Hamas charter and
its goal to obliterate Israel.
Schreuder asked in his speech why the resolution is not also directed
against administrative detention on the Palestinian side, which is
frequently used against gay Palestinians and alleged collaborators on
behalf of Israel. He noted that gay Palestinian men are arrested when
they have contact with Israeli groups or NGOs for homosexuals.
In an email to the Post, Yacov Stiassny of the Israel-based Central
Committee for Jews in Austria decried the resolution as “the old
naked hate against the Jews that presents itself with a new holier-
than-though look.”
He added that this reasoning helps explain why Israel is the number
one subject in the Austrian parliament debate and in the media
coverage, rather than Syria or Darfur.
Stiassny praised Marco Schreuder as “the only ‘righteous’ deputy in
the Bundesrat,” referencing a clear reference to the term “righteous
gentiles” that Yad Vashem uses to describe non-Jews who fought to
save Jews from the Nazis.
Stiassny said the anti-Israel sentiments in Austria embody the same
driving force of age-old anti-Semitism. In terms of post- Holocaust
Austria, he said it is the political legacy of Austria since the time
of former chancellor Bruno Kreisky, who worked with Palestinian
Liberation Organization head Yasser Arafat.
“Most of the Bundesrat deputies know neither the country nor the
history of Israel,” said Stiassny.
Schreuder wrote on his blog that he opposed the unanimous Vienna
state council condemnation of Israel’s interception of the Gaza-bound
Mavi Marmara flotilla in 2010.
Similar to the Bundesrat vote last week, members of all mainstream
democratic parties from the Vienna state council, ranging from the
social democrats to the greens to the conservatives, formed an
alliance on May 31, 2010, with the radical right-wing Austrian
Freedom Party, and blasted Israel’s actions aboard the Mavi Marmara.
The fiercely anti-Israel social democratic representative Omar al-
Rawi engineered the resolution in 2010 and spoke at a pro-Hamas rally
at the time, which was attended by between 10,000 and 12,000 people.
He told the pro- Hamas rally that the nine dead peace activists “did
not die in vain” and declared that their fight must continue.
Schreuder, who had a seat in the Vienna state council at the time,
said he would have voted against the resolution but was out of the
country when the vote was taken. He protested the resolution on his
blog. (© 1995-2011, The Jerusalem Post 07/03/12)
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