| SUMMARY: Christian
Aid's recent campaigns and attacks on Israel are further evidence
that the goals of its leadership are primarily political, and
not charitable. The barrage of reports, campaigns, press releases
and expensive advertisements all presenting strong pro-Palestinian
positions, and minimizing terror and corruption, are clear evidence
of this obsession.
Christian Aid's campaigning
and obsession with attacking Israel is further evidence that
the goals of its leadership
are primarily political, and not charitable. In the 6 months
beginning September 2004, CA has issued several reports, campaigns,
press releases and expensive advertisements all presenting strong
pro-Palestinian political positions. (List and links at the
end of this report.) These activities consistently minimize
the impact of Palestinian terrorism, and make false or unverifiable
claims regarding Palestinian victimization within Israeli self-defense
policies.
Following
the notorious "Child
of Bethlehem" campaign during the Christmas period, and
the anti-separation
barrier ad in the Guardian, the latest attack was issued
in the immediate aftermath of a Palestinian suicide bombing
in Tel Aviv, as Christian Aid released a 2
March press statement inappropriately entitled "Palestinians
need economic as well as military security". Equating victims
with perpetrators, the statement says: "The fragile ceasefire
between Israel and the Palestinians has already been shattered
- Tel Aviv has suffered another suicide bomb and Israel continues
military activities in the Occupied Palestinian Territories."
This organization repeats the amoral equivalence between a terrorist
atrocity and Israeli self-defense aimed at preventing further
bloodshed.
As
documented
by NGO Monitor, Christian Aid routinely uses the facade
of a charitable organization to pursue a highly political and
ideological pro-Palestinian agenda. Its assertions are based
on slogans that distort the history and the details of this
conflict. Commenting on the 1 March 2005 London
Palestinian reform conference, Christian Aid claims that
"the root cause of Palestinian poverty - Israel's continued
occupation of the West Bank, Gaza Strip and East Jerusalem -
was not on the agenda". The statement quotes Bernard Sabella
of the Department of Service to Palestinian Refugees, Middle
East Council of Churches, who claims
"The biggest stumbling block [to peace] is the reality of continued
occupation", ignoring Palestinian responsibilities as laid out
at the London conference itself.
Failing again to examine the
evidence, Christian Aid's PR statement relies on its highly
politicized partners (e.g. Adalah,
Physicians
for Human Rights - Israel, the Union
of Palestinian Medical Relief Committees and Palestine Monitor)
in the Gaza Strip who claim that "residential areas have been
shelled by the Israeli Defense Forces." As always, the context
is eliminated and the press statement includes a photograph
of a greenhouse in Gaza "destroyed by Israeli forces". Seemingly
in response to rising criticism, Christian Aid's Director, Daleep
Mukharji was compelled to defend
his organization in an op-ed for the Jewish Chronicle on
11 March. While attempting to explain his position, Mukarji
failed to address the fundamental issues raised by Christian
Aid's activities, completely ignoring the "Child of Bethlehem"
and other prominent campaigns. Despite Mukharji's words of condemnation
of suicide bombings and Palestinian human rights violations,
the statements from official Christian Aid material promotes
a different agenda altogether.
In
summary this "charitable" organization has continued to mount
entirely politicized attacks on Israel while excusing Palestinians
from their responsibilities to promote democratic reform and
end terror. This failure to recognize changing realities in
the Middle East can only harm the hopes for peace that are now
slowly emerging.
Christian
Aid's anti-Israel activities since September 2004:
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