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Not an Analogy: Israel and the Crime of Apartheid
In recent years, increasing numbers of people around the world have begun adopting and developing an analysis of Israel as an apartheid regime. (1) This can be seen in the ways that the global movement in support of the Palestinian anti-colonial struggle is taking on a pointedly anti-apartheid character, as evidenced by the growth of Israeli Apartheid Week.(2) Further, much of the recent international diplomatic support for Israel has increasingly taken on the form of denying that racial discrimination is a root cause of the oppression of Palestinians, something that has taken on new levels of absurdity in Western responses to the April 2009 Durban Review Conference.(3)
Many of the writings stemming from this analysis work to detail levels of similarity and difference with Apartheid South Africa, rather than looking at apartheid as a system that can be practiced by any state. To some extent, this strong emphasis on historical comparisons is understandable given that Boycotts, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) is the central campaign called for by Palestinian civil society for solidarity with the Palestinian liberation struggle, and is modeled on the one that helped end South African Apartheid. However, an over-emphasis on similarities and differences confines the use of the term to narrow limits. With the expanding agreement that the term ‘apartheid' is useful in describing the level and layout of Israel's crimes, it is important that our understanding of the 'apartheid label' be deepened, both as a means of informing activism in support of the Palestinian anti-colonial struggle, and in order to most effectively make use of comparisons with other struggles.
The Apartheid Analogy
It is perhaps understandable that some advocates of Palestinian rights look at the 'Apartheid label', in its comparative sense, as a politically useful tool. The struggle of the South African people for justice and equality reached a certain sacred status in the 1980s and 1990s when the anti-Apartheid struggle reached its zenith. The reverence with which activists and non-activists alike look to the righteousness of the South African struggle, and the ignominy of the colonial Apartheid regime are well placed; Black South Africans fought against both Dutch and British colonization for centuries, endured countless hardships including imprisonment and death, and were labeled terrorists as the powers of the world stood by the racist Apartheid regime. They remained steadfast in their struggle, raising the cost of maintaining the Apartheid system until South African capital found it no longer profitable and white political elites found it impossible to maintain. Comparison bonus points can also be scored by pointing to the deep historic PLO-ANC connection, as well as the unabashed alliance between Israel and the South African Apartheid regime, which remained strong even at the height of the international boycott against South Africa.
A further impetus for confining the 'apartheid label' to a comparison with South Africa is that the commonalities and similarities between the liberation struggles of South Africa and Palestine are quite stark. Both cases involved a process of settler-colonialism involving the forced displacement of the indigenous population from most of their ancestral lands and concentrating them in townships and reservations; dividing up the Black population into different groups with differing rights; strict mobility restrictions that suffocated the colonized; and the use of brutal military force to repress any actual or potential resistance against the racist colonial regime. Both regimes enjoyed the impunity that results from full US and European support. Accompanying these and countless other similarities are a host of uncanny details common to both cases: both regimes were formally established in the same year - 1948 - following decades of British rule; control of approximately 87% of the land was off limits to most of the colonized population without special permission, and so on. While we speak here in the past tense, all of this still applies to present-day Palestine.
As the Israeli apartheid label has gained ground, some have adopted the approach of describing the differences between the two regimes, albeit for various purposes. In general, Israel has not legislated petty apartheid - the segregation of spaces such as bathrooms and beaches - as was the case in South Africa, although Israeli laws form the basis of systematic racial discrimination against Palestinians. The 1.2 million Palestinian citizens of Israel (approximately 20% of Israel's citizens) do indeed have the right to vote and run in Israeli elections while the Black community in South Africa, for the most part, did not. The South African version of apartheid's central tenet was to facilitate the exploitation of as many Black laborers as possible, whereas the Israeli version, although exploiting Palestinian workers, prioritizes the forced displacement of as many Palestinians as possible beyond the borders of the state with the aim of eradicating Palestinian presence within historic Palestine. South African visitors to Palestine have often commented on the fact that Israeli use of force is more brutal than that witnessed in the heyday of Apartheid, and several commentators have thus taken the position that Israel's practices are worse than Apartheid; that the apartheid label does not go far enough.
Israel and the Crime of Apartheid
In terms of law, describing Israel as an apartheid state does not revolve around levels of difference and similarity with the policies and practices of the South African Apartheid regime, and where Israel is an apartheid state only insofar as similarities outweigh differences. In 1973, the UN General Assembly adopted the International Convention on the Suppression and Punishment of the Crime of Apartheid (General Assembly resolution 3068 [XXVIII](4) - entered into force 18 July 1976 - the year of the Soweto uprising in South Africa and the Land Day uprising in Palestine) with a universal definition of the crime of apartheid not limited to the borders of South Africa. The fact that apartheid is defined as a crime under the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court(5), which entered into force in 2002 - long after the Apartheid regime was defeated in South Africa - attests to the universality of the crime.
While the wording of the definition of the crime of apartheid varies between legal instruments, the substance is the same: a regime commits apartheid when it institutionalizes discrimination to create and maintain the domination of one 'racial' group over another. Karine Mac Allister, among others, has provided a cogent legal analysis of the applicability of the crime of apartheid to the Israeli regime.(6) The main point is that like genocide and slavery, apartheid is a crime that any state can commit, and institutions, organizations and/or individuals acting on behalf of the state that commit it or support its commission are to face trial in any state that is a signatory to the Convention, or in the International Criminal Court. It is therefore a fallacy to ground the Israeli apartheid label on comparisons of the policies of the South African Apartheid regime, with the resulting descriptions of Israel as being 'Apartheid-like' and characterizations of an apartheid analysis of Israel as an 'Apartheid analogy.'
Recognition by the international community of such universal crimes is often the result of a particular case, so heinous that it forces the rusty wheels of international decision-making into motion. The Transatlantic Slave Trade is an example where the mass enslavement of people from the African continent to work as the privately owned property of European settlers formed an important part of the framework in which the drafters of the 1956 UN Supplementary Convention on the Abolition of Slavery thought and acted. An even clearer example is the Genocide Convention (adopted 1948, entered into force 1951) in the wake of the Nazi Holocaust in which millions of Jews, communists, Roma and disabled were systematically murdered with the intention to end their existence. We do not describe modern day enslavement as 'slavery-like,' nor do we examine the mass killing of hundreds of thousands of mainly Tutsi Rwandans through a Rwandan 'Genocide analogy.'
Two points made by Mac Allister in her legal analysis of Israeli apartheid deserve to be reiterated because they are often confused or misconstrued even by advocates of Palestinian human rights. First, Israel's crimes and violations are not limited to the crime of apartheid. Rather, Israel's regime over the Palestinian people combines apartheid, military occupation and colonization in a unique manner. It deserves notice that the relationship between these three components requires further research and investigation. Also noteworthy is the Palestinian BDS Campaign National Committee (BNC)'s "United Against Apartheid, Colonialism and Occupation: Dignity & Justice for the Palestinian People" (7) position paper, which outlines and, to some extent, details the various aspects of Israel's commission of the crime of apartheid, and begins to trace the interaction between Israeli apartheid, colonialism and occupation from the perspective of Palestinian civil society.
The second point worth reiterating is that Israel's regime of apartheid is not limited to the West Bank and Gaza Strip. In fact, the core of Israel's apartheid regime is guided by discriminatory legislation in the fields of nationality, citizenship and land ownership, and that was primarily employed to oppress and dispossess those Palestinians who were forcibly displaced in the 1948 Nakba (refugees and internally displaced), as well as the minority who managed to remain within the 'green line' and later became Israeli citizens.(8) Israel's apartheid regime was extended into West Bank and Gaza Strip following the 1967 occupation for the purpose of colonization, and military control over the Palestinians who came under occupation. Using again the example of South Africa, the crime of apartheid was not limited to the Bantustans; the whole regime was implicated and not one or another of its racist manifestations.
The analysis of Israel as an apartheid state has proven to be very important in several respects. First, it correctly highlights racial discrimination as a root cause of Israel's oppression of Palestinians. Second, one of the main effects of Israeli apartheid is that it has separated Palestinians - conceptually, legally and physically - into different groupings (refugees, West Bank, Gaza, within the 'green line' and a host of other divisions within each), resulting in the fragmentation of the Palestinian liberation movement, including the solidarity movement. The apartheid analysis enables us to provide a legal and conceptual framework under which we can understand, convey, and take action in support of the Palestinian people and their struggle as a unified whole. Third, and of particular significance to the solidarity movement, this legal and conceptual framework takes on the prescriptive role underpinning the growing global movement for boycotts, divestment and sanctions (BDS) against Israel until it complies with international law.
Colonialism and the Role of Comparison
I have argued that the question of whether apartheid applies cannot be determined by means of comparison with South Africa, but rather by legal analysis. This, however, does not mean that comparative study is not useful. Comparison is in fact essential to the process of learning historical lessons for those involved in struggle. A central importance of comparison with South Africa stems from the fact that the South African struggle against apartheid was, as it continues to be for the indigenous people of Palestine and the Americas, a struggle against colonialism.
Focusing on the colonial dimension of Israeli apartheid and the Zionist project enables us to maintain our focus on the issues that really matter, such as land acquisition, demographic engineering, and methods of political and economic control exercised by one racial group over another. Comparison with other anti-colonial struggles provides the main resource for understanding this colonial dimension of Israeli oppression, and for deriving some of the lessons needed to fight it.
One of the many lessons from the struggle against Apartheid in South Africa stems from the fact that the ANC leadership was pressured to compromise on its economic demands such as land restitution. Only a tiny proportion of white controlled land in South Africa was redistributed to Blacks after 1994. As such, while the struggle of the South African people defeated the system of political apartheid, the struggle against economic apartheid continues in various forms including anti-poverty and landless peoples' movements today. As Palestinians and those struggling with them work to reconstruct a political strategy and consensus on how to overcome the challenges of the post-Oslo period, the centrality of the demand for land restitution should be highlighted as part of the demand for refugee return.
A second lesson of major importance comes in response to the paradigm currently guiding most mainstream accounts of how to achieve the elusive 'peace in the Middle East', which is the idea of partition often referred to as the two state 'solution'. In the 1970s, South Africa tried to deal with its "demographic problem" - the fact that the vast majority of its population was Black but did not have the right to vote. The Apartheid regime reconstructed South Africa as a formal democracy by reinventing the British-established reservations (the Bantustans) as independent states.(9) These ten 'homelands' were each assigned to an ethnicity decided by Pretoria, and indigenous South Africans who did not fit into one of the ethnicities were forced to make themselves fit in order to become nationals of one of the homelands. Through this measure, members of the indigenous population were reclassified as nationals of one or another homeland, and between 1976 and 1981 the regime tried to pass the homelands off as independent states: Transkei in 1976, Bophuthatswana in 1977, Venda in 1979, and Ciskei in 1981.
Each of these Bantustans was given a flag and a government made up of indigenous intermediaries on the Pretoria payroll, and all the trappings of a sovereign government including responsibility over municipal services and a police force to protect the Apartheid regime, but without actual sovereignty. The idea was that by getting international recognition for each of these homelands as states, the Apartheid regime would transform South Africa from a country with a 10% white minority, to one with a 100% white majority. Since it was a democratic regime within the confines of the dominant community, the state's democratic nature would be beyond reproach. No one was fooled. The ANC launched a powerful campaign to counter any international recognition of the Bantustans as independent states, and the plot failed miserably at the international level - with the notable, but perhaps unsurprising, exception that a lone "embassy" for Bophuthatswana was opened in Tel Aviv.
Israel has employed similar strategies in Palestine. For example, Israel recognized 18 Palestinian Bedouin tribes and appointed a loyal Sheikh for each in the Naqab during the 1950s as a means of controlling these southern Palestinians, forcing those who did not belong to one of the tribes to affiliate to one in order to get Israeli citizenship.(10) In the late 1970s, the Israeli regime tried to invent Palestinian governing bodies for the 1967 occupied territory in the form of 'village leagues' intended to evolve into similar non-sovereign governments; glorified municipalities of a sort. As with Apartheid's Homelands, the scheme failed miserably, both because the PLO had established itself as the sole legitimate representative of the Palestinian people, and because Palestinians largely understood the plot and opposed it with all means at their disposal. The main lesson for Israel was that the PLO would have to either be completely destroyed or would have to be transformed into Israeli apartheid's indigenous intermediary. Israel launched a massive campaign to destroy the PLO throughout the 1980s and early 1990s. In the early 1990s, and with the demise of the PLO's main backers such as the Soviet bloc and Iraq, Israel capitalized on the opportunity, and worked to transform the PLO from a liberation movement to a 'state-building' project that was launched by the signing of the Oslo accords, seven months before South Africa's first free election.
The push for the establishment and international recognition of an independent Palestinian state within the Palestinian Bantustan is no different from the South African Apartheid regime's campaign to gain international recognition of Transkei or Ciskei. This is the core of the "two-state solution" idea. The major and crucial difference is that in the current Palestinian case, it is the world's superpower and its adjutants in Europe and the Arab world pushing as well, and armed with the active acceptance of Palestine's indigenous intermediaries.Notes:
1 I use capital 'A' in Apartheid to denote the regime of institutionalized racial superiority implemented in South Africa 1948-1994, and lower-case 'a' to indicate the generally applicable crime of apartheid.
3 See
Amira Howeidi, "Israel's
right not to be criticised", Al-Ahram Weekly, 19-25
March 2009: http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/
4 For
the full text of the Convention see:
http://www.unhchr.ch/html/
5 For
the full text of the Statute see:
http://untreaty.un.org/cod/
6 See
Karine Mac Allister, "Applicability of the Crime of Apartheid
to Israel", al-Majdal #38,
(Summer 2008):
http://www.badil.org/al-
7 This
is the Palestinian civil society position paper for the April 2009
Durban Review Conference in Geneva, and can be downloaded at:
http://bdsmovement.net/files/
8 For a discussion of how Israel's apartheid legislation continues to affect refugees and Palestinian citizens of Israel with regards to control over land see Uri Davis, Apartheid Israel: Possibilities for the Struggle Within, London: Zed Books, 2003.
9 British rule in South Africa established reserves in 1913 and 1936 on approximately 87% of the land of South Africa for the purpose of segregating the Black population from the settlers.
10 For
more on this see: Hazem Jamjoum, "al-Naqab: The Ongoing
Displacement of Palestine's Southern Bedouin", al-Majdal
#39-40, (Autumn 2008 / Winter 2009):
http://www.badil.org/al-
- Posted in

14 Comments so far
Show AllIt is difficult to understand how one group of people can treat another group like this. All these guns and construction has to cost a fortune.
Our new president can do the world a favor by cutting off aid to Israel, but then of course the world's only real empire (for the moment) wouldn't have a a permanent base in the region.
We probably no worse or better than other empires in history, but there has to be a better way.
The Apartheid label is used for one reason only; having failed to destroy Israel by armed force, the new arab strategy is to dissolve it politically from within by way of pressuring it from without. By framing their goal as an anti-apartheid struggle, it is hoped that this new strategy can shed its anti-semitic image.
US aid to Israel is opposed for one reason only; it covers Israel's losses as Arabs attempt to pressure it into submission. A tiny, trade dependent country like Israel theoretically could be pressured by
A)Using terrorism to shred the Israel economy and
B)Take advantage of Israel's disproportionate defense needs and agitate it to 'spend itself to death' on defense.
The expected payoff would be Israelis collapsing chip by chip on issues like palestinian return etc. until it could dissolved and dismantled from within.
None of this devious plan can work as long as Israel has US and EU support, however. Hence the anti-zionists
Israel is not 'trade dependent' - it is AID-dependent.
Take the aid-generated trade out of Israeli GDP before you get respond with figures.
Besides, Iraq was 'trade dependent' as well - according to a whole bunch of dual-nationality shills for that war, having a repressive regime makes any nation a target for righteous invasion.
Still, as a proponent of 'Boycott 729' I do hope for as much harm as possible for Israeli exporters - a form of 'individual-level embargo' that will be in force until they change their government's racist policies. It's not 'collective punishment' or 'ghettoisation', and doesn't involve shooting children in the head or wearing hate-slogan adorned T-shirts.
Here's a hint - you can't take a 3000-year old pack of lies (where a burning bush promises someone else's land to an Egyptian ex-slave) and turn it into a set of map coordinates for a 'rightful claim' on behalf of a bunch of Eastern European peasant scum (who continue to behave in the same way as got them kicked out of country after country over the last two thousand years).
The very idea that any society ought to be founded on the whim of a racial-supremacist group of 'believers' in a Sky Wizard who directed genocide, rape and pillage... Jeebus wept.
Huge swathes of the Old Testament are basically self-interested hate literature, with "Chosenness" justifying genocide, theft, expropriation and barbarity on the basis that 'God told us we could'.
Fuck that.
Gladly, the whole 'Eretz Yisroel' thing is quite obviously coming apart at the seams (but for massive US military aid it would already have done so, and the US is out of cash). Within a generation, all the invading scum like Avgidor Lieberman will eventually wind up back in Eastern Europe where they originate - their descendants will occupy the slums of Budapest in the same way as their forefathers did.
Cheers
GT
GT's Market Rant
Correct. Fortunately, the EU countries and the US are not going to change their support for Israel in any substantive way.
This issue of Palestine and Israel is a red herring for progressives. It is a diversion to real issues like universal heath in the US and global warming. I and many other progressives are beginning to feel that the real issues that effect us, here in our own country, are being sacrificed to these issues where we do not agree.
If push came to shove, and two candidates were forced to take a stand on support of Israel, then many of us, regardless of their other policies would swallow our bile and vote for them. That is not going to happen in our lifetimes, but it might at some point, and when it does, it will cost the left a victory.
A very interesting article.
We will see how long the remnants of Israeli democracy last as their government tries to tie itself into knots with these sordid race laws.
.
It's too late..........The State of Israel is already destructing from within.
The United States will soon abandon all support for this Zionist Empire.
We have begun, with horror, to see Genocide of the Palestinians.
The United States will be out of the Middle East by June 2010.
,
Gaza And The Warsaw Ghetto
same place
different time
while the world stood by
genocide
live
Haven't you posted this comment before? Doesn't seem new.
I'm fairly sure this is a poem. People paste the same quote from some author as their signature over and over. I think we should support the creativity of our common dreamers.
'This issue of Palestine and Israel is a red herring for progressives. It is a diversion (away from) real issues like universal heath in the US and global warming.'
What a pile of baloney! With logic like this, we would have to then say that Iraq and Afghanistan are 'red herrings for progressives', wouldn't we? 'John Shady' would then have us continue with saying that opposing US militarism in all its forms is 'a red herring for progressives', too, no doubt'? Or is it just with Israel he sees it this way?
The things that Zionists cruising websites like Common Dreams that oppose Jewish State support come up with!??? Good try, 'John', but people are getting fed up with Zionism and its push to have the US taxpayer constantly pay for a so-called GWOT (Global War on Terrorism) that would last forever and forever.
Zionism is Racism, and the 'Global War on Terrorism' is State Terrorism itself itself. Opposing this militarism is the principal task of US Progressives and not a diversion from other more important issues. Zionists simply would have us to truly divert our attention away from them with having us give attention only to internal domestic issues while the US government continues to use the 'Jewish State' as a US controlled military unit in the Middle East. Way too much money is diverted away form domestic use to support this US governmental State terrorism, even when Israel is the army which carries it out.
Israel & S. Africa 100% different. SA did not pen in the people of Soweto, Johannesburg then bomb them in their homes while they slept. They never slaughtered 1400 helpless captives.
Racial Segregation yes. But the Ethnic Cleansing & Genocide that are Israel make SA's policies sound benificent & Kind.
Now Israel's minions, William Kristol & John McCain the Scum are working to amp the war in Afghanistan. 'Neocons?' is a nonword, it means Israel. What a Desecration of Judaism and Insult to Good Jews.
Israel Puts Us All At Risk
"Based on?"
"9/11"
"How was the colonial state Israel responsible for that?"
"Its massacres of Palestinians and Lebanese is what stokes the fear and hatred that underlie the violent messianic movements in the Mideast and elsewhere, among which is al Qaeda."
"The answer being?"
"Jewish colonizer and colonized Palestinian sitting down together and working things out."
"Based on?"
"One equals one."
"Anything else?"
"Liberty and justice for all."
"Otherwise?"
"It's just a matter of time."
When racism and supremacist ideology flourish among the Alpha tribe of the US, the rest of the world especially the ME will suffer the consequences. The power of the Alpha tribe through their stranglehold on finance, politics and the media is in a word conspiracy. And considering their ever strengthening grip on the greasy political apparatus in Brussles through their "Friends of Israel" and other conspiratorial cash-heavy groups their power is only set to grow as the turn the Euro parliament in a third whorehouse.
There is no cure for the disease and the halting of the globalisation of that virus without radical treatment of the patient. After Chas Freeman's assassination that is just beginning, perhaps.
Cure the US and the rest will follow.
Despite the rabid Pavlovian barking the sad truth remains, the horrible unspeakable reality of what was perpetrated in Gaza as so often in the past is in itself antisemitic. The TRUTH is antisemitic.
The NAZIs couldn't match this score card
Aside from the core issues—refugees, Jerusalem, borders—the major themes reflected in the U.N. resolutions against Israel over the years are its unlawful attacks on its neighbors; its violations of the human rights of the Palestinians, including deportations, demolitions of homes and other collective punishments; its confiscation of Palestinian land; its establishment of illegal settlements; and its refusal to abide by the U.N. Charter and the 1949 Fourth Geneva Convention Relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War.
- Donald Neff
Source: Paul Findley’s Deliberate Deceptions (1998, pages 192-4). This number only covers resolutions passed from 1955 through 1992.
UN Resolutions Against Israel, 1955-1992
1. Resolution 106: "...‘condemns’ Israel for Gaza raid"
2. Resolution 111: "...‘condemns’ Israel for raid on Syria that killed fifty-six people"
3. Resolution 127: "...‘recommends’ Israel suspend its ‘no-man’s zone’ in Jerusalem"
4. Resolution 162: "...‘urges’ Israel to comply with UN decisions"
5. Resolution 171: "...determines flagrant violations’ by Israel in its attack on Syria"
6. Resolution 228: "...‘censures’ Israel for its attack on Samu in the West Bank, then under Jordanian control"
7. Resolution 237: "...‘urges’ Israel to allow return of new 1967 Palestinian refugees"
8. Resolution 248: "...‘condemns’ Israel for its massive attack on Karameh in Jordan"
9. Resolution 250: "...‘calls’ on Israel to refrain from holding military parade in Jerusalem"
10. Resolution 251: "...‘deeply deplores’ Israeli military parade in Jerusalem in defiance of Resolution 250"
11. Resolution 252: "...‘declares invalid’ Israel’s acts to unify Jerusalem as Jewish capital"
12. Resolution 256: "...‘condemns’ Israeli raids on Jordan as ‘flagrant violation"
13. Resolution 259: "...‘deplores’ Israel’s refusal to accept UN mission to probe occupation"
14. Resolution 262: "...‘condemns’ Israel for attack on Beirut airport"
15. Resolution 265: "...‘condemns’ Israel for air attacks for Salt in Jordan"
16. Resolution 267: "...‘censures’ Israel for administrative acts to change the status of Jerusalem"
17. Resolution 270: "...‘condemns’ Israel for air attacks on villages in southern Lebanon"
18. Resolution 271: "...‘condemns’ Israel’s failure to obey UN resolutions on Jerusalem"
19. Resolution 279: "...‘demands’ withdrawal of Israeli forces from Lebanon"
20. Resolution 280: "....‘condemns’ Israeli’s attacks against Lebanon"
21. Resolution 285: "...‘demands’ immediate Israeli withdrawal form Lebanon"
22. Resolution 298: "...‘deplores’ Israel’s changing of the status of Jerusalem"
23. Resolution 313: "...‘demands’ that Israel stop attacks against Lebanon"
24. Resolution 316: "...‘condemns’ Israel for repeated attacks on Lebanon"
25. Resolution 317: "...‘deplores’ Israel’s refusal to release Arabs abducted in Lebanon"
26. Resolution 332: "...‘condemns’ Israel’s repeated attacks against Lebanon"
27. Resolution 337: "...‘condemns’ Israel for violating Lebanon’s sovereignty"
28. Resolution 347: "...‘condemns’ Israeli attacks on Lebanon"
29. Resolution 425: "...‘calls’ on Israel to withdraw its forces from Lebanon"
30. Resolution 427: "...‘calls’ on Israel to complete its withdrawal from Lebanon’
31. Resolution 444: "...‘deplores’ Israel’s lack of cooperation with UN peacekeeping forces"
32. Resolution 446: "...‘determines’ that Israeli settlements are a ‘serious obstruction’ to peace and calls on Israel to abide by the Fourth Geneva Convention"
33. Resolution 450: "...‘calls’ on Israel to stop attacking Lebanon"
34. Resolution 452: "...‘calls’ on Israel to cease building settlements in occupied territories"
35. Resolution 465: "...‘deplores’ Israel’s settlements and asks all member states not to assist Israel’s settlements program"
36. Resolution 467: "...‘strongly deplores’ Israel’s military intervention in Lebanon"
37. Resolution 468: "...‘calls’ on Israel to rescind illegal expulsions of two Palestinian mayors and a judge and to facilitate their return"
38. Resolution 469: "...‘strongly deplores’ Israel’s failure to observe the council’s order not to deport Palestinians"
39. Resolution 471: "...‘expresses deep concern’ at Israel’s failure to abide by the Fourth Geneva Convention"
40. Resolution 476: "...‘reiterates’ that Israel’s claims to Jerusalem are ‘null and void’
41. Resolution 478: "...‘censures (Israel) in the strongest terms’ for its claim to Jerusalem in its ‘Basic Law’
42. Resolution 484: "...‘declares it imperative’ that Israel re-admit two deported Palestinian mayors"
43. Resolution 487: "...‘strongly condemns’ Israel for its attack on Iraq’s nuclear facility"
44. Resolution 497: "...‘decides’ that Israel’s annexation of Syria’s Golan Heights is ‘null and void’ and demands that Israel rescind its decision forthwith"
45. Resolution 498: "...‘calls’ on Israel to withdraw from Lebanon"
46. Resolution 501: "...‘calls’ on Israel to stop attacks against Lebanon and withdraw its troops"
47. Resolution 509: "...‘demands’ that Israel withdraw its forces forthwith and unconditionally from Lebanon"
48. Resolution 515: "...‘demands’ that Israel lift its siege of Beirut and allow food supplies to be brought in"
49. Resolution 517: "...‘censures’ Israel for failing to obey UN resolutions and demands that Israel withdraw its forces from Lebanon"
50. Resolution 518: "...‘demands’ that Israel cooperate fully with UN forces in Lebanon"
51. Resolution 520: "...‘condemns’ Israel’s attack into West Beirut"
52. Resolution 573: "...‘condemns’ Israel ‘vigorously’ for bombing Tunisia in attack on PLO headquarters
53. Resolution 587: "...‘takes note’ of previous calls on Israel to withdraw its forces from Lebanon and urges all parties to withdraw"
54. Resolution 592: "...‘strongly deplores’ the killing of Palestinian students at Bir Zeit University by Israeli troops"
55. Resolution 605: "...‘strongly deplores’ Israel’s policies and practices denying the human rights of Palestinians
56. Resolution 607: "...‘calls’ on Israel not to deport Palestinians and strongly requests it to abide by the Fourth Geneva Convention
57. Resolution 608: "...‘deeply regrets’ that Israel has defied the United Nations and deported Palestinian civilians"
58. Resolution 636: "...‘deeply regrets’ Israeli deportation of Palestinian civilians
59. Resolution 641: "...‘deplores’ Israel’s continuing deportation of Palestinians
60. Resolution 672: "...‘condemns’ Israel for violence against Palestinians at the Haram al-Sharif/Temple Mount
61. Resolution 673: "...‘deplores’ Israel’s refusal to cooperate with the United Nations
62. Resolution 681: "...‘deplores’ Israel’s resumption of the deportation of Palestinians
63. Resolution 694: "...‘deplores’ Israel’s deportation of Palestinians and calls on it to ensure their safe and immediate return
64. Resolution 726: "...‘strongly condemns’ Israel’s deportation of Palestinians
65. Resolution 799: "...‘strongly condemns’ Israel’s deportation of 413 Palestinians and calls for their immediate return.