Prime Minister: Palestinian children don’t need bandages – they need you to speak up NOW to help stop the slaughter!

Palestine Solidarity Network Aotearoa

13 September 2023

Media Release:

Prime Minister Chris Hipkins fell over himself earlier in the week to condemn the Hamas attack on Israel but has shown callous racism in refusing to condemn Israel’s wanton killing of Palestinians civilians in Gaza.

It is a war crime under the Fourth Geneva Convention to:

  • Maintain an illegal blockade of Palestinians living under Israeli occupation in Gaza

  • Bomb a densely populated civilian population with a horrific death toll as Israel is doing

  • Subject Palestinians civilians to “collective punishment” through the bombing and depriving them of the essentials of life like food and water

But Prime Minister Hipkins is silent. He is refusing to condemn Israeli war crimes and its criminal genocidal behaviour against Palestinians. He is thereby condoning Israeli violence and helping the spread of race-hatred against Palestinians on social media.

Like a sock puppet the Prime Minister stays silent at the genocide of Palestinians but magically comes to life when Israelis are killed.

Hipkins has said New Zealand is ready to provide humanitarian assistance – prepared to bandage Palestinian children but not to speak up and help stop them being killed and maimed in the first place.

Hipkins stance is deeply racist but mirrors what New Zealand and other western governments have done for 75 years – express pious concern for Palestinians while excusing Israeli slaughter. Rather than Israeli policies being the source of this week’s fighting, it is the western countries failure to hold Israel to account for their war crimes which is the source of the violence.

Tomorrow, in rallies up and down the country New Zealanders will renew their demand for the New Zealand government to speak out unequivocally against Israel and thereby help end the slaughter of Palestinians in Gaza.

Details of the rallies are on our Facebook page here: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100064134091562

 

John Minto

National Chair

Palestine Solidarity Network Aotearoa

0220850161

johnminto@orcon.net.nz


Further background to the rallies

The tragic events in Israel/Palestine these past few days have highlighted the absolute failure of western governments like New Zealand to hold Israel accountable for its myriad war crimes against the Palestinian people for over 75 years.

Even in the past year the New Zealand government has failed to speak up despite obvious signs that unbearable pressure was building in Palestine following the election in late 2022 of the most extreme far-right government in Israel’s history. This new government has taken numerous steps to ramp up pressure on Palestinians everywhere in the occupied Palestinian territories.

It announced the building of more illegal Israeli settlements on Palestinian land

Encouraged attacks on Palestinian towns villages and rural communities by illegal Israeli settlers and provided Israeli military support for the settlers

Organised highly provocative incursions into the Al Aqsa mosque compound by Israeli government ministers

Justified and casualised the killing of Palestinians resisting the Israeli occupation of their country (over 250 Palestinians were killed in the first nine months of this year including dozens of children)

The total silence of western governments such as New Zealand to these developments has emboldened Israel to act with impunity as it bulldozes more Palestinian land, builds more illegal settlements.

The reaction from Hamas when it came has shocked and appalled Israelis, Palestinians and most of the world community.

Palestinian Solidarity Network Aotearoa has condemned the Hamas attack on civilians as a war crime under the Fourth Geneva Convention, just as we condemn any attack on civilians no matter who the attacker is. But unlike our Prime Minister, and most western governments, we also condemn Israeli war crimes.

It is a war crime to use collective punishment against civilian populations. In other words it is unlawful to punish a whole group for the actions of a few. It is also unlawful to withhold, food, water and the essentials of life from people living under military occupation as Israel is doing to Gaza.

The New Zealand government must not only condemn war crimes committed by Hamas but it must also condemn war crimes against the Palestinian people.

But Prime Minister Chris Hipkins has not once this year condemned Israeli war crimes and even after the events of the past few days he is silent. For the government, Palestinian lives matter less than Israeli lives.

Meanwhile Israel has announced preparations to commit more war crimes against Palestinians.

“We are fighting against human animals” said Israeli Defence Minister Yoav Gallant yesterday as he announced what he called a “complete siege” on Gaza which Israel is set to impose.

Hearing racist, dehumanising, language about Palestinians from Israeli politicians is nothing new but this time Israel is using genocidal language to justify the massive death toll which they are planning to inflict on Palestinian refugees in Gaza – refugees created through war crimes committed by Israeli militias in 1948.

On Saturday Palestinians and their supporters are holding rallies and vigils around New Zealand to demand our government speak out and condemn not only the killing of Israeli civilians but also the slaughter of Palestinian civilians in Gaza. We will be demanding the government take action to hold Israel to account for the crimes of its occupation of Palestine in the same way we have held Russia to account for its crimes against the Ukrainian people in its occupation of Ukraine.

The start of each rally will include a minute of silence to remember all the civilians – Palestinians and Israelis – who have been killed in the last week.

 

John Minto

National Chair

Palestine Solidarity Network Aotearoa

0220850161

johnminto@orcon.net.nz


John Minto

John Minto is also former National Organiser for HART (Halt All Racist Tours) which successfully campaigned to stop rugby contact between New Zealand and apartheid South Africa in the 1970s and 1980s.