Oakland activists block Israeli ship for third day

10 years ago | Posted in: Latest Politics News | 661 Views

Pro-Palestinian protesters on Monday continued a campaign to block an Israeli commercial vessel from docking in Oakland, California for a third day.

About 20 protesters arrived at the port at 5 a.m. local time to block the container ship owned by Zim Shipping Services Ltd., one of the world’s largest container shipping companies, from entering the Port of Oakland and unloading cargo. Two demonstrators were detained and cited, according to the Oakland Police Department.

Another protest was planned for 6 p.m., an action quickly organized after rumors that the ship would again attempt to dock. In addition to picketing at the docks, protesters have been attempting to gain the support of the longshoremen who would handle the unloading.

“It’s not clear yet whether this will be a sustained action,” said Daniela Kantorova, who spoke with Al Jazeera on her way to the port. “It takes a lot of effort and energy to sustain this action. But these ships arrive every Saturday. People are thinking of making this a regular action, a weekly action.”

Inspired by a call from Palestinian civil society to impose boycotts, divestment and sanctions on Israel until it ends its occupation of Palestinian lands, the action was part of a series of events organized by Block the Boat, a loose, Oakland-based coalition of grassroots organizations.

Saturday’s protest, which launched the campaign, drew between 3,000 to 5,000 protesters. Block the Boat organizers are planning similar actions in Seattle, Vancouver and other U.S. and Canadian ports in coming weeks.

Organizers said Palestine wasn’t all that was on protesters’ minds. Also figuring prominently were recent events in Ferguson, Missouri, where protesters have clashed with police following the killing of unarmed black teen Michael Brown by a white police officer on Aug. 9.

“There were numerous signs that said things like, ‘Global Intifada from Oakland to Ferguson to Palestine,’” said Mollie Costello, 42, one of the protesters at the port event. Black fists, a symbol of the Black Power movement, adorned countless signs held by demonstrators.

“It may be difficult for people to see the connection between black America and the struggle of Palestinians in the Middle East,” Costello said. “It comes down to oppression, occupation and basic rights that are denied people to hold them down, like Palestinians, like black America. It’s easy for people living in those communities, under those conditions to see the similarities.”

Another protester, Russell Bates, 67, who was detained Monday, said Palestinians and African Americans share similar experiences of social immobility.

“It seems like the people in Gaza in particular are packed into a ghetto-like situation, where they aren’t allowed to leave except in exceptional situations,” Bates said, whereas in Ferguson, people are “captive in their own ghetto — not surrounded by walls necessarily. Invisible walls keep them down.”

The port blockade, organizers say, aims not just to put a dent in the Israeli economy, but to “expose” Americans to all elements of the U.S. relationship with Israel — a partnership they say is also resulting in the militarization of U.S. police forces nationwide. This, the organizers charge, has led to a recent surge in police brutality against communities of color and the killings of young black men like Brown.

“We will no longer stay silent as our governing bodies play a role in what’s happening with Israel as we will no longer stand for the violence against communities here in the U.S.,” said Reem Assil, one of the Block the Boat organizers.

It remains unclear whether Israeli police techniques are being employed in Ferguson, but St. Louis County police have received instruction from their counterparts in Israel.

In April 2011, then St. Louis County Police Chief Timothy Fitch was sent to Israel “to study counter-terrorism” measures, where he was “briefed by senior members of the Israel National Police as well as the Israel Defense Forces and Intelligence / Security organizations,” according to a press released by the St. Louis County Police.

“I am confident that this will be a unique learning experience offered nowhere else in the world,” Fitch said in the release.

Fitch traveled to Israel as part of “National Counter-Terrorism Seminar in Israel,” an initiative by the Anti-Defamation League, which “fights anti-Semitism and all forms of bigotry, defends democratic ideals and protects civil rights for all,” according to its website…. see more

source: America Aljazeera

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