by Dror Eydar
It's time the French government was honest about the purpose of its human rights award – to praise groups that work against Israel and for whom "human rights" apply to everyone except the Jews.
1.
On Dec. 10, two Palestinian organizations –  one openly declared, the other of which uses Israeli cover – will  receive the Human Rights Award from the French government. The two  groups deserve each other, and they both fight against Israel and the  Jews' return to their homeland. They both talk about morality, but their  activities promote the opposite. They both work in response to  international pressure on the Jewish state, which urges us to agree to  their suicidal peace plans. One organization is B'Tselem, whose director  Hagai El-Ad travels the world, slandering Israel and inviting the  nations of the world to intervene and call to order these Jews who for  some reason insist on defending themselves and holding on to their  historic lands in Judea, Samaria and Jerusalem.
This isn't the first time that the activity  of El-Ad and his organization creates the impression that for them,  human rights include everyone except the Jews. In the imaginary  Palestine, which sees to celebrate the destruction of Israel, heaven  forbid, El-Ad would be an honored citizen.
2.
The other organization being awarded the  sketchy honor is Al-Haq, which hates Israel and the Jews and uses every  platform to support the BDS movement and boycott of Israel, meaning  wiping it off the map. In February 2016, the group declared it "the  right of every individual to take part in and support BDS activity."  Their call decreed that the European Union's steps to label products  made in Israeli settlements was insufficient, and they are demanding a  total boycott of Israeli goods. For them, all of Israel is a  "settlement" that must be uprooted from the Middle East, under the guise  of "protecting human rights."
Al-Haq encourages the world to fight Israel  in the courts, over "war crimes and crimes against humanity" – a  reference to our war against terrorism. The organization has suggested  attacking the Israeli legal system by "flooding the Supreme Court with  petitions in the hope of overwhelming its workload and resources." Last  July, the head of the organization declared that convicted terrorists  had a "right" to receive a salary from the Palestinian Authority.
This is how the organization described the  events leading up to Operation Protective Edge in the summer of 2014:  "On June 12, 2014, three settler boys disappeared near the city of  Hebron in the West Bank; the three were later found dead." What do you  think? "Disappeared" and "were found dead" – it happens, doesn't it?  Like I said, this kind of "human rights" does not include the Jews'  right to life.
3.
Wait for the cherry on the cake: The  director of Al-Haq, Shawan Jabareen, is a well-known lover of Israel. In  June 2007, the Israeli Supreme Court described him as follows: "The  petitioner [Jabareen] apparently operates as a kind of Dr. Jekyll and  Mr. Hyde; he spends some of his working time as executive director of a  rights group, and the rest as an operative in a terrorist organization  [the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine] that does not  hesitate to commit murder and attempted murder, and has nothing to do  with rights, and actually rejects the most basic right of all, the most  fundamental right, without which there are no others – the right to  life." These are B'Tselem's friends. It's no coincidence.
Irish Senator Frances Black was quick to  congratulate the recipients of the French prize, saying their activity  helped her bring a bill to boycott products from Israeli settlements,  which she called a "war crime," to a final vote. Birds of a feather.
4.
And now for those who are conferring the  honor. It's very doubtful that French Justice Minister Nicole Belloubet  truly knows to whom she will be awarding the prize. This is not the  first time the French government has taken part in such an immoral  disgrace. A perverted relationship has been created there that gives  prizes to haters of Israel that support terrorism and who use the term  "human rights" in vain.
In 2012, the French government gave the  prize to none other than the Alternative Information Center for "its  work in exposing Israel's lack of culpability in the occupied  Palestinian territories." This is an even more extremist organization  than B'Tselem (it's hard to compete with them, but they manage it) that  supports the Palestinian demand to return to Israel, as well as BDS, of  course, and accuses us of genocide and a bunch of other crimes. It's  heartening to know that the head of the organization, Michel  Warschawski, an anti-Zionist Marxist, was tried and imprisoned in the  1990s for aiding the PFLP.
Here's a suggestion for the government of  France – let's drop the pretense and call the prize by an appropriate  name: the prize for the rights of those who oppose (sometimes with fire  and bloodshed) the Jews' return to Zion.
Dror Eydar
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/opinions/france-is-a-partner-in-shame/?redirected=323027
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