South Africa Parliament Votes to Downgrade Ties with the ‘Israeli’ Regime
By Staff, Agencies
South Africa's parliament votes in favor of downgrading the country's relations with the ‘Israeli’ occupation regime in solidarity with the Palestinian people.
The legislature voted on a relevant draft resolution on Tuesday, the Middle East Eye news website reported.
The draft resolution had been introduced by the National Freedom Party [NFP] mandating the downgrading of the country's embassy in the occupied territories given the occupation regime's ongoing abuses against the Palestinian landowners.
The NFP released a statement, saying such a move would have been supported by the country's late anti-apartheid leader Nelson Mandela.
"This is a moment [Mandela] would be proud of. He always said our freedom is incomplete without the freedom of Palestinians," read the statement.
The ‘Israeli’ regime "was built through the displacement, murder, and maiming of Palestinians. And to maintain their grip on power, they have instituted apartheid to control and manage Palestinians," the statement noted.
"As South Africans, we refuse to stand by while apartheid is being perpetrated again."
The ‘Israeli’ regime claimed existence in 1948 after occupying huge swathes of Palestinian territories during a Western-backed war.
It occupied more land, namely the West Bank, including East al-Quds, and the Gaza Strip, in another such war in 1967. The regime withdrew from Gaza in 2005, but has been keeping the coastal sliver under routine deadly attacks and a crippling siege.
Ever since 1967, Tel Aviv has built hundreds of settlements upon the overrun territories and deployed the most aggressive restrictions on the movements of Palestinians there.
South Africa established close ties with the ‘Israeli’ regime during the apartheid era, but after the collapse of the discriminatory system, the African country began to lean towards Palestine.
In 2019, South Africa downgraded its relations with the Tel Aviv regime in reaction to its deadly atrocities against the people of Gaza. The move saw Pretoria demoting its diplomatic mission in the occupied territories into a liaison office with limited functionality, returning its ambassador, and refusing to send the envoy back for four months.
In February, South African Foreign Minister Naledi Pandor expressed hope for a "direct action" against the regime in Tel Aviv for its "well-documented apartheid practices."
Also last month, South Africa’s governing African National Congress party welcomed the "encouraging" expulsion of a senior ‘Israeli’ diplomat from the African Union [AU] summit in Addis Ababa.
The incident saw an ‘Israeli’ observer delegation at the African Union summit in the Ethiopian capital being expelled from the opening ceremony after representatives from South Africa and Algeria reportedly objected to the presence of diplomats from the apartheid Tel Aviv regime in the event.
The Zionist regime showed a fiery reaction to the incident that has gone viral across social media showing security guards approaching the ‘Israeli’ delegates and escorting them out after several minutes of argument.
The African Union later announced that the ‘Israeli’ observer status at the 55-nation bloc had been suspended, adding that the regime had not been invited to the union's summit from which its delegation was kicked out.