Report finds discrimination against Israeli Arabs
3 July 1997
JERUSALEM (AP) Discrimination against Israeli Arabs has increased in the past year, an Israeli civil liberties group said Tuesday, citing unfair hiring practices and discrepancies in government funding.The gap between Israel's Jewish and Arab communities has grown since Benjamin Netanyahu was elected prime minister, said Uri Shavit, director of the Association for Civil Rights in Israel.
The group cited preferential services and government funding given to Jewish communities by the interior and housing ministries, both headed by members of Jewish religious parties.
Israeli Arab communities, by contrast, are treated by government ministries "as an obstacle to be circumvented," it said in its annual report.
Some Education Ministry grants are earmarked only for army veterans, the report said, making most Arabs ineligible because they are not drafted into Israel's army.
Some private employers also demand military service, the civil rights group said, citing an ice cream store that advertised for staff with an army record. "The criterion of army service is cynically used to prevent Arabs being accepted for jobs," it said.
The report by the organization of volunteer lawyers said such messages feed bigotry among Israeli youth. It cited a government study several months ago that found two-thirds of Jewish high school students opposed equal rights for Arabs.
More than a sixth of Israel's 5.8 million citizens are Arabs, and about 95 percent of Arab voters supported Netanyahu's opponent Shimon Peres in the May 1996 election.
The report also had harsh words for Israel's treatment of Palestinians.
It said the Shin Bet security agency still uses "violent and degrading interrogation techniques" against Palestinians, such as tying them in painful positions and sleep deprivation.
The association also criticized a bill that would prevent Palestinians from seeking compensation from the state for damages in the 1987-93 uprising against Israeli occupation in the West Bank and Gaza Strip.
Still, it found some improvements. Shavit pointed to a loosening of Israel's closure of the West Bank and Gaza, which allows thousands of Palestinian laborers to return to jobs in the Jewish state.
(c) Copyright 1997 The Associated Press.