Canada’s Double Standards
by Yves Engler l Dissident Voice
Canada’s tax system currently subsidizes Israeli settlements that
Ottawa deems illegal; however, the Conservative government says there’s
nothing that can be done about it.
In June of last year, Guelph activist, Dan Maitland, emailed Foreign
Affairs Minister Lawrence Cannon concerning Canada Park, a Jewish
National Fund of Canada initiative built on land Israel occupied after
the June 1967 War. Three Palestinian villages (Beit Nuba, Imwas and
Yalu) were demolished to make way for the park.
A few weeks ago Maitland received a reply from Keith Ashfield,
Minister of National Revenue, who refused to discuss the particulars of
the case but provided “general information about registered charities
and the occupied territories.”
Ashfield wrote that “the fact that
charitable activities take place in the occupied territories is not a
barrier to acquiring or maintaining charitable status.”
This means Canadian organizations can openly fundraise for
settlements Ottawa (officially) deems illegal under international law
and get the government to pay up to a third of the cost through tax
credits for donations. To justify the government’s position, Ashfield
cited a September 2002 Federal Court of Appeal case (Canadian Magen
David Adom for Israel v. Minister of National Revenue), which reversed
the Canadian Revenue Agency’s previous position.
The exact amount is not known but it’s safe to assume that millions
of Canadian dollars make their way to Israeli settlements every year. In
1997, when it was more of a legal grey area, tax lawyer David Drache
claimed that “there are hundreds of [Canadian] organizations …
supporting organizations directly or indirectly beyond the Green Line,”
referring to the internationally-recognized armistice line between
Israel and the occupied West Bank.
In the late 1990s, Israel’s largest settler group, Yesha, raised more
than $700,000 a year in Canada. When former Israeli Prime Minister
Ariel Sharon visited in the mid-1990s, the Canadian Arab Federation’s
Jehad Aliweiwi said he “left with more than $1 million in tax-deductible
funds, with no secret as to the destination.” Through the 1990s the
Press Foundation was probably the largest known source of funds for
settlements, raising as much as $5 million annually for settlers in the
occupied West Bank town of Hebron and in the occupied Golan Heights,
which was captured from Syria in 1967.
Illegal settlements are not the only questionable activities in
Israel that Canadians subsidize through their tax system. A mid-1990s
survey found more than 300 registered Canadian charities with ties to
Israel, a relatively wealthy country. Every year Canadians send a few
hundred million dollars worth of tax-deductible donations to Israeli
universities, parks, immigration initiatives and, more controversially,
“charities” that aid the Israeli army in one way or another.
One example is Aid to Disabled Veterans of Israel or Beit Halochem
(Canada), which brings soldiers singled out as heroes by the Israeli
military on trips to Canada. Many Canadians, including the Charles R.
Bronfman Foundation, support the Libi Fund — “The Fund For Strengthening
Israel’s Defense.” In early 2008, Major Gil Chemke, a member of the
Israel’s elite search and rescue team, toured the country on behalf of
the Canadian Magen David Adom for Israel (CMDAI), which operates in the
occupied West Bank. Established to assist wounded soldiers and the
population during disasters, CMDAI has raised millions of dollars.
Chemke drummed up financial contributions for CMDAI by showing
“behind-the-scenes video footage of a rescue operation in Lebanon for a
female air crew member whose helicopter was shot down by Hizballah”
during Israel’s 2006 invasion of Lebanon.
Established in 1971, the Association for the Soldiers of Israel in
Canada (ASI) provides financial and moral support to active duty
soldiers. In 2009, ASI (Canada) — which provides tax receipts through
the Canadian Zionist Cultural Association — and El Al airlines granted a
50 percent discount on flights to Israel from Canada for families of
“lone soldiers” who join the Israeli military.
While it’s legal — and government will foot part of the bill — to
finance charities linked to a foreign army responsible for numerous war
crimes and settlements that contravene international law, Ottawa has
made it illegal for Canadians to aid a hospital operated by the elected
Hamas government.
Ottawa’s post-11 September 2001 terrorist list makes it illegal to
financially assist Hamas, the Popular Front for the Liberation of
Palestine, the al-Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigade, the Abu Nidal Organization, the
Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine-General Command, the
Palestine Liberation Front, the Palestinian Islamic Jihad and groups
associated with these organizations. Only one Israeli group, the
marginal Kahane Chai, is on the list.
On 25 December, Hamas criticized Canada for re-listing it a
“terrorist” entity. “The decision is a clear bias to Israel,” Hamas
spokesman, Fawzi Barhoum, told Xinhua. “This encourages Israel to commit
more crimes against the Palestinian people.”
Ottawa makes it difficult for Canadians to support many Palestinian
groups all the while subsidizing expansionist and militaristic Israeli
institutions. Canadians of good conscience should protest and demand
change.
Yves Engler is the author of Canada and Israel: Building Apartheid and The Black Book of Canadian Foreign Policy. For more information visit yvesengler.com. Read other articles by Yves.