It is irresponsible for PETA to applaud any action by the Israeli government, considering Israel’s brutal legacy of violence towards Palestine’s environment and the animals it sustains.
[Article originally appeared on MiddleEastMonitor.com]
Gaza zoo after Israeli bombing...
People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) praised Israel
last week for being the first country to ban the sale of animal
furs. Such legislation is worthy of praise, of course, but in the
case of Israel any praise, especially regarding its ethics towards
animals, is completely misplaced.
Throughout the country’s short history, Israel has repeatedly
exposed its worrying position on environmental justice with its
state-protected environmental terrorism and deliberate military
attacks on animals. The military offensive against the Gaza Strip in
2008-2009, for example, killed hundreds of Palestinians, as well as
many animals, particularly those sheltered at the Gaza Zoo.
“This camel was pregnant, a missile went into her back,” Gaza
zookeeper Emad Jameel Qasim told Gulf News at the time. “Look, look
at her face. She was in pain when she died.”
According to Qasim, when Israeli soldiers entered the zoo, they made
their way to the lion enclosures and shot the animals at point-blank
range. Monkeys nearby tried to flee. Some were shot inside their
enclosures, while others attempted to hide in clay pots and adjacent
offices, only to be hunted down and killed in the most brutal of
ways at the hands of the “world’s most moral army”. Many of the
animals that weren’t killed by Israeli bullets starved to death
because the people taking care of them were trapped in their own
homes due to the Israeli bombardment.
Rather than a condemnation of Israel’s attacks on all living beings
in Gaza, less than a month later PETA took it upon itself to come up
with a solution to the so-called “Israeli-Palestinian conflict”. The
campaign group appealed to the Israeli Defence Ministry to install a
“pro-vegetarian mural” on both sides of Israel’s apartheid wall and
barriers in the West Bank and Gaza adorned with the phrases “Give
Peas a Chance” and “Nonviolence Begins on Your Plate: Go
Vegetarian”. PETA has made it perfectly clear through statements
such as these that, like the lives of the people of Palestine, the
lives of Palestinian animals are not worthy of mention.
Unfortunately, 2008/9 was not the only time that Israel has attacked
Gaza Zoo. In 2014, during the occupation state’s so-called
“Operation Protective Edge”, Israeli forces bombarded the zoo again,
killing more than 80 animals. A number of the zoo’s lions had to be
taken elsewhere to recover from the trauma they suffered, a
privilege that no Palestinian human beings are afforded.
During that same assault on the Gaza Strip, Palestinian farmers were
devastated by the bombing of their agricultural land and livestock.
Ali Alommor, a Palestinian farmer in Gaza explained to Middle East
Eye that his donkeys were vital for his livelihood and that of his
family. However, the Israeli offensive left his donkeys “riddled
with bullets” and one looking like it had been run over by a tracked
vehicle, such as a tank or armoured bulldozer, as it tried to flee.
Another farmer, Sami Abu Hadaeid, had to flee from the bombing,
leaving his beloved sheep behind. All 30 of the animals were killed
before he could return. They were either shot and decapitated by
soldiers or were crushed underneath the rubble of their shelters.
Israeli tanks also killed more than 500 cows that supplied many
Palestinians with milk, supporting the livelihoods of sixty
families. Similarly, in 2017 an Israeli F-16 aircraft fired a
missile at a chicken farm in Gaza. The roofs of the enclosures
collapsed, killing hundreds of the birds.
Israel’s lack of humanity and concern for Palestinian life has
always been extended to include the local environment, livestock,
and crops. Whether that be the state-protected illegal settler arson
attacks on Palestinian olive groves, toxic waste dumping in the West
Bank, or the destruction of Gaza’s water treatment infrastructure
leading to the dangerous pollution of the Mediterranean Sea, the
Israeli regime has remained consistent in its positions towards
Palestine’s people, animals, and wildlife habitats.
At the very least, it is irresponsible for PETA to applaud any
action by the Israeli government, considering Israel’s brutal legacy
of violence towards Palestine’s environment and the animals it
sustains. The activists within the organisation would be better off
campaigning for animal rights in the territory occupied and
controlled by the colonial state. Anything less diminishes their
credibility.
Please also read FYI: Critics of conditions in Gaza Zoo expose the value placed on Palestinian lives