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Is Dubai helping ethnic cleansing in Palestine?

Is Dubai helping ethnic cleansing in Palestine?

The government of recently allowed a major bankroller of Jewish settlement expansion in the West Bank to open at least two Jewelry stores in the Gulf emirate.

Is Dubai helping ethnic cleansing in Palestine?According to reliable sources in the United Arab Emirates, of which Dubai is a key member-state, Israeli billionaire and diamond magnate Lev is preparing to open two large jewelry stores in Dubai, a world’s hub of Jewelry trading.

The first store will be opened soon at the Burj Dubai Mall (Dubai Mall Tower) while a second store is slated to be opened later this year in the new Atlantis Hotel on the Jumeirah Palm Island.
Leviev has already opened one store in Dubai in March, 2008, in the lobby of al-Qasr Hotel on Madinat Jumeirah.
The Dubai authorities were initially reluctant to grant the Israeli billionaire a license to do business in the oil-rich emirate. However, Leviev reportedly successfully lobbied “North American and European connections” to convince Dubai officials to reconsider their objections.

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Leviev’s companies, including Africa- and Leader Management & Development as well as several other subsidiaries, have been quite active in displacing Palestinian villagers from their homes and land in several parts of the West Bank.

The two firms have built hundreds of settler units in at least five Jewish settlements constructed on land illegally seized from its Arab proprietors.

In recent years, a company called Leader belonging to Leviev built the settlement of Zufim on private Arab land seized from the village of Jayyous. Danya Cebus, a subsidiary of the Leviev-owned company Africa-Israel has built hundreds of settler units on land stolen from the village of Bilin. Numerous additional settler units were built in the two large settlements of Ma’ali Adomim, a few kilometers east of Jerusalem, and Har Homa, near the predominantly Christian Arab town of Beit Sahur.

Israel hopes that these settlements will cut off East Jerusalem from the rest of the West Bank, thus making the Palestinian dream of making the city the future capital of a prospective Palestinian state utterly unrealistic and outright impossible.

In addition to his intensive involvement in Jewish settlement expansion, including colonies defined by the inherently unjust Israeli justice system as “manifestly illegal,” Leviev has donated undisclosed but reportedly large sums of money to the Land Redemption Fund, a land-grabbing organization affiliated with Gush Emunim, the ideological group behind Jewish settlement activities in the West Bank.

According to the Israeli newspaper, Yediot Aharonot, the Land Redemption Fund uses fraud and strong-arm tactics to seize land from Palestinians for settlement expansion.

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Last year the Israeli group, Peace Now, and other settlement-watch groups, discovered that hundreds of settler units built in the settlement of Matityahu in the Salfit region, in the central West Bank, were actually built on private Palestinian land seized at gun point from its legal and rightful Palestinian owners.
However, despite the discovery, the Israeli government refused to dismantle the illegal settler units, with one Israeli official saying that “this problem will be discussed with the Palestinian Authority in the context of final-status talks.”

Leviev’s companies are actually destroying the lives of thousands of Palestinians by narrowing their horizons and dispossessing them of their livelihoods.

Abdullah Abu Rahma from the village of Bilin and Sharif Omar from Jayyous told representative of the human rights group Adalah-NY (www.adalahny.org), which monitors Israeli theft Palestinian land, that “Leviev’s companies are destroying the olive groves and farms that have sustained our villages for centuries.”

We call on people of conscience all over the world to impose broad boycotts and implement divestment initiatives against Israel similar to those applied against apartheid South Africa.”

The mayor of Jayyous, which suffered incalculable losses due to Leviev’s destructive rampage in the northern West Bank, told this reporter that “Leveiv is indulging in ethnic cleansing against our community and our farmers.”

He is building settlements at our expense; he is destroying our land, our farms, and our orchards, and at the same time he is opening business in Dubai in order to finance his crimes against our people. Shame on Dubai and its government.”

Some Jewish organizations opposed to the Israeli policy of ethnic cleansing and apartheid have also called on the countries of the world to boycott Israeli businesses and firms involved in dispossessing Palestinians of their land.
We call on the government and people of the United Arab Emirates to join the growing international campaign to boycott ’s companies due to their construction of Israeli colonial settlements,” declared Daniel Lang-Levitsky of Jews Against the Occupation-NYC.

A major Israeli violator of Palestinian rights and international law should not be opening jewelry stores in Dubai,” said Issa Ayoub, a spokesperson for the Adalah-NY group. Adalah-NY organized eight boycott protests outside Leviev’s new Madison Avenue Jewelry store in New York City over the last five months.

The Palestinian Authority has refused to comment on the Dubai government decision to allow the settler bankroller Leviev to open business ventures in the oil-rich emirate.

One Palestinian official contacted by telephone said “I don’t know anything about this affair and I have not heard of Leviev.”

A Hamas official in the Gaza Strip said “the Palestinian people were feeling embittered and betrayed by this scandalous behavior on the part of the Dubai government.”

We were hoping that Dubai would stand with us against the genocidal Israeli regime and its unrelenting efforts to ethnically cleanse our people from their ancestral homeland. We had never imagined that a day would come when we had to appeal to an Arab country to refrain from harming us and undermining our cause.”

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Is Dubai helping ethnic cleansing in Palestine?
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About Khalid Amayreh

Khalid Amayreh a journalist based in the Occupied Palestinian town of Dura. He obtained his MA in journalism from the University of Southern Illinois in 1983.

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12 Responses to Is Dubai helping ethnic cleansing in Palestine?

  1. kimmy 04/24/2008 at 6:49 am #

    I am getting sick of the Zionists whining about “terrorists” when their own people are the terrorists.
    I have a problem with other Arab countries dealing with Israel.
    There is no mention of Palestein.
    WTF?

  2. Christie 04/24/2008 at 4:56 pm #

    I guess there is too much hatred on both sides. Check out my comments on the Palestinian issue at http://www.sa4877.blogspot.com

  3. kimmy 04/27/2008 at 3:12 am #

    Christie,
    Give me a good reason to check out these comments.
    In 1948, the Palestinians were driven out.
    Ever since then the occupation has grown with the support of the US.
    Some Israelis and Zionist are disagreeing.
    http://www.seruv.org.il/english/default.asp
    Read that.

  4. Ali 04/27/2008 at 10:00 am #

    Unfortunately Dubai is so overwhelmed with capitalisim and its industrial revolution that it’s loosing its identity. People are obssesed with malls, brandnames that it became a huge mall that needs a huge cieling only.

  5. The Fanonite 04/29/2008 at 4:00 am #

    I guess there is too much hatred on both sides. Check out my comments on the Palestinian issue at http://www.sa4877.blogspot.com

    Who gives a rat’s ass about your comments, when evidently you can’t even make the fundamental distinction between the oppressor and the oppressed. ‘Both sides’ is not fairness, it is complicity. If you saw someone with their feet on another’s neck who is down on the floor, would you be speaking about the hatred of ‘both’? Or has no one ever taught you how to distinguish between cause and effect?

    Haitham:

    Having lived in Dubai, I wouldn’t be surprised in the least if this turned into a trendy shopping spot for that execrable noveau riche culture. In 2004 I had seen people step on each other’s heads to have their photos taken with Madeleine ‘worth it’ Albright. More recently, Blair was receiving royal treatment in Abu Dhabi, pocketing a handsome checque delivering his insufferable banalities. But the incident that really crystallized the contempt that I have for the place is the following:
    http://fanonite.org/2007/05/30/gulf-arabs-sowing-catastrophe-reaping-tragedy/

  6. angus 04/30/2008 at 9:58 am #

    Israeli jeweller has no trade licence to open shop in Dubai
    http://www.gulfnews.com/nation/General/10209492.html

    Israeli jeweller has no trade licence to open shop in Dubai
    By Abbas Al Lawati, Staff Reporter
    Published: April 30, 2008, 00:14
    Dubai: No trade licence has been granted to open Israeli jewellery store Leviev in Dubai contrary to claims by Leviev and its agent in Dubai, said a top official at the Department of Economic Development.

    “We are aware of these reports and have not granted a trade licence to any business of this name. If such an application does come to us we will deal with it accordingly,” Ali Ebrahim, Deputy Director General for Executive Affairs in Dubai, told Gulf News.

    Israeli diamond magnate Lev Leviev’s self-titled diamond boutique recently issued a press release announcing plans to open two stores in Dubai through its Moroccan-Palestinian agent Arif Bin Khadra.

    Lev, an Uzbek-Israeli, is accused of profiteering from building Jewish colonies on occupied Palestinian land, illegal under international law.

    Ebrahim said Israeli citizens were not allowed to operate in Dubai, adding that “precautionary measures” are taken to ensure that they do not. He added that Israeli businesses would be prevented from operating in Dubai through non-Israeli partners.

    “There are no loopholes,” he said. “We check backgrounds of businesses that apply”.

    Jewish and Palestinian advocacy groups have been campaigning against Leviev’s alleged plans to open in Dubai.

    Jewish colony activities

    Eisa Mikel, a spokesperson for The Coalition for Justice in the Middle East (Adalah), a Jewish-Palestinian advocacy group leading the campaign against Leviev, told Gulf News that Lev Leviev profits directly from the building of colonies on Palestinian land in the West Bank, where his companies are active in at least four colonies.

    Dania Cebus, a subsidiary of Lev’s Africa-Israel Investments, is alleged to be involved in the construction of the colony of Har Homa between occupied Jerusalem and Bethlehem, Ma’ale Adumin, which surrounds occupied East Jerusalem, Zufim, built on the village of Jayyous, and Ariel, built in 1978 on a number of former Palestinian villages.

    Adalah and New York-based Jews Against the Occupation issued a statement calling for the UAE to “join the growing international campaign to boycott Lev Leviev’s companies due to their construction of Israeli colonies”.

    Mikel said the momentum against Leviev has been growing, citing a letter Adalah received from charity organisation Oxfam recently in which the group distanced itself from the Israeli businessman following media reports of donations made to the group by Lev.

    Gulf News’ requests for an interview with a Leviev representative were unanswered by the time of going to print, but according to the Leviev press release, the boutiques will open in Dubai Mall and the Atlantis Hotel in Palm Jumeirah this year.

    The Emaar Malls Group, which is developing the Dubai Mall, would not comment on the issue but a spokesperson from the Atlantis Hotel confirmed to Gulf News that the lobby of the hotel will include a Leviev boutique.

    Leviev’s agent, Bin Khadra, first brought Leviev diamonds to the UAE in March this year with the opening of his store Levant Jewellery in the Mina Al Salam hotel. He told Gulf News that the franchise in the Dubai Mall and the Atlantis Hotel would be wholly owned by him.

    Asked if he was aware of the activities of Lev Leviev’s companies in the West Bank, Bin Khadra said that he had heard of Leviev’s practices in the West Bank but had seen no proof of the allegations, adding that they were not a major concern because “such questions are not asked in the diamond business”.

    Dubai, he said, was an apolitical and international city that needed global brands such as Leviev. “What we have learned here is that you don’t have to talk about politics or religion if you’re doing business,” he said.

    Bin Khadra added that he knows of other major Dubai-based jewellers who were interested in bringing Leviev to the UAE. “If we hadn’t brought Leviev, someone else would have”.

    Lev Leviev’s activities in one colony in particular have raised concerns from Palestinian activists. Ma’ale Adumin is the largest and most controversial of Israel’s 126 colonies in the West Bank.

    The strategic colony of 33,000 Jewish residents has expanded deep into the occupied territory, in effect splitting the northern and southern West Bank into half, and encircling occupied East Jerusalem, which the Palestinians want as the capital of their future state.

    Israel’s hold on and continuing expansion of Ma’ale Adumin is often cited by its critics as proof of the lack of a serious commitment to a settlement to the conflict on Israel’s part.

    Ardent Zionist

    Mikel noted that Lev’s activities in the colonies are driven by his ideological leanings.

    Said to be an ardent Zionist, Lev told an Israeli paper recently that the status of occupied Jerusalem was non-negotiable.

    “For me, Israel, [occupied] Jerusalem and Haifa are all the same. So are the [Syrian] Golan Heights,” he told the paper. “To decide the future of [occupied] Jerusalem? It belongs to the Jewish people. What is there to decide? [occupied] Jerusalem is not a topic for discussion.”

    We are aware of these reports and have not granted a trade licence to any business of this name. If such an application does come to us we will deal with it accordingly.”

  7. Blog reader 05/02/2008 at 10:12 pm #

    Dubai begins to comply with calls to boycott settlement financier
    http://electronicintifada.net/v2/article9500.shtml

  8. mary 05/06/2008 at 2:56 pm #

    http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/942837.html

    This is this horrible person’s new house in London. And the people in Gaza are barely existing without fuel, food, water, power and sewage treatment.

  9. angus 05/08/2008 at 7:14 am #

    http://www.thejewishweek.com/viewArticle/c36_a9372/News/New_York.html

    Protesting Leviev, From Here To Dubai

    N.Y.-based Arab-Jewish group claims credit for UAE snub of diamond
    merchant; Leviev spokesman says stores will open under his name.

    Leviev already operates two jewelry stores in Dubai under the name
    “Levant” through a Moroccan-Palestinian agent Arif Bin Khadra.

    by Walter Ruby
    Special To The Jewish Week

    Israeli diamond producer and retailer Lev Leviev’s penchant for
    flamboyantly branding his posh jewelery stores with his own name
    appears to have gotten him into trouble again – this time with the
    government of the glittery Arabian emirate of Dubai.

    Leviev has been under siege from pro-Palestinian protestors who have
    been picketing his posh diamond shops on Madison Avenue and London
    for months. They are protesting the fact that subsidiary firms of
    Leviev’s company Africa-Israel have been constructing Jewish
    settlements in the West Bank.

    The diamond producer suffered a new setback last week when a
    high-ranking Dubai official last week stated that his opulent
    city-state in the United Arab Emirates will not grant the
    Uzbekistan-born magnate a trade license to open two new stores there

    - at least not under the name “Leviev.”

    But a Leviev spokesman insisted the 51-year-old billionaire will get
    his way in the end and open “Leviev” stores in Dubai to add to those
    already in existence in New York, London and Moscow.
    Responding to a recent announcement by Leviev that he plans to open
    new stores this fall in Dubai, Ali Ebrahim, deputy director general
    for executive affairs in Dubai, said: “We are aware of these reports
    and have not granted a trade license to any business of this name. If
    such an application does come to us, we will deal with it
    accordingly.”

    According to Leviev, one of the new stores is slated for the Dubai
    Mall, soon to be the world’s tallest building; the other is slated
    for the Atlantis Hotel, on a recently constructed artificial island.

    Ebrahim said Israeli citizens are not permitted to operate businesses
    in Dubai. He added that such citizens would also be prevented from
    operating through local partners, even though Leviev already operates
    two jewellery stores in Dubai under the name “Levant” through a
    Moroccan-Palestinian agent Arif Bin Khadra. According to media
    reports, Israeli diamond traders have operated openly in Dubai for
    years.

    Ebrahim made his comments after Adalah-NY, a pro-Palestinian group
    here that has been holding anti-Leviev demonstrations since last
    November outside the magnate’s diamond shop on Madison Avenue,
    strenuously protested to the Dubai government over Leviev’s plans to
    open new diamond stores there.

    Yet on May 4, Leviev spokesman Justin Blake told The Jewish Week
    that, Ebrahim’s comments to the contrary, Leviev remains committed to
    his goals for Dubai.

    “The stores will be opening in Dubai under the Leviev name as
    planned,” Blake said, declining to respond to questions as to how
    Leviev will manage to open his stores in Dubai despite the stated
    refusal of the authories there to allow him to do so.

    Before Blake made his comments, observers in Dubai speculated that
    Leviev, acting through Bin Khadra, would ultimately agree to open his
    new stores there under the name “Levant” rather than his own name.

    Yet Blake’s remarks indicate that Leviev may be planning to fight
    Dubai’s decision not to allow him to brand the stores with his own
    name, and will likely press the U.S. government to apply pressure on
    Dubai to reverse its decision. Leviev has previously asserted that
    attacks on his business activities by Adalah-NY and other groups are
    “politically motivated” or impelled by anti-Semitism.

    Ethan Heitner, a spokesman for Adalah-NY, which is composed almost
    equally of Arabs and anti-Zionist Jews, claimed primary credit for
    Dubai’s reversal of its earlier apparent willingness to allow Leviev
    to open his stores there. “Working in conjunction with activists in
    Dubai and Palestine, Adalah-NY sent out a press release calling for
    Dubai to boycott Leviev on the basis of his violations of
    international humanitarian law. … We’ve heard reports of UAE
    papers and officials receiving our press release from multiple
    sources and angry phone calls.”

    Heitner said that even if Leviev ultimately succeeds in opening his
    new stores in Dubai under the “Levant” name, Adalah-NY will still
    have achieved a moral victory. “Before our boycott call … Leviev
    was proudly planning to open an eponymous flagship boutique in the
    tallest building in the world – a grand symbolic achievement for a
    titan of global capitalism. Now, that’s not going to happen.”

    Lev Leviev appears to believe otherwise.

  10. MK 01/10/2009 at 10:37 pm #

    STOP buying products with UPC code starting with 729. 729 = made in israel

Trackbacks/Pingbacks

  1. Haitham Sabbah - 04/21/2008

    Is Dubai helping ethnic cleansing in Palestine?: The government of Dubai recently allowed a major bankroll.. http://tinyurl.com/5t9d35

  2. Islamify.com - 04/24/2008

    Is Dubai helping ethnic cleansing in Palestine?…

    “The government of Dubai recently allowed a major bankroller of Jewish settlement expansion in the West Bank to open at least two Jewelry stores in the Gulf emirate”…