The anti-Israel crowd's favorite British law
After years of seeing Israeli heroes charged under a misguided and easily exploited British law, U.K. politicians are finally wising up
Israel's Doron Almog is a true hero of democracy and human rights — and yet, a British law cynically exploited by pro-Palestinian activists almost led to his arrest.
In 1976, the Israeli Defense Forces hero dropped onto the runway at Uganda's Entebbe airport, pathmarking the way for the Israeli commandos who rescued 256 hostages aboard a hijacked Air France jetliner. Almog was an officer on the airlift that rescued 6,000 Falasha Jews from Ethiopia in the 1980s. As head of Israel's southern command from 2000-2003, he defeated every attempt by terrorists to infiltrate Israel from Gaza. Almog lost five members of his family to a suicide bomber in Haifa in 2003. After the death of his own mentally handicapped son, he founded a charity to provide services to the severely disabled in southern Israel.
In the fall of 2005, Almog visited the United Kingdom on a fundraising mission for his charity. On landing, he was informed that British police officers were waiting to arrest him. A pro-Palestinian British lawyer had sworn out a complaint against Almog for his anti-terrorist work in Gaza. Under British law, any foreign visitor to Britain can be accused of human rights violations by any private person in Britain, and brought before a British court to answer for actions taken anywhere on Earth.
Almog remained on the plane, and returned to Israel without disembarking. He was the first Israeli to be attacked in British court in this way, but not the last. In the years since 2005, pro-Palestinian activists have repeatedly attempted to use British law as a weapon against Israelis, most recently against former foreign minister Tzipi Livni in December 2009.
The Livni case embarrassed the British government, as well it should.









































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