JERUSALEM: The Palestinian Authority on Friday welcomed remarks by a former head of the Zionist entity’s Mossad spy agency qualifying the legal situation in the occupied West Bank as "apartheid”, but Zionists denounced the comments. Tamir Pardo, who led Mossad from 2011 to 2016, told US news agency the Associated Press that "there is an apartheid state here”, referring to the Palestinian territory the Zionists have occupied since 1967. "In a territory where two people are judged under two legal systems, that is an apartheid state,” he said in the interview published on Wednesday.

Ahmed Al-Deek, a top Palestinian Authority official, said Pardo was among an "increasing number of Zionist officials” expressing such a view. "We hope that this marks the beginning of an awakening in Zionist society to support the rights of the Palestinian people and to pressure the Zionist government to end its occupation of Palestinian land,” Deek said in a statement. In 2021, US-based group Human Rights Watch (HRW) joined some Palestinian and Zionist NGOs in adopting the term "apartheid” to describe Zionist policies towards Palestinians and the country’s Arab minority.

A year later, Amnesty International followed suit with a report on the subject which was promptly condemned as "lies” by Yair Lapid, then foreign minister and now opposition leader. Pardo’s interview comes as the current hard-right government advances controversial judicial reforms which the former Mossad chief has publicly opposed. He joined several Zionist officials and diplomats who have expressed concerns that the occupation risked becoming an apartheid state, but Pardo went further than most of them.

JERUSALEM: In this file photo, then Mossad director Tamir Pardo arrives for the weekly cabinet meeting at the Israeli prime minister's office in Jerusalem on February 22, 2015. -- AFP photos

‘Shame’

The comments drew condemnation in the entity, where Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s Likud party dubbed them "shameful and false”. "Hospitals in (the Zionist entity) treat Jews and Arabs, Zionists and Palestinians in the same way. Arabs and Jews study and work together in (the Zionist entity),” the right-wing party said in a statement. "Pardo, shame on you.” In a joint statement, senior officers from the occupation’s army, police and other security services said the remarks were "pitiful and baseless”. "Pardo’s allegations are detached from reality” and "a vile defamation of (Zionist entity) and its security forces”, the statement said.

His remarks were "based on personal political views”, the officers argued. The West Bank, excluding annexed east Jerusalem which the Zionists also seized in the Six-Day War of 1967, is home to some 490,000 Zionists who reside in settlements deemed illegal under international law. About 2.9 million Palestinians live in the territory. Netanyahu’s administration, a coalition between his Likud party and extreme-right and ultra-Orthodox Jewish allies, favors settlement expansion, and some of its members advocate annexation of the West Bank.

Human rights groups regularly denounce restrictions imposed by Zionists on Palestinians’ freedom of movement and discrimination faced by the Arab minority. HRW said in its 2021 report that "(the occupation’s authorities) are committing the crimes against humanity of apartheid and persecution” through "systematic oppression and inhumane acts”.

It described a "government policy ... to maintain the domination by Jewish Zionists over Palestinians across ... the occupied territory”. Zionists firmly rejected those allegations and accused the group of bias. The apartheid regime in South Africa, which ended in the early 1990s, classified and segregated inhabitants by ethnicity and imposed harsh restrictions on the non-white majority. South Africa’s ruling ANC party has previously compared Zionists to an "apartheid state”. – AFP