Barcelona has suspended official ties with Israel over its violation of Palestinian rights. Barcelona mayor Ada Colau announced on February 8: 鈥淚 have decided to temporarily suspend relations with the state of Israel and with the official institutions of that state 鈥 including the twinning agreements with the Tel Aviv City Council 鈥 until the Israeli authorities put an end to the system of violations of the Palestinian people 鈥 We cannot be silent.鈥
The Barcelona-Tel Aviv agreement was originally signed in 1998 in the context of the already moribund Oslo Peace Accords and included a twinning arrangement between Barcelona and Gaza.
Given the pathological sensitivity of the Zionist state to criticism and campaigns against its apartheid rule over the Palestinian people, even in quieter times this decision would have had an explosive impact.
However, coming as it does in the run-up to the May 28 election for Barcelona Council, Colau鈥檚 move has guaranteed that the Israel-Palestine conflict will now become an important factor in the contest, and in Spanish politics.
Critical decisions await the council. Should it try to reverse Colau鈥檚 decision and restore ties with a state condemned by the United Nations and Amnesty International for systematic violations of human rights?
Will major Catalan parties, like the Party of Socialists of Catalonia (PSC) and the governing Republican Left of Catalonia (ERC) 鈥 that last year helped carry a Catalan parliament resolution describing Israel as an apartheid state 鈥 now run for cover when asked to act against it?
Early polling for the election shows a four-way struggle between Colau鈥檚 Barcelona Together (BeC), the PSC (her partner in the council administration) and the two pro-independence parties, the ERC and Junts (Together).
The last three forces reacted immediately to Colau鈥檚 decision, which was not voted on by the council, but implemented by mayoral decree.
She made the move at a press conference with representatives of the petition campaign 鈥淏arcelona with Apartheid NO, Barcelona with Human Rights YES鈥. The campaign was initiated by the , enjoying the support of all of Catalonia鈥檚 trade union peak bodies and 100 civil associations.
鈥楳颈蝉迟补办别苍鈥
Former PSC deputy-mayor Jaume Collboni, who had recently resigned from the position to concentrate on his election campaign, rushed into print the following day in : 鈥淏arcelona does not destroy bridges, and shouldn鈥檛 break with anyone. On the contrary, I commit myself to restoring the agreement with Tel Aviv. Our Israeli sister city is today a diverse, open, tolerant and progressive capital.鈥
Collboni was forgetful: in May last year, in response to the Russian invasion of Ukraine, Barcelona Council temporarily 鈥渄estroyed bridges鈥 with Saint Petersburg.
Junts mayoral candidate Xavier Trias sent Tel Aviv mayor Ron Huldai a letter expressing his 鈥減rofound discomfort鈥 with Colau鈥檚 decision, dubbed as 鈥渕istaken, electoralist and undemocratic鈥 and 鈥渘ot reflective of the majority attitude of the people of Barcelona and Catalunya鈥. He promised to 鈥渘ormalise鈥 relations with Tel Aviv.
The ERC, which is in competition with BeC for the Barcelona progressive vote, avoided criticising a decision that will be popular with many left-minded people and concentrated its fire on Colau鈥檚 鈥渦nilateral鈥 decision-making.
It also pointed out that the petition of the campaign to suspend ties with Israel did not call for a mayoral decree, but for a decision by the whole council, and that the 3750 signatures needed had been gathered and a date for discussion set.
After some days of silence from the ERC-run Catalan government, foreign affairs minister Meritxell Serret stated that, while it 鈥渞espected the decisions of other institutions鈥 and maintained its compromise on the 鈥渧ery sensitive鈥 issue of Palestine, her government would maintain Catalonia鈥檚 long-standing relation with Israel.
Celebrations
The only political force besides the BeC that celebrated the decision was the left-independentist People鈥檚 Unity List (CUP), presently without members on the council but with prospects of returning after May 28. The CUP greeted the decision as resulting from the campaign of pressure on a supposedly reluctant Colau.
Whatever the truth of that insinuation, it would have been hard for the mayor to act otherwise, given that Barcelona Council ombudsman David Bondia Garcia had that counselled suspension of the council鈥檚 ties with Israel.
He also recommended that the human rights record of all other cities with which Barcelona is twinned be investigated.
The decree, which Israeli foreign affairs spokesperson Lior Haiat described as 鈥渞einforcement for extremists, terrorist groups and antisemites鈥, was greeted with joy by the Palestinian community in Catalonia.
Salah Jamal, a doctor and one of the founders of the community, remarked that 鈥淐olau has been brave鈥, adding that the twinning of Barcelona and Tel Aviv had achieved nothing.
He said: 鈥淚f Israel doesn鈥檛 take notice of the UN or even the USA, will it pay any attention to Xavier Trias or Ada Colau? When the Oslo Accords were signed there were 20,000 settlers on the West Bank. Now there are more than 700,000.鈥
In its media release celebrating the decision, the said: 鈥淭here have already been too many deaths so far this year and too many empty words about the two-state solution. It is time for the Catalan, Spanish and European governments to assume their responsibilities and put an end to the impunity enjoyed by Israel.
鈥淭oday, Barcelona has set an example. Let us hope that others will soon follow.鈥
For the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement, Colau鈥檚 decision recalled 鈥渢hose historic and brave councils who first imposed sanctions on South Africa鈥檚 apartheid鈥.
Counterattack
The counter-mobilisation of the pro-Zionist right followed immediately.
Isabel Ayuso, the ultra-liberal People鈥檚 Party (PP) premier of the Community of Madrid, appeared in Tel Aviv alongside Israeli President Isaac Herzog on February 13, boosting her jurisdiction as an unconditional friend of Israel and a 鈥減lace of opportunities鈥 for its foreign investment.
鈥淲e are not going to break relations with anyone, with any country, and much less with a democratic state like Israel,鈥 she said. 鈥淭his trip is on behalf of all the people of Madrid, of an open, tolerant, prosperous community that defends freedom and life above all else and does not want the decision taken unilaterally by the mayor of Barcelona to be seen outside our borders as a decision by Spain.鈥
The PP mayor of Madrid, Jos茅 Luis Mart铆nez-Almeida, rebroadcast the slander of the Israel-Spain Forum Alliance, announcing that Colau鈥檚 action 鈥渉ad an obvious antisemitic stench鈥 and that he would suggest to Tel Aviv mayor Huldai that his city twin with Madrid.
Colau replied by calling criticism of the state of Israel as 鈥渕ore than legitimate鈥 and saying her decision should not 鈥渂e considered as discrimination against the Jewish people, because its target is a government, not a people or a religion鈥.
The reaction of the right provoked a counterreaction of support, led by a initiated by the Progressive International and signed by prominent left figures from Spain and internationally.
The tensions over the issue between and within Catalonia鈥檚 parties have generated a stream of articles from Catalan sympathisers with 鈥渕oderate鈥 Zionism. For example, pro-ERC historian Joan Culla, after 鈥渆xposing鈥 Ombudsman Bondia Garcia in the February 14 as a 鈥渘otorious anti-Israeli activist鈥, dedicated the rest of his piece to 鈥渨hat about鈥 arguments: What about the twinning of Catalan towns to places in Nicaragua? What about the repression of LGBTQI people in Barcelona鈥檚 Iranian twin city of Isfahan?
According to Culla, Colau鈥檚 move was 鈥減re-electoral demagogy鈥, motivated by the need to embarrass the ERC and PSC and stem the loss of left votes to the CUP.
That鈥檚 certainly not excluded. But the effect on the Palestine struggle has been wholly positive. Gaza mayor Dr Yahya Sarray said in : 鈥淵our recent decision to stand with the people of Gaza and Palestine has sent a powerful message of solidarity and support.鈥
After Colau鈥檚 announcement, PSC deputy mayor Laia Bonet demanded that the decision be brought before the 41-seat council. At the same time the parties of the right, including Citizens 鈥 for whom Colau鈥檚 decision was 鈥渟hameful鈥 and 鈥渋deological鈥, and the PP, for whom it 鈥渟eeded hatred鈥 鈥 foreshadowed a motion to rescind it.
As the time of writing, the vote on Barcelona Council would be 10 BeC councillors in favour of endorsing the decision, 12 against (the parties of the right), with the PSC in two minds about the political cost of associating with them and ERC about that of supporting Colau.
[Dick Nichols is 91自拍论坛鈥檚 European correspondent, based in Barcelona.]