{Originally posted to the Tower Magazine website}
Omar Barghouti, a co-founder of the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions movement and the Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel, is suspected of evading taxes on some $700,000 that he earned between 2007 to 2017 while serving as the director of the Ramallah-based National Computing Resources, which markets and rents ATMs and other technology within the Palestinian Authority.
Barghouti, who resides in the Israeli city of Acre, deposited the money in a Ramallah bank account to hide it from tax authorities, according to the charges. He is also believed to have deposited income from a global speaking tour and book royalties in a bank account in the United States, which was similarly hidden from authorities.
Police say that credit cards and transaction records found at his house support their suspicions.
While Barghouti was released on bail after being interrogated by authorities in Haifa, he is currently subject to a travel ban. His defense attorney is asking for leniency in application of the ban, as Barghouti is scheduled to go abroad twice in April, including once to receive a prize for his work with the BDS campaign by the organization Promoting Enduring Peace.
Barghouti, a Qatari-born Palestinian, is married to an Arab-Israeli woman and holds Israeli permanent residency status. He earned a degree in philosophy at Tel Aviv University.
The BDS campaign, which Barghouti helped launch in 2005, attempts to delegitimize and isolate Israel in an effort to advance Palestinian interests. Many leaders of the campaign have publicly affirmed that they seek Israel’s destruction, with Barghouti saying in 2004, “We are witnessing the rapid demise of Zionism, and nothing can be done to save it … I, for one, support euthanasia.” He also said in 2014 that Palestinians have a right to “resistance by any means, including armed resistance.”
Leading BDS activist As’ad Abu Khalil similarly acknowledged in 2012 that “the real aim of BDS is to bring down the state of Israel.”
Efforts to boycott Israel have been denounced by top Western leaders, including former President Barack Obama, former secretary of state and Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, and the administration of President Donald Trump. German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s political party, the Christian Democratic Union, passed a resolution in December stating that the party “declares with this motion its disapproval and rejection of every form of BDS activity and condemns these activities as anti-Semitic.” Days later, British Prime Minister Theresa May called Israel “a thriving democracy,” and stressed, “the boycotts, divestment and sanctions movement is wrong, it is unacceptable, and this party and this government will have no truck with those who subscribe to it.”
France’s highest court ruled in October 2015 that BDS is a form of hate speech and its campaigners can be prosecuted for “inciting hate or discrimination.”
Earlier that month, over 150 British artists, including Harry Potter author J. K. Rowling, Booker Prize winner Hilary Mantel, and renowned historian Simon Schama, signed a public letter calling cultural boycotts of Israel “divisive and discriminatory.”