MK Lipman: Swedish FM answering difficult questions in a public setting is huge diplomatic success.
Swedish opposition MPs said Tuesday evening that they would call the country’s foreign minister, Margot Wallström, to a mandatory parliamentary debate regarding incitement to violence emanating from the Palestinian Authority, as well as rising concerns over foreign aid given to the PA.
They stated this during a meeting at the Swedish parliament in Stockholm initiated by MP Mikael Oscarsson of the Christian Democrats.
It came at the urging of the World Zionist Organization and former MK Dov Lipman, the WZO’s director of public diplomacy in the office of the vice chairman, along with the Israel Allies Foundation and the Zionist Federation of Sweden.
Wallström has made several contentious comments about Israel in recent months, linking Islamic radicalization in Europe to the Israel-Palestinian conflict after the Paris terror attacks in November 2015, and again earlier this month, alleging that Israeli security forces have carried out extra-judicial killings of Palestinian assailants in the recent wave of violence.
Seven Swedish MPs from four parties attended the meeting.
They were addressed by Itamar Marcus, director of the Palestinian Media Watch organization, who highlighted in particular recent comments made by Jibril Rajoub, deputy secretary of the Fatah Central Committee, where Rajoub expressed support and encouragement for Palestinian violence against Israelis.
“I say that whoever carried out individual acts of heroism, we in the Fatah movement bless and encourage them. We consider them heroes and a crown on the head of every Palestinian,” Rajoub said on January 2 in reference to the wave of knife attacks, car rammings and other forms of terrorism carried out in recent months against Israelis.
The MPs were also shown examples of incitement from other PA officials, as well as incitement from PA-controlled media and social media accounts.
MP Margareta Cederfeldt (Moderate Party) said that “the incitement in the Palestinian schools is appalling and shocking,” while Oscarsson was similarly disturbed.
“We must check where the funding that we send to the PA is going. We cannot support incitement to terror,” he said.
“We will call Foreign Minister Wallström to the plenum and force her to answer the evidence of incitement that we just saw.”
Marcus called for the Swedish parliament to sanction Rajoub for his encouragement of violence against Israeli civilians.
“There have to be political ramifications to calls for murder by senior PA and Fatah officials,” he told the lawmakers.
“Especially since Rajoub said that the PA is watching to see the international community’s response to its killing of Israelis, to be silent now following these statements by Rajoub is perceived by the PA as a green light to murder, and is facilitating murder,” Marcus went on. “Sweden, along with all European countries, has a moral obligation to distance itself from Rajoub in a clear and politically meaningful way, including prohibiting his entry into Sweden, as they would to any other open promoter of murder.”
The Swedish MPs are also seeking to advance a resolution raised in parliament to censure Rajoub for his comments, to ban him from Sweden until he retracts them, and to condemn the Fatah party.
“The Swedish MPs literally gasped as they realized that Swedish funding was going to the PA, which is inciting terror and murder. They have been motivated to take action, and that was our number one goal,” Lipman told The Jerusalem Post following the meeting in Stockholm.
“The fact that Foreign Minister Wallström will have to answer these difficult questions in a public setting is a huge diplomatic success,” he continued. “We can never allow lies and misrepresentation and facts to run wild.
We must confront lies head on and continue to go anywhere, anytime to present the facts regarding the true impediments to peace.”
As reported by The Jerusalem Post