Israeli actors boycott settlements

A group of Israeli actors and playwrights has refused to perform in Jewish settlements in the West Bank.

A group of Israeli actors and playwrights has refused to perform in Jewish settlements in the West Bank.

The protest comes just days before US-sponsored peace talks start over the occupied territory where Palestinians want a state.

A total of 57 theatrical personalities had signed up to the boycott by today, prompted by the planned opening in November of a state-funded theatre in Ariel, one of the biggest Jewish settlements in the West Bank.

The signatories urged managers of six major theatre companies to hold productions only within Israel proper, "Those actors among us hereby declare that they will refuse to appear in Ariel, as well as at other settlements," said the boycott petition, circulated before the start of the Israeli-Palestinian peace talks in the US on September 2nd.

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The move drew rebukes from an Israeli government facing a Palestinian threat to pull out of negotiations if settlements expand.

"The last thing we need at this time, when we are under such assault, is a boycott attempt from within ourselves," Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu said.

Mr Netanyahu told his cabinet said he had been informed performance schedules for the settlements were unchanged. He accused the petitioners of acting inappropriately given the government's financial underwriting of their theatres.

Mr Netanyahu likened their petition to the cancellation by some international artists of performances in Israel and other bids to drum up embargoes in solidarity with the Palestinians.

"I do not want to negate the right of any person, of any artist, to have a political opinion and to express this opinion. But we as a government should not fund boycotts ... against the citizens of Israel, whoever they may be," he said.

Some Israeli artists criticised the boycott call, showing lack of consensus in the country over how to view settlements built on territory captured from Jordan in the 1967 war.

Culture minister Limor Livnat, a senior member of Mr Netanyahu's rightist Likud party, said the petitioners were out of line given the government's financial underwriting of their theatres. "They can protest against what they call occupied land, but here they are certainly imposing a boycott," the minister told Army Radio, accusing the actors of "bringing about a rift in Israeli society".

The settlements have been branded as illegal internationally but many Jews say they have a biblical birthright to live there.

Actor Oded Kotler, who signed the petition, said his government-backed paycheck would not prevent him from shunning settlement venues. "My contract with the theatre says explicitly that I am obligated to perform within the State of Israel - and Ariel is not part of the state," he said.

Successive Israeli governments have pledged to annex West Bank settlements, including Ariel, under any future peace accord. The Palestinians have spoken about limited territorial exchanges but balk at Israeli moves to predetermine borders.

A more immediate dispute has been over the September 26th expiry of a partial moratorium that Mr Netanyahu imposed on settlement building to coax Palestinians into negotiations. They want the freeze extended and expanded.

Reuters