Head to Head - Israeli settlers: Patriots or invaders?
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A UN report says
Israeli settlements violate human rights and could be prosecuted as war crimes, but many
Israeli settlers consider themselves patriots. So what hope is there for
peace in the
Middle East?
In a country where settlers are now one of the biggest and strongest political movements,
Dani Dayan, a Netanyahu advisor and the outgoing chairman of the
Yesha (
Settlers)
Council, says there is no two-state solution to the conflict and that he is happy with the status quo.
Dayan has been a major in the
Israeli army, a successful IT entrepreneur, and a
University lecturer. In
1999 he became an executive committee member of the
Yesha Council, which represents the settler movement, and in
2007, its chairman until
February 2013. He completely revitalised the movement until his resignation to campaign openly for
Binyamin Netanyahu.
Mehdi Hasan goes head to head with Dayan at the
Oxford Union, discussing whether
Zionism is a colonialist project, whether the so-called apartheid roads are just an urban legend - and more importantly, what is the solution to this protracted conflict?
Dayan claims settlements are irreversible but preaches in favour of dismantling the wall. With a lively audience and robust debate from the expert panel,
Head to Head is tackling the hard issues surrounding the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Are the settlements a natural extension of the
Israeli state or the single biggest obstacle to peace in the Middle East? Will the
Palestinians ever be able to build an independent and viable state?
Joining our discussion are: Dr
Ghada Karmi, an academic and the author of
The Palestinian Exodus (1999), In
Search for
Fatima (
2002), and
Israel's
Dilemma in
Palestine (2007); Sam
Westrop, a former director of the
British Israel Coalition, and a fellow of the New York-based
Gatestone Institute; and
Hannah Weisfeld, the director of Yachad, a pro-peace, pro-Israel
NGO based in
London.
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