The U.N. special rapporteur is one of the most courageous crusaders against
the genocide in Gaza. Because of this, she is blacklisted and treated as if she
is a terrorist.͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏
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Francesca Albanese and the Lonely Road of Defiance
The U.N. special rapporteur is one of the most courageous crusaders against the
genocide in Gaza. Because of this, she is blacklisted and treated as if she is
a terrorist.
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| Chris Hedges |
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| Dec 30 |
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Francesca Albanese - by Mr. Fish
NICE, France — It is a late November afternoon. I am driving to Genoa, Italy
with Francesca Albanese, the U.N. Special Rapporteur on the situation of human
rights in the Palestinian territories occupied since 1967. We are traveling to
join striking dockworkers. The dockworkers call for a moratorium on weapons
bound for Israel and a halt to the Italian government’s plans to increase
military spending.
We speed past the inky waters of Baie des Anges on our right and the
razor-backed French Alps on our left. Châteaus and clusters of houses with
red-tiled roofs, shrouded in the fading light, are perched on the rolling
hillsides. Palm trees line the seafront road.
Francesca — tall with flecks of gray in her hair and wearing large black-framed
glasses and hoop earrings — is the bête noire of Israel and the United States.
She was placed on the Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) list of the U.S.
Treasury Department — normally used to sanction those accused of money
laundering or being involved with terrorist organizations — six days after the
release of her report, “From economy of occupation to economy of genocide.”
The OFAC list — weaponized by the Trump administration to persecute Francesca
and in clear violation of the diplomatic immunity granted to U.N. officials —
prohibits any financial institution from having someone on the list as a
client. A bank that permits someone on the OFAC list to engage in financial
transactions is banned from operating in dollars, faces multimillion-dollar
fines and is blocked from international payment systems.
In her report, Francesca lists 48 corporations and institutions, including
Palantir Technologies, Lockheed Martin, Alphabet Inc., Amazon, International
Business Machines Corporation (IBM), Caterpillar Inc., Microsoft Corporation
and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), along with banks and
financial firms such as BlackRock, insurers, real estate firms and charities,
which in violation of international law, are making billions from the
occupation and the genocide of Palestinians.
The report, which includes a database of over 1,000 corporate entities that
collaborate with Israel, demands these firms and institutions sever ties with
Israel or be held accountable for complicity in war crimes. It describes
“Israel’s “forever-occupation” as “the ideal testing ground for arms
manufacturers and big tech — providing boundless supply and demand, little
oversight and zero accountability — while investors and private and public
institutions profit freely.”
You can see my interview about the report with Francesca here.
Francesca, whose previous reports including “Gaza Genocide: a collective crime”
and “Genocide as colonial erasure” along with her empassioned denunciations of
Israel’s mass slaughter in Gaza, have made her a lightning rod. She is
excoriated every time she deviates from the approved script, including when
pro-Palestine demonstrators stormed the headquarters of the Italian daily
newspaper La Stampa while we were in Italy.
Francesca condemned the incursion and property destruction — protesters
scattered newspapers and spray-painted slogans on the walls such as “Free
Palestine” and “Newspapers complicit with Israel” — but added that it should
serve as a “warning to the press” to do its job. That qualification expressed
her frustration with the media’s discrediting of the reporting of Palestinian
journalists — over 278 journalists and media workers have been killed by Israel
since Oct. 7 along with over 700 of their family members — and uncritical
amplification of Israeli propaganda. But it was seized upon by her critics,
including Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, to lynch her.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio imposed sanctions on Francesca in July.
“The United States has repeatedly condemned and objected to the biased and
malicious activities of Albanese that have long made her unfit for service as a
Special Rapporteur,” the State Department’s press release read. “Albanese has
spewed unabashed antisemitism, expressed support for terrorism, and open
contempt for the United States, Israel, and the West. That bias has been
apparent across the span of her career, including recommending that the ICC,
without a legitimate basis, issue arrest warrants targeting Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and former Defense Minister Yoav Gallant.”
“She has recently escalated this effort by writing threatening letters to
dozens of entities worldwide, including major American companies across
finance, technology, defense, energy, and hospitality, making extreme and
unfounded accusations and recommending the ICC [International Criminal Court ]
pursue investigations and prosecutions of these companies and their
executives,” it went on. “We will not tolerate these campaigns of political and
economic warfare, which threaten our national interests and sovereignty.”
The sanctions followed those imposed in February and June on the court’s
prosecutor Karim Khan along with two judges for issuing arrest warrants for
Netanyahu and Gallant.
Francesca is barred from entering the U.S. even to appear at the United Nations
in New York City, to present one of her two annual reports. The other is
delivered at the United Nations Office at Geneva.
Francesca’s assets in the U.S. have been frozen, including her bank account and
her U.S. apartment. The sanctions cut her off from the international banking
system, including blocking her use of credit cards. Her private medical
insurance refuses to reimburse her medical expenses. Hotel rooms booked under
her name have been cancelled. She can only operate using cash or by borrowing a
bank card.
Institutions, including U.S. universities, human rights groups, professors and
NGOs, that once cooperated with Francesca, have severed ties, fearful of
penalties established for any U.S. citizen who collaborates with her. She and
her family receive frequent death threats. Israel and the U.S. have mounted a
campaign to get her removed from her U.N post.
Francesa is proof that when you stand steadfastly with the oppressed, you will
be treated like the oppressed.
She is unsure if her book, “When the World Sleeps: Stories, Words, and Wounds
of Palestine,” which has been translated into English and is expected to be
released in April next year, will be distributed in the U.S.
“I’m a sanctioned person,” she says ruefully.
But she is not cowed. Her next salvo will be a report that documents the
torture of Palestinians in Israeli prisons. While torture, she says, was “not
widespread,” before Oct. 7, it has now become ubiquitous. She is collecting
testimonies of those released from Israeli detention.
“It reminds me of the stories and testimonies I read from Argentina’s
dictatorship,” Francesca tells me. “It’s that bad. It’s systemic torture
against the same people. The same people are taken, raped and brought back,
taken, raped and brought back.”
“Women?” I ask.
“Both,” she answers.
“To have women tell you they have been raped, multiple times. They’ve been
asked to masturbate soldiers. This is incredible,” Francesca says. “For a woman
to say that. Imagine what they have endured? There are people who have lost
their words. They cannot talk. They cannot speak after what they’ve endured.”
Establishment media organizations, she says, not only dutifully parrot back
Israeli lies, but routinely block reporting that reflects negatively on Israel.
“In April, I reported the first cases of sexual harassment and rape that had
taken place in January and February 2024,” she says. “People didn’t want to
listen. The New York Times interviewed me for two hours. Two hours. They didn’t
write a line about it.”
“The Financial Times had — because of the relevance of the topic — an embargo’d
version of ‘From economy of occupation to economy of genocide,’” she says.
“They didn’t publish it. They didn’t even publish a review, an article, days
after the press conference. But they did publish a critique of my report. I had
a meeting with them. I said, ‘This is really depressing. Who are you? Are you
paid for the work you do? Who are you loyal to, your readers?’ I pushed them.
They said, ‘Well, we didn’t find that it was up to our standards.’”
This, I tell her, is how the New York Times would spike stories by reporters
that editors deem too incendiary.
“They discredit your sources regardless of what your sources are,” I tell her.
“That becomes the vehicle by which they don’t publish. This isn’t a good faith
discussion. They’re not giving a fair analysis of what your sources are. They
are categorically dismissing them. They’re not telling you the truth, which is,
‘We don’t want to deal with Israel and the Israel lobby.’ That’s the truth.
They don’t say that. It is always, ‘It’s not up to our standards.’”
“There is no free media, no free press in Italy anymore,” Francesca laments.
“There is, but it’s fringe or on the margins. It is an exception. The main
newspapers are held by groups connected to big powers, financial and economic
powers. The government controls — directly or indirectly — much of Italian TV.”
The drift towards fascism in Europe and the United States, Francesca says, is
intimately tied to the genocide, as is the emerging resistance.
“There is a brewing anger and dissatisfaction with political leadership in
Europe,” she says. “There is also a fear that lingers in many countries because
of the rise of the right. We’ve been there. There are people who have living
memories of fascism in Europe. The scars of Nazi-fascism are still there, even
the trauma. People cannot process what has happened and why it’s happened.
Palestine has shocked people. Italians in particular. Maybe because we are who
we are in the sense that we cannot be silenced that easily, we cannot be scared
as has happened to the Germans and the French. I was shocked in France. The
fear and repression is incredible. It is not as bad as Germany, but it’s much
worse than it was two years ago. The minister of education in France cancelled
an academic conference on Palestine at the Collège de France — the highest
institution in France. The minister of education! And he bragged about it.”
Francesca says our only hope now is civil disobedience, embodied in actions
such as strikes that disrupt commerce and government or the attempts by the
flotillas to reach Gaza.
“The flotillas created this sense of ‘Oh, something can be done,’” she says.
“We are not powerless. We can make a difference even in shaking the ground,
rocking the boat. Then the workers have come in. The students have already been
mobilized. There has been a sense through the various protests that we can
still change things. People have started to connect the dots.”
Francesca presented her 24-page report “Gaza Genocide: a collective crime” to
the U.N. General Assembly in October, a report that had to be delivered
remotely from the Desmond and Leah Tutu Legacy Foundation in Cape Town, South
Africa, because of the sanctions.
Danny Danon, the Israeli ambassador to the United Nations, following her
presentation, said, “Ms. Albanese, you are a witch and this report is another
page in your spellbook.” He accused her of trying to “curse Israel with lies
and hatred.”
“Every page of this report is an empty spell, every accusation, a charm that
does not work, because you are a failed witch,” Danon continued.
“It triggered a moment of enlightenment.” Francesca says of the insults. “I
connected it to the injustice that women have suffered through the centuries.”
“What is happening to the Palestinians and to those who are speaking out for
the Palestinians, is the 2025 equivalent of burning witches in the public
square,” she goes on. “It was done to scientists and theologians who didn’t
align with the Catholic Church. It was done to women who held the power of
herbs. It was done to religious minorities, to indigenous people, like the Sámi
people.”
“Palestine,” Francesca says, “has opened a portal to history, to where we come
from and to what we risk if we don’t pull the brakes.”
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