From the mountains of southern Kazakhstan, I’ve been following a significant development in the ongoing war involving Israel, the accelerating momentum of the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) movement. This decades-old campaign, aimed at isolating Israel economically and politically, has gained renewed traction since the outbreak of the current conflict.
BDS and Its New Momentum
The BDS movement, short for Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions, seeks to pressure Israel into policy concessions by targeting its economy. While such campaigns are not new, the latest wave of support for BDS has been spurred by allegations of famine in Gaza.
Recent reports from the United Nations claim that malnutrition rates in Gaza have “risen dramatically” over the past month. However, those figures have been challenged, with evidence suggesting that the UN altered its metrics reducing the malnutrition threshold from 30% to 15% thereby inflating the reported crisis. Critics argue that such statistical manipulation mirrors past political tactics used to reshape narratives on unemployment, inflation, and debt.
Israel, meanwhile, continues to allow significant humanitarian aid into Gaza, including roughly 200 truckloads of supplies daily, more than enough, according to analysts, to feed the population multiple times a day.