In his latest bout of theatrics, BDS’s Muhammed Desai positions himself as a victim of racist and Islamophobic bullying whose right to freedom of expression has been infringed. This follows his removal from a Virgin Active Gym for wearing a t-shirt calling for a boycott of Israel. There can be only one sensible response to this, and that is, “Ag, shame!”
Desai entered the gym in the full knowledge that its rules prohibit members from wearing clothing bearing provocative political slogans. He knew very well, in other words, what the result would be when he decided to overtly flout this regulation. That is why he made sure the media, in anticipation of a nice juicy confrontation, would be on the scene. Desai got what he wanted, of course. His stunt resulted in widespread coverage throughout the print, electronic and online media.
No-one who has over the years followed the antics of Desai and BDS-SA, the rabidly anti-Israel organisation of which he is national coordinator, will be at all surprised by this. It has long been the modus operandi of BDS activists to first provoke an ugly confrontation and then run to the media posing as victims.
Please do not misunderstand me, I am a staunch proponent of freedom of speech. However, that is not what the Virgin Gym incident was about. Rather, it was just another opportunity for grandstanding and publicity seeking on the part of one of Joburg’s great political theatre impresarios, Muhammed Desai.
Hearing that there was tension within the Old Eds gym off Desai trotted with a journalist in tow, ready to launch into his later media stunt. He would have us believe that Etv journalist Yusuf Omar was coincidentally gymming at exactly the time Desai arrived for his `workout’ that night. “I didn’t enter the gym with a journalist. It was just coincidental he was there”, he claimed in a Radio 702 interview. Gee, how very convenient. I think it can be taken as a given that journalists do not lurk in the passages of local gyms in the hope that something worth reporting on will just crop up.
I was wondering where BDS’s commitment to freedom of expression came into the picture when they disrupted a piano concert at Wits University in 2013, when they prevented Palestinian Human Rights Activist Bassem Eid from speaking at the University of Johannesburg earlier this year, and when they threatened to `shut down Sandton’ and ensure `no proud Zionist would be allowed to have a concert on our soil’. I also wondered why, if its commitment to freedom of expression is so strong, it resorted to threats, intimidation, smear campaigns and even attempted bribery to prevent a group of South African students to visit Israel in order to broaden their knowledge of the situation there.