It is that time of the year again when groups that have nothing in common but a hatred of Israel go on an all-out propaganda offensive known as Israeli Apartheid Week.
The main instigator, as always, is the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement.
The co-ordinator of the South African branch, Muhammed Desai, made headlines last year when he defended the behaviour of protests who changed "shoot the Jew" outside a concert by an Israeli musician at Wits University.
I've written before about how rabid and often ill-concealed antisemitism can unite disparate groups who wouldn't normally deign to be in the same room as one another. What else has the power to unite leftist feminists, right wing Islamists, anarchists and fascists?
Those who are truly interested in seeing life improve for the inhabitants of the Palestinian Territories would do better to focus on the impact groups such as Hamas are having on the prospects for peace, instead of expending energy on the chimaera of Israeli "apartheid".
Take as just one example the Hamas government in Gaza's rejection of school textbooks dealing with human rights, submitted for approval by the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East, which runs 245 schools in the Gaza Strip.