ACLU sues Kansas for law punishing Israel boycotters

A right-wing Israeli holds the national flag during a demonstration outside the Defense Ministry to support Israeli soldier Elor Azaria, during his sentencing in military court, February 21. Azaria was sentenced to 18 months in prison for his deadly shooting of an incapacitated Palestinian attacker in the West Bank city of Hebron. In Kansas, a state law punishes prohibits state contracts with people who boycott Israel, leading to a lawsuit filed by the ACLU last week. File Photo by Debbie Hill/UPI

Oct. 16 (UPI) — The American Civil Liberties Union has filed a lawsuit against the state of Kansas for a law that punishes people who boycott Israel, the organization announced last week.

The lawsuit is based on a complaint by Kansas public school math teacher Esther Koontz, who is a member of the Mennonite Church USA, which divested from Israeli companies this year and urged members to do the same. But in July, a Kansas law went into effect that requires any person or company that contracts with the state to sign a statement that says they are “not currently engaged in a boycott of Israel.”

Koontz said the law punishes her for her political beliefs.and prevents her from working as a public school teacher and math teacher trainer.

“As a member of the Mennonite Church USA, and a person concerned with the human rights of all people — and specifically the ongoing violations of Palestinians’ human rights in Israel and Palestine — I choose to boycott consumer goods made by Israeli and international companies that profit from the violation of Palestinians’ rights,” Koontz said.

However, the Kansas State Department of Education informed her that she would have to sign the following statement in order to contract with the state: “As an Individual or Contractor entering into a contract with the State of Kansas, it is hereby certified that the Individual or Company listed below is not currently engaged in a boycott of Israel.”

Koontz wouldn’t sign the statement and was subsequently banned from teacher training.

“I was stunned,” Koontz said. “It seems preposterous that my decision to participate in a political boycott should have any effect on my ability to work for the state of Kansas.”

The ACLU argues that the law violates the First Amendment on several grounds because it “compels speech regarding protected political beliefs, associations, and expression; restricts the political expression and association of government contractors; and discriminates against protected expression based on its content and viewpoint.”

The Kansas State Attorney General’s Office told the Wichita Eagle that it is reviewing the lawsuit.

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