| SWC & British Architect Friends of Israel to International In a letter to the UIA's President Gaétan Siew and Secretary-General Jordi Farrando, the Centre's Director forInternational Relations, Dr Shimon Samuels, together with BAFI Chairman Daniel Leon expressed their respective membership's concern at "the so-called 'Architects and Planners forJustice in Palestine' campaign against your Israeli member organization, the Israel Association of United Architects (IAUA)." Samuels continued, "This group has, outrageously, sought the implication of your UK affiliate, the Royal Institute ofBritish Architects (RIBA), in vaunting the endorsement of their petition by RIBA's outgoing President, Jack Pringle, and President-Elect Sunand Prasad." The letter noted that "Its website mission states that 'RIBA exists to advance architecture and promote excellence inthe profession... For its 30,000 strong membership in the UK and abroad, the RIBA provides specialist information and advice, practice promotion (via) professional support, commercialproducts (via RIBA enterprises) and many social and cultural Leon contended that "political campaigns not only do not promote architectural excellence nor good practical orsocio-cultural harmony, they clearly obstruct these objectives. Indeed, the specifically anti-Israeli focus of this campaign directly violates the European Union's Article 13 of Samuels and Leon also cited the European Union Monitoring Centre on Racism and Xenophobia, which, in 2004, definedantisemitism, inter alia, as: "Applying double standards by requiring of it [Israel] a behaviour not expected or demanded of any other democratic nation." The letter pointed to the UIA's masthead representing "architects worldwide, 'without regard to nationality, race,religion or architectural doctrine...'", urging the Union "to condemn this petition, and to inquire into the implications of its public support by Presidents Pringle and The appeal was shared with both the Presidents, respectively, Jean-François Susini and R.K. Stewart, of the ArchitectsCouncil of Europe (ACE), and the UIA United States member, the American Institute of Architects (AIA), in order to alert them to possible international repercussions. Samuels concluded, "Inaction on this matter would be to the detriment of architectural professional integrity and wouldencourage its hijacking for political agendas." |