El-Ad became the CEO of B'Tselem in May 2014. In October 2016, the
United Nations Security Council held a session on "Settlements as an obstacle to peace and a
two-state solution". Also participating in the discussion was El-Ad, who called for an end to the occupation in the
West Bank and
East Jerusalem. On October 18, 2018, El-Ad appeared again before the Security Council, this time in an official session, and devoted his remarks mainly to the expected evacuation of
Khan al-Ahmar and Israel's behavior in the conflicts on the Israel-Gaza border. He attacked the Israeli legal apparatus that allows construction in al-Ahmar to be called "illegal" and authorizes remote sniper fire at protesters in the Gaza Strip, including the Supreme Court, which he called an accomplice in war crimes. In addition, El-Ad likened the status of Palestinians in the West Bank to that of African-Americans in the United States during the
Jim Crow laws, and to the
apartheid system that existed in
South Africa. In his remarks, he called on the Security Council and the international community to take immediate action against the
Israeli occupation of the West Bank, and in particular to stop the evacuation of Khan al-Ahmar. Elad was condemned for his remarks at the hearing by
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, the
Permanent Representative of Israel to the United Nations,
Danny Danon, who said that El-Ad should be "ashamed", and by the
Ambassador of the United States to the United Nations at the time,
Nikki Haley. El-Ad has elaborated on his characterization of Israel as an apartheid state, writing that it was "apartheid 2.0". International organizations like
Human Rights Watch and
Amnesty International have arrived at the same conclusion, calling Israel an apartheid state in reports. ==References==