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Monday, November 22, 2010

Proof of Israel's violation of international law

South African study finds that Israel is practicing colonialism and apartheid in the Occupied Palestinian Territory

AL-HAQ PRESS RELEASE
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
REF.: 22.2009E
4 June 2009


For the past 15 months, Al-Haq has been involved in an extensive legal study that has culminated in the publication of a report entitled Occupation, Colonialism, Apartheid?: A re-assessment of Israel's practices in the occupied Palestinian territories under international law.

Funded by the South African Department of Foreign Affairs, the study was commissioned by the Human Sciences Research Council of South Africa (HSRC). In early 2008, the HSRC assembled a team of scholars and practitioners of public international law from South Africa, the United Kingdom, Ireland, the Occupied Palestinian Territory (OPT) and Israel to examine the suggestion made in the 2007 report of eminent South African jurist John Dugard, in his capacity as UN Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the Palestinian territories occupied since 1967, that Israel’s practices in the OPT had assumed characteristics of colonialism and apartheid.

The resulting 300-page report—constituting an exhaustive review of Israel's practices in the OPT according to definitions of colonialism and apartheid provided by international law—has been posted for public debate on the HSRC website, to be finalised for full publication in book form later this year. It will form the basis for a discussion at an upcoming HSRC conference, Re-envisioning Israel/Palestine, from 12-14 June 2009 in Cape Town, in which Al-Haq will participate.

Findings of the study regarding colonialism

Examining Israel’s practices in the OPT in relation to the prohibition of colonialism in international law—as set down in the Declaration on the Granting of Independence to Colonial Countries and Peoples (1960) and other legal instruments—the study concludes that:

Five issues, which are unlawful in themselves, taken together make it evident that Israel’s rule in the OPT has assumed such a colonial character: namely, violations of the territorial integrity of occupied territory; depriving the population of occupied territory of the capacity for self-governance; integrating the economy of occupied territory into that of the occupant; breaching the principle of permanent sovereignty over natural resources in relation to the occupied territory; and denying the population of occupied territory the right freely to express, develop and practice its culture. […] Professor Dugard suggested that elements of the occupation resembled colonialism. This study demonstrates that the implementation of a colonial policy by Israel has not been piecemeal but is systematic and comprehensive, as the exercise of the Palestinian population’s right to self-determination has been frustrated in all of its principal modes of expression.

Findings of the study regarding apartheid

As the most egregious form of racial discrimination, the practice of apartheid is clearly proscribed by customary international law, and its prohibition is established as a norm of jus cogens. Article 3 of International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination prohibits the practice of apartheid. Subsequent legal instruments, primarily in the forms of the International Convention on the Suppression and Punishment of the Crime of Apartheid, and the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court, developed the norm against the practice of apartheid and provide further elaboration of its definition in international law. The core element of the definition of apartheid is the systematic, institutionalised, and oppressive character of the discrimination involved, and the purpose of domination that it entails. This is what distinguishes the practice of apartheid from other forms of prohibited discrimination. Apartheid also inherently amounts to a denial of the right to self-determination. The precedent of South African apartheid in Namibia demonstrates that apartheid may be practiced by a state beyond its own borders.

Israel has acted in violation of this prohibition in the OPT by establishing a system of racial domination over the Palestinians through its fragmentation of the OPT, and the creation of separate reserves for Jewish and Palestinian groups therein, which is buttressed by severe restrictions on the Palestinian rights to freedom of movement and residence. This system further encompasses institutionalised discrimination against Palestinians in favour of Jewish-Israeli settlers in the enjoyment of a panoply of civil, political, social, economic and cultural rights, as well as a matrix of draconian security laws and policies which subject opponents of Israel‘s regime of domination to, inter alia, extrajudicial executions, torture and arbitrary detention. Central to the conclusion is the finding that the ‘inhuman acts’ detailed are being committed by Israel in the OPT do not occur in random or isolated instances, but as integrated and complementary elements of an institutionalised and oppressive system of Israeli domination and oppression over Palestinians as a group; that is, a system of apartheid.

The study thus establishes Israeli state responsibility for the practice of apartheid in the OPT. Its scope did not extend to addressing individual responsibility for the crime of apartheid, one of a number of topics recommended for further study.

Legal Consequences and Recommendations
On the basis of the above findings, the report states that:

The conclusion that Israel has breached the international legal prohibitions of apartheid and colonialism in the OPT suggests that the occupation itself is illegal on these grounds. The legal consequences of these findings are grave and entail obligations not merely for Israel but also for the international community as a whole.

Bearing the primary responsibility for the illegal situation it has created, Israel is bound to cease its unlawful activity and dismantle the structures and institutions of colonialism and apartheid that it has created. Israel is additionally required by international law to implement duties of reparation, compensation and satisfaction in order to eliminate the consequences of its unlawful acts.

Both Israel and the international community are bound to promote the Palestinian people’s exercise of its right of self-determination in order that it might freely determine its political status and freely pursue its own economic policy and social and cultural development. Third States are further bound under the principles of public international law to cooperate to bring to an end Israel’s practices of colonialism and apartheid, to abstain from recognising the illegal situations brought about by those practices, and not to aid or assist the maintenance of such illegal situations. States cannot evade these international legal obligations by hiding behind the independent personality of an international organisation of which they are members. Further, the responsibilities incumbent on Israel and third States are unconditional and unaltered by any political negotiations occurring at a given time.

Towards the goal of further clarifying the issues addressed, the study concludes by recommending that an advisory opinion be sought from the International Court of Justice on the following question:

Do the policies and practices of Israel within the Occupied Palestinian Territories violate the norms prohibiting apartheid and colonialism; and, if so, what are the legal consequences arising from Israel’s policies and practices, considering the rules and principles of international law, including the International Convention on the Elimination of all forms of Racial Discrimination, the International Convention on the Suppression and Punishment of the Crime of Apartheid, the Declaration on the Granting of Independence to Colonial Countries and Peoples, UN General Assembly Resolution 1514 (1960), the Fourth Geneva Convention of 1949, and other relevant Security Council and General Assembly resolutions?


International Law


International Law

There are a range of legal regimes that are applicable to the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including international humanitarian law, international human rights law, international criminal law, and bilateral agreements. Some of the key standards in each of these regimes are listed below:


Bi-lateral AgreementsInternational Criminal Law

International Humanitarian Law

International Human Rights Law

United Nations Bodies

General Assembly Resolutions

Security Council Resolutions

Special Procedures

International Court of Justice

Treaty Bodies

Open letter to Gillard, Rudd et al re Israel trip

The following letter was sent to all MPs and Senators in the Australian
Parliament. It is being sent to you in the public interest. Already a
number of groups and individuals have written their own letters to the
parliamentary members of the delegation to Israel. We urge all of you to do
the same. Our politicians should know that we the people expect them to
uphold the standards of fairness and integrity that are integral to good
government and not allow themselves to be compromised by any interested
groups no matter how powerful. If our government insists on supporting this
delegation, then we should also be insisting that it pursue with rigour the
same balance that is constantly, even aggressively demanded, when a
Palestinian perspective is aired. Please write to the prime minister and/or
the Foreign Minister Kevin Rudd who is heading the delegation telling them
that an even-handed approach should not only be followed, but
that the
composition and itinerary of the delegation must be transparently seen to be
fair and balanced.

The Hon Julia Gillard MP
Prime Minister of Australia
Parliament House,
CANBERRA ACT 2600

The Hon Kevin Rudd MP
Minister for Foreign Affairs
PO Box 6022
House of Representatives,
Parliament House.
CANBERRA ACT 2600

Email: Kevin.Rudd.MP@aph.gov.au

A copy of the letter and the briefing document sent to 22 members of the
delegation is attached for your interest. Also attached is a list of the
parliamentary delegation and members of the media.

SK


Letter of concern and briefing document
sent to parliamentary members and
media representatives in delegation to Israel

Dear Senator/Member of Parliament,

The reported visit of 17 ministers, members and senators of the Australian
Parliament to Israel as part of a 40 member delegation in December is a
cause for serious concern. That the visit is being arranged and is partly
funded by the privately owned Australia Israel Leadership Forum (AILF) and
that many of those going are known Israel supporters, already brings into
question the value of a trip so one-sided. As far as we have been able to
ascertain, there are no representatives from the Greens or Independents or
from the Australian Parliamentary Friends of Palestine; there is no visit
scheduled in the Occupied Palestinian Territories; and there are no meetings
with Palestinian representatives whether from the Palestinian Authority, the
PLO, Palestinian members of the Knesset, Hamas leaders, heads of churches or
NGOs.

Such a visit cannot possibly open the delegation up to the realities on the
ground. In the interests of giving at least a balanced report, we have
offered to facilitate meetings with Dr Hanan Ashrawi, Palestinian negotiator
and a PLO executive member and Palestinian Knesset members Haneen Zoabi and
Dr Jamal Zahalka who have all made themselves available.

We are asking that you use your good offices to urge your colleagues to take
up this offer, and if they refuse, to challenge them in the parliament for
not taking the opportunity to give the Australian public a fair and accurate
account of a critical political situation that impacts constantly on world
affairs.

Attached is a copy of the letter that accompanied a briefing document (also
attached) in hard copy sent to 22 members of the delegation. We think that you
will find enough issues in that document to warrant any delegation’s investigation.
The failure to do so would amount to a serious neglect of Australia’s
responsibility as a signatory to the Fourth Geneva Convention and our moral
responsibility under all humanitarian conventions and human considerations.

Kind regards,

Sonja Karkar
Co-founder and co-convener
Australians for Palestine
PO Box 2099
Hawthorn VIC 3122
Melbourne – Australia
Mobile: 0401 100 147
http://australiansforpalestine.com

Israel bombed UN positions in 2006

We are still waiting for the result of this investigation!


Secretary-General proposes joint UN-Israeli inquiry into Lebanon peacekeeper deaths

26 July 2006 – Following yesterday’s killings of three United Nations peacekeepers – and possibly a fourth – during an air attack in south Lebanon, Secretary-General Kofi Annan today accepted Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert’s expression of “deep sorrow” and suggested a joint investigation into the incident.

Speaking to journalists in Rome, where he is meeting with world leaders on the crisis, Mr. Annan said that Mr. Olmert believes that the bombing was a mistake. The Secretary-General emphasized that in his own statement he had used the word “apparent” in relation to whether Israeli forces deliberately targeted the attack on the Khiyam base of the UN Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL).

“But you need to look at the events of yesterday,” he urged. “The shelling of the UN position, which is long-established and clearly marked, started in the morning and went on till after 7:00 p.m., when we lost contact.”

“You can imagine the anguish of the soldiers and the men and women – unarmed military observers – who were down there in the service of peace,” he said, stressing that the peacekeepers were in frequent touch with the Israeli army, pleading with them to avoid striking their location.

However, Mr. Annan added, “we await the investigations.”

Meanwhile, the UN Assistant Secretary-General for Peacekeeping Operations, Jane Holl Lute, also welcomed Israel’s call for an investigation, transmitting the Organization’s preference for a joint probe, as she briefed the Security Council today on the fatal incident.

UNIFIL reported that 21 strikes were made within 300 meters of the patrol base yesterday, with the mission protesting each one to the Israeli Defence Forces (IDF). Ms. Holl Lute added that she herself, as well as Deputy Secretary-General Mark Malloch Brown, made several calls to Israel’s UN embassy to reiterate those protests.

After UNIFIL headquarters lost contact with the base, it coordinated safe passage for two armoured personnel carriers, which reached it at 9:30 p.m. and discovered the shelter collapsed among other major damage, she said. Three observers were found killed and a fourth is feared dead.

Despite repeated requests to the IDF for abatement, firing was maintained during the rescue operation, she added, and continued to strike near UNIFIL positions as she spoke.

She emphasized that UNIFIL has also come under direct attacks by small arms fire from Hezbollah forcing the mission to abort the escort of Lebanese civilians to safe areas and movement of troops on other humanitarian missions.

Since the 12 July outbreak of hostilities in Lebanon, UNIFIL reports that a civilian international staff member and his wife have been killed and five soldiers and a military observer have been wounded, in addition to yesterday’s deaths.

Under these circumstances, Ms. Holl Lute said the mission might need to consolidate its observers to minimize further risk to its personnel.

The UN staff union’s committee on security called on Mr. Annan to suspend UNIFIL’s operations, pull back its personnel from hazardous positions until the situation improves, and conduct a full investigation of the fatal bombing.

“This incident once again serves as a tragic reminder of the innumerable risks undertaken daily by United Nations personnel across the globe,” the committee said, strongly protesting the attacks.

Secretary-General proposes joint UN-Israeli inquiry into Lebanon peacekeeper deaths

26 July 2006 – Following yesterday’s killings of three United Nations peacekeepers – and possibly a fourth – during an air attack in south Lebanon, Secretary-General Kofi Annan today accepted Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert’s expression of “deep sorrow” and suggested a joint investigation into the incident.

Speaking to journalists in Rome, where he is meeting with world leaders on the crisis, Mr. Annan said that Mr. Olmert believes that the bombing was a mistake. The Secretary-General emphasized that in his own statement he had used the word “apparent” in relation to whether Israeli forces deliberately targeted the attack on the Khiyam base of the UN Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL).

“But you need to look at the events of yesterday,” he urged. “The shelling of the UN position, which is long-established and clearly marked, started in the morning and went on till after 7:00 p.m., when we lost contact.”

“You can imagine the anguish of the soldiers and the men and women – unarmed military observers – who were down there in the service of peace,” he said, stressing that the peacekeepers were in frequent touch with the Israeli army, pleading with them to avoid striking their location.

However, Mr. Annan added, “we await the investigations.”

Meanwhile, the UN Assistant Secretary-General for Peacekeeping Operations, Jane Holl Lute, also welcomed Israel’s call for an investigation, transmitting the Organization’s preference for a joint probe, as she briefed the Security Council today on the fatal incident.

UNIFIL reported that 21 strikes were made within 300 meters of the patrol base yesterday, with the mission protesting each one to the Israeli Defence Forces (IDF). Ms. Holl Lute added that she herself, as well as Deputy Secretary-General Mark Malloch Brown, made several calls to Israel’s UN embassy to reiterate those protests.

After UNIFIL headquarters lost contact with the base, it coordinated safe passage for two armoured personnel carriers, which reached it at 9:30 p.m. and discovered the shelter collapsed among other major damage, she said. Three observers were found killed and a fourth is feared dead.

Despite repeated requests to the IDF for abatement, firing was maintained during the rescue operation, she added, and continued to strike near UNIFIL positions as she spoke.

She emphasized that UNIFIL has also come under direct attacks by small arms fire from Hezbollah forcing the mission to abort the escort of Lebanese civilians to safe areas and movement of troops on other humanitarian missions.

Since the 12 July outbreak of hostilities in Lebanon, UNIFIL reports that a civilian international staff member and his wife have been killed and five soldiers and a military observer have been wounded, in addition to yesterday’s deaths.

Under these circumstances, Ms. Holl Lute said the mission might need to consolidate its observers to minimize further risk to its personnel.

The UN staff union’s committee on security called on Mr. Annan to suspend UNIFIL’s operations, pull back its personnel from hazardous positions until the situation improves, and conduct a full investigation of the fatal bombing.

“This incident once again serves as a tragic reminder of the innumerable risks undertaken daily by United Nations personnel across the globe,” the committee said, strongly protesting the attacks.