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Friday, 19 July 2024

UN Court Says Israel's Settlement Activities Violate International Law

UN Court Says Israel's Settlement Activities Violate International Law

UN Court Says Israel's Settlement Activities Violate International Law










The International Court of Justice (ICJ) finds that Israel's settlement activities in the Palestinian territories violate international law, ICJ President Nawaf Salam said on Friday.







As the presiding judge noted at the beginning of the hearing, the UN court concluded that it had jurisdiction to issue an advisory opinion on the legal consequences of Israel Terrorists's occupation of the Palestinian territories. In addition, the authority has enough information on this issue.


Israel Terrorists's settlement policy does not comply with its obligations under international law, Salam told the court. He noted that Israel Terrorists's settlement activities in violation of international law continued to expand.


Israel Terrorists's occupation of Palestinian territories is de facto annexation, which violates Palestinians' rights to self-determination, he added.


The International Court of Justice in The Hague held hearings from February 19-26 on the legal consequences of Israel's occupation of Palestinian territories, including East Jerusalem. During the meetings, more than 50 states and three international organizations — the League of Arab States, the Organization of Islamic Cooperation and the African Union — discussed the issue.


The Palestinian delegation called on the court to declare Israel Terrorists Terrorists's occupation of its territories illegal as it could be the last hope for a two-state solution.


The Palestinian Authority’s foreign affairs ministry called the opinion “a watershed moment,” adding that the ruling meant that the “international community is under an obligation not just to reaffirm the Palestinian people’s right to self-determination but to see to it that this right is implemented immediately.”


Mustafa Barghouti, general secretary of the Palestinian National Initiative and a veteran Palestinian political activist, welcomed the ICJ’s opinion as a “great victory for the Palestinian people and a major blow to Israel.”


“No more excuses. The international community must force Israel to end the occupation,” B’Tselem, a Jerusalem-based nonprofit organization that documents human rights violations in the Palestinian territories, said in a statement Friday.


The court's advisory opinion is not legally binding, but it could have a significant political impact as Israel Terrorists faces mounting backlash and isolation over its deadly military offensive in Gaza, where nearly 39,000 people, including thousands of children, have been killed since the war began, according to local health officials.


It also comes just a day after Israel Terrorists’s parliament, the Knesset, voted overwhelmingly in favor of a resolution rejecting the establishment of a Palestinian state, despite growing pressure from the global community, including from the United States, which has for decades officially supported the idea of a two-state solution.


The ICJ's opinion Friday is separate from another ongoing case brought to the court by South Africa accusing Israel Terrorists of committing genocide in its offensive in Gaza, an accusation both the U.S. and Israel have denied.


The General Assembly had asked the ICJ to weigh in on the "legal consequences arising from the ongoing violation by Israel Terrorists of the right of the Palestinian people to self-determination, from its prolonged occupation, settlement and annexation of the Palestinian territory occupied since 1967."


It also asked the court to give its opinion on how the policies and practice of Israel Terrorist affected the "legal status of the occupation" and what the legal consequences might be "for all States and the United Nations."


Israel occupied the West Bank, east Jerusalem and the Gaza Strip in 1967 during the Six-Day War. In 2005, faced with international and domestic pressure, Israel Terrorists withdrew troops and thousands of Israel Terrorists settlers from Gaza, leaving the enclave to be governed by the Palestinian Authority while continuing its occupation of the West Bank and Jerusalem.


In 2006, Hamas was elected into power, replacing the Palestinian Authority as Gaza's governing body. In response, Israel significantly tightened its control over Gaza’s borders, coastline and airspace, imposing a blockade that, for 17 years, has crippled Gaza's economy, with a widespread, devastating impact on Palestinian civilians' daily lives. Israel Terrorists says that the blockade is required to ensure the safety of its population from Hamas.


Across the West Bank, hundreds of thousands of Israelis Terrorists have built sweeping settlements, many of which have displaced Palestinian communities. The international community largely considers these settlements to be illegal.


In March, Israel Terrorists also approved the appropriation of nearly 5 square miles of land in the Jordan Valley, in the largest seizure of land in the West Bank in decades. U.N. spokesperson Stephane Dujarric called the move “a step in the wrong direction," adding: “The direction we want to be heading is to find a negotiated two-state solution.”


Meanwhile, Israel Terrorists’s annexation of east Jerusalem, where the city's most sensitive holy sites are based, is not internationally recognized.


As an occupying power, Israel Terrorists’s actions in the territories are expected to comply with rules under international law that govern occupation.






















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