UN Takes
First Step To End Israel’s Impunity
By Ali Abunimah
September 29,
2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- UN officials are finally moving to hold Israel
accountable for breaking international law, though
they are facing fierce resistance from Israel and
its allies.
“After decades of Palestinian dispossession and
Israeli military occupation and apartheid, the
United Nations has taken its first concrete,
practical step to secure accountability for ongoing
Israeli violations of Palestinian human rights,”
said Omar Barghouti,
a founder of the boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS)
movement. “Palestinians warmly welcome this step.”
On
Wednesday, Israel’s Haaretz newspaper
reported that the
UN’s human rights office began sending letters to
some 150 companies around the world warning them
that they may be added to a database of firms doing
business with Israeli settlements in the occupied
West Bank, including East Jerusalem.
This
week Nickolay Mladenov, the top UN political
official in Jerusalem,
told the UN Security Council
that “Israel’s illegal settlement activities have
continued at a high rate” in gross breach of UN
resolutions.
There
is a
growing legal consensus
that international law requires governments to
prohibit all trade with the settlements.
“This could
snowball”
Israeli
officials have admitted that many firms – though
they did not provide names – have already responded
to the letters by assuring the UN human rights
office that they will not renew their contracts in
Israel or seek new ones.
“These
companies just can’t make the distinction between
Israel and the settlements and are ending their
operations altogether,” a senior Israeli official
told Haaretz. “Foreign companies will not
invest in something that reeks of political problems
– this could snowball.”
The
senior Israeli official confirmed
what a top EU diplomat had reported
back to colleagues in Brussels.
In a
June memo written when he was the EU ambassador in
Tel Aviv,
Lars Faaborg-Andersen
admitted that the EU had no reliable way to
distinguish exports from settlements from other
Israeli goods.
The
Israeli official’s comments also echo the findings
of a secret report by two influential Israel lobby
groups
leaked to The Electronic Intifada
earlier this year.
The report,
which was endorsed by the Israeli government,
concluded that most of the “collateral damage” being
done to Israel by the BDS movement is a result of a
growing “silent boycott” – groups, individuals and
companies who make undeclared decisions to refrain
from engaging with Israel, either because of their
support for Palestinian rights, or simply to “avoid
unnecessary problems and criticisms.”
Household names
Last
month, The Washington Post
named some of the
American companies warned by the UN that they may be
listed in the database.
They
include household names such as
Caterpillar,
TripAdvisor,
Priceline.com and
Airbnb.
According
to Haaretz, about 30 of the 150 companies
are American while others are from Germany, South
Korea and Norway.
The Washington Post
also outlined the strong American opposition to the
database, whose creation was
mandated by a UN
Human Rights Council vote last year. Nikki Haley,
the US ambassador to the UN, has called the database
“shameful” and said her country is considering
pulling out of the UN Human Rights Council.
No
Advertising
- No
Government
Grants -
This Is
Independent
Media
|
Israel has
set up a government task force to try to thwart the
list, but according to Haaretz, most of the
officials involved in the effort believe publication
of the database in December is “inevitable.”
With
the list looming, US lawmakers have proposed
legislation – the
Israel Anti-Boycott Act
– that could impose
harsh fines and prison terms
for companies and their personnel who participate in
a boycott of Israel and its settlements that is
deemed to be encouraged by an international
organization.
Israel’s
“desperation”
The
intensity of the US pressure – and the long history
of the so-called international community’s pandering
to Israel – means that it cannot be taken for
granted that UN officials will not capitulate again.
Two
years ago, then UN Secretary-General
Ban Ki-moon
caved in to Israeli
and American pressure and removed Israel from a UN
list of serious violators of children’s rights.
In
March, Ban’s successor
Antonio Guterres
bowed to US pressure and
suppressed a report
that found that Israel practices
apartheid against
Palestinians.
One
of the conclusions of that
report is that
research and legal analyses by UN bodies – such as
the United Nations Center Against Apartheid – were
critical resources for civil society activists in
their efforts aimed at “legitimating boycott,
divestments and sanctions, and contributing to the
overall formation of a transnational movement
against apartheid in South Africa.”
The
report urged a similar approach toward ending
Israeli apartheid. Veteran campaigner Adri Nieuwhof
recently wrote for
The Electronic Intifada that UN registers of firms,
athletes and entertainers complicit in South African
apartheid gave a huge boost to the international
solidarity campaign.
“That
Israel wants to nip the planned database in the bud
is a sign of desperation,” Nieuwhof wrote. “Israel
is already a pariah state in the minds of ordinary
people around the world. If Israel’s crimes do not
cease, its isolation will grow.”
“We hope
the UN Human Rights Council will stand firm and
publish its full list of companies illegally
operating in or with Israeli settlements on stolen
Palestinian land, and will develop this list as
called for by the UN Human Rights Council in March
2016,” BDS co-founder Omar Barghouti stated.
“If
implemented properly, this UN database of companies
that are complicit in some of Israel’s human rights
violations may augur the beginning of the end of
Israel’s criminal impunity.”
Ali Abunimah, Co-founder of The Electronic Intifada
and author of
The Battle for Justice in Palestine,
now out from Haymarket Books.
This
article was first published by
Electronic Intifada
- |