UN efforts to protect Palestinian land from economic
exploitation are failing, and exposing the hypocrisy
of western states
By Jonathan CookFebruary 18, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - After lengthy delays,
the United Nations finally published a database last
week of businesses that have been profiting from
Israel’s illegal annexation and settlement activity
in the West Bank.
The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights,
Michelle Bachelet, announced that 112 major
companies had been identified as operating in
Israeli settlements in ways that violate human
rights.
Aside from major Israeli banks, transport
services, cafes, supermarkets, and energy, building
and telecoms firms, prominent international
businesses include Airbnb, booking.com, Motorola,
Trip Advisor, JCB, Expedia and General Mills.
Human Rights Watch, a global watchdog, noted in
response to the list’s publication that the
settlements violate the Fourth Geneva Convention. It
argued that the firms’ activities mean they have
aided “in the commission of war crimes”.
The companies’ presence in the settlements has
helped to blur the distinction between Israel and
the occupied Palestinian territories. That in turn
has normalised the erosion of international law and
subverted a long-held international consensus on
establishing a viable Palestinian state alongside
Israel.
Work on compiling the database began four years
ago. But both Israel and the United States put
strong pressure on the UN in the hope of preventing
the list from ever seeing the light of day.
The UN body’s belated assertiveness looks
suspiciously like a rebuke to the Trump
administration for releasing this month its Middle
East “peace” plan. It green-lights Israel’s
annexation of the settlements and the most fertile
and water-rich areas of the West Bank.
In response to the database, Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu threatened to intensify
his country’s interference in US politics. He noted
that his officials had already “promoted laws in
most US states, which determine that strong action
is to be taken against whoever tries to boycott
Israel.”
He was backed by all Israel’s main Jewish
parties. Amir Peretz, leader of the centre-left
Labour party, vowed to “work in every forum to
repeal this decision”. And Yair Lapid, a leader of
Blue and White, the main rival to Netanyahu, called
Bachelet the “commissioner for terrorists’ rights”.
Meanwhile, Mike Pompeo, the US secretary of
state, accused the UN of “unrelenting anti-Israel
bias” and of aiding the international boycott,
divestment and sanctions (BDS) movement.