Hi
Ida and Frank! A bit late starting today!
Palestine
threatens Israel with ICC if further settlements built
Palestine declared Wednesday that they will be left with ‘no choice’ but to take Israel to the International Criminal Court (ICC) if the Jewish state proceeds with plans to build settlements in occupied areas of East Jerusalem.
Palestinians
labourers work at a housing construction site in the West Bank Jewish
settlement of Alon, east of Jerusalem on December 3, 2012. (AFP
Photo/Menahem Kahana)
RT,
24
January, 2013
After
a meeting Wednesday of the United Nations Security Council on the
Middle East, Riad Malki, the Palestinian foreign minister, said his
government’s decision will largely depend on whether the Israelis
build on the E1 area outside the Arab suburbs of East Jerusalem.
“If
Israel would like to go further by implementing the E1 plan and the
other related plans around Jerusalem then yes, we will be going to
the ICC. We have no other choice. It depends on the Israeli
decision,”
he said.
E1
is one of the occupied areas where newly-reelected Benjamin
Netanyahu’s outgoing government has given the green light for what
could be potentially thousands of new settlement homes.
Malki
said the Palestinian government would wait and see what the new
Israeli government does, adding that they are
“absolutely not going to tolerate any construction in that
particular area.”
Previously
the Palestinians have said that bringing their various disputes with
Israel to the ICC in The Hague was not option, but Malki’s remarks
on Wednesday appear to mark a change of tactics.
The
Palestinians became eligible to join the ICC after a vote on November
29, 2012, at the United Nations General Assembly, which voted to
upgrade their status from ‘observer entity’ to ‘non-member
observer state’.
This
decision was seen by many as de facto recognition of an independent
Palestinian state. Only nine nations including Israel and the United
States voted against the motion in the 193-nation general assembly.
The
vote took place on the 65th anniversary of the adoption of UN
resolution 181, which portioned Palestine into separate Jewish and
Arab states. After the vote, Israel announced it would build another
3,000 settler homes in East Jerusalem and the West Bank.
Senior
Israeli officials announced last month that Israel does not intend to
cancel plans to accelerate settlement construction in E1.Netanyahu
himself said in an interview with Israeli Channel 2 last month that
the disputed area
“is not occupied territory”
and that he “does
not care” what
the UN thinks about it.
Around
500,000 Israelis and 2.4 million Palestinians live in the West Bank
and in East Jerusalem, areas that, along with Gaza, the Palestinians
want for a future state.
E1
covers 12 sq km and is particularly significant because it backs onto
East Jerusalem, which the Palestinians want as their capital, and
because it sticks out into the narrow middle section of the West
Bank.
The
United Nations regards all Israeli settlements in the West Bank as
illegal. While Robert Serry, the UN Special Coordinator of the Middle
East Peace Process, has said that the Israeli settlements are
“increasingly an obstacle to peace.”
However, he has also warned the Palestinians against pursuing the
issue at the ICC.
The
White House reiterated its call Wednesday for the resumption of long
stalled Israeli-Palestinian peace negotiations, in light of recent
Israeli election which returned Netanyahu to power with a weaker
majority for his right-wing bloc.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.