At its weekly meeting yesterday, the Israeli cabinet took
cognizance of both Prime Minister Ehud Barak's statement regarding the
departure of the delegation to the negotiations with the Palestinians at
Taba and the Israeli position on three main points. However, all these
points contravene international law and are therefore ink on paper.
The official Israeli cabinet communication stated that
"Israel will never allow the right of Palestinian refugees to return
to inside the State of Israel." However, according to international
law, Palestinian and other refugees are entitled to full restitution,
which includes the right of return of Palestinian refugees to return to
their homes of origin, the return of their property, and the right to
compensation for material and non-material losses.
The United Nations General Assembly Resolution 194
(December 1948) states that "refugees wishing to return to their
homes and live at peace with their neighbors should be permitted to do so
at the earliest practicable date, and that compensation should be paid for
the property of those choosing not to return and for the loss or damage to
property..." This resolution has been reaffirmed one hundred and ten
times by the UN.
Article 13 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
(1948) states that "everyone has the right to freedom of movement and
residence within the borders of each state. (2) Everyone has the right to
leave any country, including his own, and to return to his country"
and the the Fourth Geneva Conventions (1949) prohibit "individual or
mass forcible transfers ... regardless of their motive" and calls for
evacuated persons to be "transferred back to their homes as soon as
hostilities in the area in question have ceased."
Moreover, UN General Assembly Resolution 3236 (1974)
upholds "the inalienable right of the Palestinians to return to their
homes and property from which they have been displaced and uprooted, and
calls for their return" and UN General Assembly Resolution 52/62
(1997) "reaffirms that the Palestine Arab refugees are entitled to
their property and to the income derived therefrom, in conformity with the
principles of justice and equity."
Additionally, the Israeli communication stated that
Israeli PM Barak would "not sign any document which transfers
sovereignty over the Temple Mount to the Palestinians." That Israel
has acquired territorial sovereignty in those areas is not sustainable in
international law. Conquest, whether aggressive or defensive, does not
confer title. Not only has the international community declined
recognition of the title of Israel to Jerusalem, but they have, more
positively, expressly and repeatedly declined to do so.
Between 1947 and 1996, the UN Security Council issued 21
resolutions condemning Israeli policies in Jerusalem that violate
international (human rights) law. The General Assembly has also issued
similar resolutions (54 resolutions between 1947 and 1992, excluding those
that were vetoed by the US). These resolutions were issued either because
of Israeli policies and measures on Jerusalem in particular, or they
referred to Jerusalem in the context of the Occupied Territories.
The resolutions emphasize the illegitimacy of Jerusalem's
annexation, based on the illegitimacy of acquiring territory by war.
Additionally, these resolutions regard the city as an integral part of the
Occupied Territories and emphasize the applicability of international
humanitarian law, especially the Fourth Geneva Convention. There has been
unheard-of international unanimity over these resolutions.
Finally, the Israeli communication stated that
"Israel insists that in any settlement, 80% of the Jewish residents
of Judea, Samaria and Gaza will be in settlement blocs under Israeli
sovereignty." However, the establishment of permanent civilian
settlements contravenes international humanitarian law, which prohibits an
occupying power from transferring population from its territory into
territory it occupies, and from performing any act in occupied territory
that is not intended to meet its military needs or benefit the local
population.
Article 49 of the Fourth Geneva Convention explicitly
provides that, "the Occupying Power shall not deport or transfer
parts of its own civilian population into the territory it occupies."
The commentary of the International Committee of the Red Cross to this
article states that the article is intended to prevent a practice adopted
during the Second World War by certain Powers, which transferred portions
of their own population to occupied territory for political and racial
reasons or in order, as they claimed, to colonize those territories.
The declared purpose of the settlers, like that of Israeli
governments that established the settlements, was and continues to be to
change the demographics in the Occupied Territories, a change that was
actually accomplished, at least in those areas in which there is congested
Israeli settlement.
The Israeli government initiated most of the Jewish
settlement in the Occupied Territories. All of the relevant ministries and
authorities assisted by expropriating land, planning, implementing, and
financing. The various Israeli governments encouraged and continue to
encourage Israeli civilians to move to the Occupied Territories by
providing benefits, such as grants and loans under favorable terms.
Even where individual settlers, rather than the
government, established settlements, the government acted retroactively to
turn these into permanent settlements. To achieve this, the government
assisted with planning, infrastructure, establishment of public buildings
and institutions, expropriation of land to expand the settlements, and
encouragement of other Israeli civilians to live there.
Settlements established pursuant to the decision of a
government committee, through governmental planning, implementation,
assistance and encouragement, clearly breach article 49 of the Fourth
Geneva Convention.
A fundamental principle of international humanitarian law
relating to territory subject to belligerent occupation is that occupation
is essentially a temporary situation. The temporary nature of occupation
entails limitations imposed on the occupying power regarding the creation
of permanent facts in the occupied territory.
Article 46 of the Hague Regulations prohibits the
confiscation of private property. Article 52 allows the occupying power to
requisition land in exchange for compensation, but only to meet its
military needs. Requisition of land, contrary to confiscation, is
temporary by definition, and the occupying power does not obtain
ownership. Article 55 of the Hague Regulations stipulates that the
occupying state is regarded only as trustee of public property in the
area, and does not obtain ownership of the property.
Since the military commander is not the sovereign in the
territory and his administration there is only temporary, he may exercise
only two considerations when making decisions concerning the occupied
territory: the welfare of the local population and his security needs.
Thus, the occupying state may only institute permanent changes where they
are intended for the local population.
Since it has never been contended that the settlements
were established to benefit the Palestinian residents of the Occupied
Territories, the legal justification for their establishment must be that
they were temporary actions intended for security needs. Since this is
clearly not the case, in establishing the settlements, Israel is violating
a fundamental principle of international humanitarian law.