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Occupied Palestinian territories ‘new type of crime against humanity
Marijntje Lazet's picture
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Geneva, Switzerland
Geneva, Switzerland

Occupied Palestinian territories ‘new type of crime against humanity’

Published on : 30 November 2010 - 1:01pm | By Marijntje Lazet (Photo: The Corner Report)
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Special Rapporteur Richard Falk urged the United Nations and the international community to draft a new protocol of international humanitarian law to address the situation of prolonged occupation and refugee status imposed upon the Palestinian people for over 43 years of Israeli occupation.

“The Palestinian experience suggests the need for a new protocol of international humanitarian law,” he said in a statement issued Monday to mark the International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People.

Falk stressed the need to impose “some outer time limit after which further occupation becomes a distinct violation of international law, and if not promptly corrected, constitutes a new type of crime against humanity.”

For the independent expert designated by the UN Human Rights Council to monitor the situation of human rights in Palestinian territories occupied since 1967, “the UN and the international community as a whole will be judged in the future by whether effective action is now taken to end the humanitarian catastrophe that has befallen the Palestinian people.”

“In this respect,” Falk warned, “the UN, the governments and the peoples of the world will be all be judged complicit to the extent that this persistent violation of fundamental human rights is endured without taking the necessary steps in a spirit of urgency and commitment to bring this abusive occupation to an end and achieve Palestinian self-determination in accordance with international law and the dictates of global justice.”

Regarding current efforts to reactivate a peace process between Israel and the Palestinian authorities, the UN Special Rapporteur reminded that “negotiation between the parties to the conflict needs to be guided by the implementation of several principles of international law if a settlement of the conflict is to achieve Palestinian self-determination.”

These principles moreover include withdrawal from Palestinian territory occupied since 1967, dismantling settlements established during the occupation, fixing secure and internationally recognized borders and guaranteeing free access to sacred sites and religious buildings throughout historic Palestine.

“A peace process that does not heed these guidelines, with appropriate degrees of flexible implementation,” Falk warned, “cannot realize either self-determination for the Palestinian people or peace with security and justice for both Palestinians and Israelis.”
 

 

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