Illegal by any other word The international community needs to start finding its voice on Israel. For years now, Israel has been able to act with impunity, killing many Palestinians, taking more and more land and moving further and further towards unilaterally settling the Palestinian-Israeli conflict by force rather than negotiations, and the international community has remained largely silent, hushed by Washington.
Nothing illustrates this emasculation of international voices better than the weak protest UN chief Ban Ki-moon proffered when Israel last week announced tenders to build 300 new houses in an illegal settlement in occupied East Jerusalem.
The United Nations is the protector of international law. International law clearly deems Israeli settlements on occupied territory illegal. East Jerusalem is occupied territory. Building new houses there is therefore illegal and immoral. It should be opposed vociferously and unequivocally and if no order to desist is issued, it should be followed up by sanctions. The UN should spearhead such efforts.
But all Ban could muster was that the tender was “not helpful”.
Not helpful? Ignoring someone toiling with heavy bags is “not helpful”. Building illegal houses on occupied territory in a conflict situation is a provocation that could start bloodshed. Doing so immediately after an international peace conference, where settlements have long been recognised as an obstacle to progress, is rude, arrogant and belligerent.
The UN needs to straighten itself out. It is not useful to anyone, least to the UN itself, that the organisation should allow itself to become simply a member of the Quartet, one voice among four. After all, the other three members of the Quartet ought by right defer to the UN in matters of international law.
The sooner the UN gets out of the Quartet and frees itself from Washington’s constraints the better for everyone.
But the UN is only part of the problem. The EU, too, needs to get its act together. While there are powerful interests among EU countries to keep the EU from becoming a united power on the international stage, Europeans, if they had any self-respect, ought to decide what they actually want.
In terms of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict, a counterbalance to the US would be welcome and would also serve to bring, sooner rather than later, an end to US hegemony on peace mediation.
US mediation in this conflict, as we all know, has led us nowhere.
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