What Is the PLO Doing with New UN Status?

By Stuart Littlewood

The Palestinian Embassy in London has just issued a press release under the heading “Pressing need to halt Israel’s illegal settlement colonization campaign via political, legal, and diplomatic means”.

It complains about Israel’s “flagrant disrespect of international law” in announcing, the day after the UN upgraded Palestine’s status, a further 3,000 illegal settlement units in Palestinian East Jerusalem.

“It is time that political, economic and legal means are used so that Israel bears its responsibility for its violations and obstruction of peace efforts,” says Ambassador Manuel Hassassian. He wants the British government and the EU to ban Israeli settlement products and bar Israeli extremist settlers. “This is the only way to halt Israel’s illegal settlement campaign, salvage the two-state solution and revive the peace process.”

What’s more, he urges the British public to…

• Write to their MP outlining Israel’s illegal settlement expansion activities which are a breach of article 49(6) of the Fourth Geneva Convention and constitute war crimes.
• Ask their MP to call for a ban on import of settlement products into the UK.
• Contact the Foreign Office.
• Inform the Embassy of any responses.

There has been a “pressing need” to halt Israel’s illegal settlement-building ever since the Allon Plan of 1967. But the PLO did remarkably little over the years to use the channels open to it until last month when it finally got around to applying for – and getting – non-Member observer status at the UN.

Why is the newly-empowered Palestine, fresh from its victory, still asking us to do the donkey-work? One hoped that President Abbas would waste no time in signing up to the Rome Statute and joining the International Criminal Court and the International Court of Justice in order to lay long-overdue charges against Israel for its illegal occupation, blockade, war crimes and crimes against humanity. First among the many legal options, surely, is to cut the endless whining and apply for an injunction against further settlement construction.

True, reports are circulating that Palestinian officials talk of filing war crimes charges and encouraging the international community to impose sanctions. But there may be a long wait before this Zionist-corrupted British government suspends trade with the thugs it repeatedly pledges to support and persuades its EU partners to do the same.

Now that access to the proper UN legal machinery is available for Palestinians, it is ridiculous to claim that EU and other sanctions are “the only way” to halt Israel’s illegal settlement campaign and salvage the two-state solution. Did 138 nations vote to upgrade Palestine’s UN status for nothing?

Only a few days ago Cameron renewed his loyal pledge: “We said we’d resist calls for boycotts on Israel and yes – we are going to keep on working with Israel, doing business with Israel, trading with Israel.”

And earlier this month Agent Hague was saying that European trade sanctions against Israel were not an option. “I don’t think there is enthusiasm around the European Union … about economic sanctions in Europe on Israel. I don’t believe there would be anywhere near a consensus nor is that our approach.”

Even news that South Africa’s ruling party, the ANC, has adopted BDS (boycott, divestment and sanctions) as official policy is unlikely to push Hague and Cameron into making a humiliating U-turn and shafting their best friends in the entire world. But if those 138 nations could be persuaded to similarly embrace BDS, who knows, it might do the trick.

Meanwhile, when asked what steps the British Government was taking to promote compliance with obligations under international law in the conflict between Israel and Palestine, Alistair Burt (Foreign Office minister for Middle East affairs) gave Parliament this soppy reply: “We repeatedly call on Israel to abide by its obligations under international law and have a regular dialogue with Israel on legal issues relating to the occupation, including settlements and the treatment of prisoners, including Palestinian children in military custody.”

“We have consistently condemned Israel’s announcements to expand settlements in the Occupied Palestinian Territories, including East Jerusalem… We look to the Government of Israel to take all necessary steps to prevent settlement construction.”

And when Jeremy Corbyn asked what steps were being taken to make sure Israeli settlements are excluded from all EU and UK agreements with Israel, Burt replied that UK and EU guidelines do not currently differentiate between products from Israel or from the Occupied Palestinian Territories. He said the EU Foreign Affairs Council was working on measures to ensure that settlement produce does not enter the EU duty-free, under the EU-Israel Association Agreement, and that EU-wide guidelines are issued to make sure that settlement products are not incorrectly labelled as Israeli produce. But there are currently “no plans for EU or domestic legislation on this issue”.

Another MP asked what advice the Government was giving UK companies who do business with Israeli settlements, and was told: “International law does not impose obligations on corporations, and for a company to operate in Israeli settlements is not, per se, contrary to UK law. So we do not provide advice or guidelines to UK companies who operate, or are considering operating, in Israeli settlements.”

So much for ‘dialogue’.

The ball is now in the PLO’s court. Before telling us what WE must do, Mr. Ambassador, let’s see evidence of what the PA/PLO are doing, if anything, after their heady success at the UN three weeks ago.

Here was a chance for the Palestinian leadership to show us what they’re really made of. But it seems they’re stuck in same old time-wasting groove.

– Stuart Littlewood’s book Radio Free Palestine, with Foreword by Jeff Halper, can now be read on the internet by visiting www.radiofreepalestine.org.uk. He contributed this article to PalestineChronicle.com.

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4 Comments

  1. It seems that Stuart’s hatred towards Jews goes well beyond that of extremist Arab groups. What on earth has it got to do with Stuart, who is neither an Arab nor a Muslim and doesn’t live in Israel or surrounds, how Abbas chooses to conduct his diplomacy. Why has he got to show you anything, particularly since you prefer a hate agenda over a peaceful solution. If an agreement was reached you’d be screaming because hatred of Jews is your real agenda. Tough – we’re here to stay, and have a Happy Christmas as you celebrate the birth of one of our most famous Jews.

  2. Absolutely to the point Stuart – the PA inertia to seize Palestinian human and political rights mirrors the inertia of the US, UK , EU, canada and Australia. to fulfil their obligations as UN members..and the inertia of the Palestinian people to pressure the PA is completely bizarre.

  3. For many to understand Stuarts article they must first read the majority of his work prior to this one, and to the extent possible actually have at the very least a meager understanding of this conflict. I agree with most of the above, but also believe the PA knows the ball is in their court, and are therefore taking every possible detour before taking matters to the ICC or ICJ. They are in control, relatively speaking of course. The SC pretty much condemned Israel, save for the US, and it is becoming common place for people (and governments) to actually criticize a worldly one-sided conflict without being thrown into the anti-Semite basket, a sad use of the word to most people who actually suffer from antisemitism.
    @Vacy
    It is not inertia of the Palestinian people; to broadly define all those affected by such a decision as Palestinians, and to assume none the world over have been proactive in their approach is ridiculous. But you are right in claiming that the political authority of the Palestinians has long been absent, and that the people (directly) in their constituency have had other things to worry about rather than a lackluster and nonconstructive process (and I refuse to adopt the word peace process).

    Apologies for the long post.

  4. So Vacy, let me understand this. You, like Stuart, are chastising Abbas and the West Bank/Gaza Arabs for doing what they themselves choose to do, which has so far been balanced and surprisingly peaceful since the UN vote, instead of praising them. Why do you, another non-Arab non-Muslim encourage confrontation if they don’t want it, other than maybe because you hate Israel and Jews, rather than having the interests of the Arabs at heart. Like wars, legal action can be unpredictable and I wouldn’t like to be a PLO or Hamas rep appearing in a criminal court discussing war crimes, so Abbas is pretty wise on that one.

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