The Jerusalem Post

Any Israeli annexation plan is illegal, whether limited or unlimited, UN says

- • By TOVAH LAZAROFF

Any Israeli West Bank annexation plan is illegal irrespecti­ve of whether it includes all or only some of the settlement­s, UN High Commission­er for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet clarified on Monday.

“Annexation is illegal. Period,” Bachelet said.

She spoke out amid reports that Israel weighed assuaging internatio­nal and Palestinia­n objections to annexation by moving forward with a partial plan.

This would likely include the applicatio­n of sovereignt­y over areas of high settler-population density, known as the blocs, rather than advancing an initiative that would annex the entire 30% of the West Bank as outlined under US President Donald Trump’s peace plan.

Yamina MK and former justice minister Ayelet Shaked told Army Radio earlier in the day that the Jordan Valley would be excluded from Israel’s annexation plans.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu “has given up on the Jordan Valley” because of the opposition from the Arab world, she said.

Shaked charged that the sovereignt­y map included in Trump’s peace plan had been drawn up by Netanyahu. “He worked for three years for this plan, and he can make changes to it, as long as his coalition agrees,” she said.

In Geneva, Bachelet said that the objection to annexation is not related to the size of the territory, but is an illegal act whether it includes “30% of the West Bank, or 5%.”

“The precise consequenc­es of annexation cannot be predicted,” Bachelet said, “but they are likely to be disastrous for the Palestinia­ns, for Israel itself, and for the wider region.”

Such a step could harm the

Palestinia­ns by restrictin­g their freedom of movement, cutting them off from humanitari­an services, placing their population centers in enclaves, and contributi­ng to the further expropriat­ion of private Palestinia­n property, Bachelet said.

She further warned that annexation could place Palestinia­ns at risk of forced population transfer.

Annexation is “likely to entrench, perpetuate and further heighten serious human rights violations that have characteri­zed the conflict for decades,” Bachelet said.

“Even the most minimalist form of annexation would lead to increased violence and loss of life, as walls are erected, security forces deployed and the two population­s brought into closer proximity,” Bachelet said.

Such annexation “will not change the obligation­s of Israel as occupying power towards the occupied population under internatio­nal humanitari­an or human rights law” and would harm the possibilit­y of a twostate solution, Bachelet said.

“The shock waves of annexation will last for decades, and will be extremely damaging to Israel, as well as to the Palestinia­ns,” Bachelet warned. “However there is still time to reverse this decision.”

THE FOREIGN accused Bachelet

Ministry yet once again of politicizi­ng her office to attack Israel.

Bachelet spoke out unilateral­ly out of her own accord, thereby joining the Palestinia­n campaign against the US peace plan, the ministry said.

Israel long ago lost confidence in Bachelet’s ability to “promote human rights,” the ministry said. It recalled that in February, Israel had cut off ties with her office.

Overnight, Netanyahu indicated he supported the annexation of all 30% of the West Bank allowed under Trump’s plan, when he addressing a Christians United for Israel virtual conference. Trump’s plan provided Israel with defensible borders “including the strategic Jordan Valley,” the prime minister said.

With only two days left to go until July 1, the earliest date by which Netanyahu can apply sovereignt­y, no final decisions have been made with regard to the sovereignt­y map.

Any conversati­ons about a partial annexation plan, which could include settlement blocs, have not necessaril­y included settler leaders.

“No one has spoken to us or shown us maps” for a partial annexation plan, Ma’aleh Adumim Mayor Benny Kashriel told The Jerusalem Post.

The question of when and how to apply sovereignt­y changes from minute to minute, he said.

His city of 38,000 people is located just five kilometers outside of Jerusalem, in the direction of the Jordan Valley and the Dead Sea.

When Israel speaks of retaining high Jewish-population areas of the West Bank, his settlement bloc is often one of the premier locations that come to mind.

Yet with all of the reports circulatin­g about such a possibilit­y, no one has picked up the phone to discuss this with him.

Kashriel’s city has always enjoyed wide Israeli “consensus” and even internatio­nal consensus when it comes to its future inclusion in Israel’s final borders.

Former prime minister Yitzhak Rabin spoke of the importance of placing Ma’aleh Adumim within Israel’s sovereign borders, Kashriel said. That was followed by former prime minister Ariel Sharon, who spoke of Ma’aleh Adumim as a bloc that should be within sovereign Israel.

He noted that even the grassroots 2003 Geneva Initiative, which was signed by PLO Executive Committee member Yasser Abed Rabo and former Israeli justice minister Yossi Beilin, placed Ma’aleh Adumim within Israel’s sovereign borders in its map for a two-state resolution of the conflict. That placement excluded the unbuilt E1 section.

 ?? (Reuters) ?? MICHELLE BACHELET
(Reuters) MICHELLE BACHELET

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