Bangkok Post

France seeks EU warning for West Bank plan

Diplomats pushing sanctions on Israel

-

BRUSSELS: France is urging its European Union partners to consider threatenin­g Israel with a tough response if it goes ahead with a de facto annexation of parts of the occupied West Bank, three EU diplomats said.

Belgium, Ireland and Luxembourg also want to discuss the possibilit­y of punitive economic measures during a foreign ministers’ meeting on Friday, the diplomats said, though all member states would have to agree to any collective action.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said cabinet discussion­s will start in July over extending Israeli sovereignt­y to Jewish settlement­s and the Jordan Valley in the occupied West Bank, as was mooted under US President Donald Trump’s Middle East peace plan.

Palestinia­ns have expressed outrage at Israel’s plans to cement its hold further on land it seized in the 1967 Middle East war, territory they are seeking for a state.

The EU diplomats did not give details on what punitive measures EU member states might consider to try to dissuade Israel from making the move.

In terms of procedure, EU government­s would need to ask the Commission and the EU foreign policy division, the EEAS, to draw up a list of options.

All 27 EU nations would need to agree to any EU response and Israel’s closest allies such as Hungary and the Czech Republic could still block even preparator­y work.

An EU spokesman on Monday declined to comment on internal discussion­s but said: “annexation is contrary to internatio­nal law and if annexation goes ahead, the EU will act accordingl­y”.

Israel has long been a part of the EU’s research and innovation programme Horizon 2020, which was worth nearly 80 billion euros (about 2.8 trillion baht) between 2014 and 2020, according to the European Commission’s official figures.

The EU is also Israel’s top trading partner and Israel benefits from trade preference­s with the world’s largest trading bloc.

EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said in February that Mr Trump’s plan departed from “internatio­nally agreed parameters”.

Mr Borrell also said that any steps made towards annexing Palestinia­n territory, “if implemente­d, could not pass unchalleng­ed.”

That is a view taken by France, Belgium, Luxembourg and Ireland, according to EU diplomats.

“There is clearly a need to look at what annexation means in the context of internatio­nal law and we do need to know our options,” said one senior EU diplomat involved in the discussion­s.

“We also need to say what exactly the consequenc­es of annexation would be, ideally as a way to stop any such move,” the diplomat said.

The Palestinia­ns and many countries regard the West Bank settlement­s as illegal under the Geneva Convention­s that bar settling on land captured in war.

However, Israel disputes this, citing security needs as well as biblical, historical and political connection­s to the land.

 ?? AFP ?? Protesters place a picture of former Palestinia­n prisoner Qassam Barghouti and accused terrorist on the rubble of his family house near Ramallah in the West Bank on Monday.
AFP Protesters place a picture of former Palestinia­n prisoner Qassam Barghouti and accused terrorist on the rubble of his family house near Ramallah in the West Bank on Monday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand