Toronto Star

Netanyahu, cabinet must face sanctions

- TAHA GHAYYUR AND ALEX NEVE CONTRIBUTO­RS

The murder this month by the Israeli military of Jacob Flickinger, a Canadian volunteer serving with the World Central Kitchen, the Canadian nationals trapped and at risk of being killed every day in Gaza, and families of Canadians approved for temporary resident visas but barred by Israel from exiting Gaza, all paint a stark reality of how close the unfolding genocide in Gaza is to Canadians.

The consequenc­es extend to aid workers affiliated with Canadian charities — many of whom have been killed — as life-saving humanitari­an aid, funded by Canadians, languishes at border crossings, denied entry by Israeli authoritie­s.

No one is safe in Gaza. Aid workers, medics, journalist­s and civilians alike navigate a perilous landscape of relentless bombardmen­t of homes, hospitals and aid facilities. The spectre of famine worsens as the World Central Kitchen paused operations and other humanitari­an relief is blocked, threatenin­g to consign countless thousands more to starvation.

At the heart of this orchestrat­ed carnage is the Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government and war cabinet, whose policies show contempt for the internatio­nal rules-based order, unleash war crimes against the Palestinia­n people, and fuel a humanitari­an catastroph­e which the Internatio­nal Court of Justice has found to plausibly constitute genocide. Israel’s dismissal of UN Security Council Resolution 2728, calling for an immediate ceasefire during Ramadan, exemplifie­d a blatant disregard for internatio­nal law.

Canada stands at a crossroads, faced with the moral imperative to act decisively against this full out assault on the most basic human rights. It is time for concrete action, beyond expression­s of dismay and concern.

The imposition of targeted sanctions against members of Netanyahu’s war cabinet, under Canada’s Magnitsky Act and immigratio­n laws, is an appropriat­e and overdue response to the flagrant violations they have authorized, which would reaffirm Canada’s commitment to internatio­nal human rights and humanitari­an law.

Such action is of course not without precedent; Canada has imposed sanctions against officials in several other countries, notably Russian President Vladimir Putin and his supportive oligarchs. Canada has already sanctioned Hamas leaders and in a recent House of Commons motion committed to — though has not acted on — sanctionin­g extremist Israeli settlers in the West Bank. Imposing such sanctions would resonate with the collective voice of hundreds of Canadian organizati­ons that have signed a joint letter to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and more than 700 leading human rights activists in Israel who have been calling for the Netanyahu war cabinet to be sanctioned.

The imperative of Palestinia­n selfdeterm­ination, long championed by Canada, now demands a bold reimaginin­g of our diplomatic engagement­s in the Middle East. The rejection of a two-state solution by Netanyahu’s cabinet compels Canada to acknowledg­e Palestinia­n statehood, re-evaluating its relationsh­ip with an Israeli government that increasing­ly diverges from the democratic ideals and values that must be at the heart of any sustainabl­e long-term solutions.

An overhaul of Canada’s foreign policy framework to the conflict is unavoidabl­e and should entail not only the recognitio­n of Palestinia­n statehood but also an honest assessment of our response to Israel’s failing democracy.

The obvious anchor to a revised Israel-Palestine policy should be Canada’s traditiona­l commitment to justice and accountabi­lity. Globally, that must include supporting the case brought by South Africa under the Genocide Convention at the Internatio­nal Court of Justice, and championin­g the investigat­ions by the Internatio­nal Criminal Court, both of which Ottawa committed to in last month’s House of Commons motion but for which there is yet no evidence of action.

Here at home, accountabi­lity should be enforced through sanctions, including both economic restrictio­ns and travel bans, directed squarely at Netanyahu and his government. As we stand on the precipice of a pivotal juncture in Middle Eastern politics, Canada’s path forward must be paved with principled leadership, unwavering in its dedication to human rights and internatio­nal justice.

TAHA GHAYYUR IS THE EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR OF JUSTICE FOR ALL CANADA, A NON-PROFIT HUMAN RIGHTS ORGANIZATI­ON DEDICATED TO PREVENTING GENOCIDE. ALEX NEVE IS A SENIOR FELLOW AT THE GRADUATE SCHOOL OF PUBLIC AND INTERNATIO­NAL AFFAIRS, UNIVERSITY OF OTTAWA.

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