The Jerusalem Post

‘ UNSC must enforce settlement blacklist’

- • By TOVAH LAZAROFF

The United Nations Security Council ( UNSC) must enforce a settlement boycott by ensuring that the database of businesses operating over the pre- 1967 lines can be used for enforcemen­t action, special rapporteur Michael Lynk said in a written report submitted to the General Assembly in New York.

“The UNSC should ensure that the database becomes a living tool, that it clarifies and broadens its mandate, and that it provides the database with sufficient resources so that its spotlight can properly identify the scope of all business involvemen­t with the settlement­s and the occupation,” he wrote in his annual report published over the weekend.

Lynk is a Canadian legal expert who is the UN Human Rights Council special rapporteur for the human rights situation in the Palestinia­n territorie­s.

In February, the Office of the High Commission­er for Human Rights published a list of 112 business entities it says it has reasonable grounds to conclude operate over the pre- 1967 lines, 94 domiciled in Israel and 18 in six other countries.

These countries include the United States, Great Britain, France, the Netherland­s, Thailand and Luxembourg.

The list gives a boost to the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement and operates as a warning to those companies that such business dealings could constitute a war crime.

Neither the High Commission­er’s Office nor the UNHRC, which commission­ed the list, have any enforcemen­t power; the list is advisory only.

Lynk, however, has now asked the UNSC to enforce a boycott of Israeli areas over the pre- 1967 lines in the West Bank, east Jerusalem and the Golan Heights.

He called on states to boycott Israeli entities located over the pre- 1967 lines, including banning Israeli goods from such areas.

Lynk also urged nations “to discourage the promotion of tourism and emigration to the Israeli settlement­s.”

Israel has conducted a “cost- free occupation,” he wrote, adding that without consequenc­es, there is no incentive for Israel to withdraw from the West Bank, east Jerusalem and the Golan Heights.

“Without the developmen­t and applicatio­n of comprehens­ive accountabi­lity measures by the internatio­nal community against the Israeli occupation, it will continue well into the future,” Lynk wrote. “It is well past time for the council to lead the internatio­nal community by drawing from its own precedents... and other modern sanctions regimes to honor its directions to end assistance to the settlement­s and to end the occupation.”

Lynk’s proposal is based on his legal determinat­ion that Israel’s hold on territory over the pre1967 lines is illegal under internatio­nal law. Israel and the United States have rejected that view.

US President Donald Trump’s peace plan to resolve the Israel- Palestinia­n conflict would allow for Israel to retain most of Jerusalem and 30% of the West Bank. The US has separately recognized Israeli sovereignt­y over the Golan Heights.

Lynk’s call comes as the Arab world has begun to embrace Israel, with the UAE and Bahrain signing normalizat­ion deals with Israel and Sudan agreeing to establish ties with the Jewish state irrespecti­ve of the status of the territorie­s over the pre- 1967 lines.

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