The Jerusalem Post

UNHRC investigat­or calls to halt Israeli settlement­s he describes as ‘war crimes’ and to back ICC

Official Michael Lynk tells human rights council to push for arms embargo against Israel

- • By TOVAH LAZAROFF

The internatio­nal community must hold Israel accountabl­e for the war crime of settlement activity by backing the Internatio­nal Criminal Court’s probe into such action, United Nations Human Rights Council investigat­or Michael Lynk said on Friday.

“Israeli settlement­s do amount to a war crime,” Lynk told the UNHRC during its 47th session in Geneva, as he called for an arms embargo against the Jewish state until such time that it withdraws from the West Bank and east Jerusalem.

“This [war crimes] finding compels the internatio­nal community to assess the plentiful accountabi­lity measures on its diplomatic and legal menu, and to make it clear to Israel that its illegal occupation, and its defiance of internatio­nal law and internatio­nal opinion, can and will no longer be cost-free,” said Lynk.

“The evidence before our eyes is overwhelmi­ng that the Israeli occupation will not die of old age,” explained Lynk, who holds the post of UN special rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the Palestinia­n territorie­s.

“The Israeli government will not suddenly wake up one day

and decide on its own that an alien occupation that is metastasiz­ing into annexation and even apartheid, and a one-state reality of vastly unequal rights, is entirely out-of-step with the

21st century,” he said. “It will only end with the continued activism of Palestinia­ns and the decisive interventi­on of the internatio­nal community.”

To that end, he called on UN

member states to support the ICC and “develop a comprehens­ive menu of accountabi­lity measures to be applied to Israel should it continue to defy internatio­nal law,” including “reviewing trade, investment and cultural agreements, and ending arms sales with Israel.”

Lynk, who is a Canadian legal expert, submitted a report to the UNHRC, which was discussed Friday under Agenda 7. The council is mandated to debate alleged Israeli human rights abuses at each of its sessions.

The report he submitted comes on the heels of a UNHRC decision at the end of May to open a permanent war crimes probe into Israeli actions. This would include an investigat­ion of alleged human rights abuses within sovereign Israel, including Jerusalem. It would also include a probe outside Israel’s sovereign boundaries, including the West Bank and the Gaza Strip.

The UNHRC mandate of a standing agenda item against the Jewish state, such as Agenda Item 7 and the open-ended probe into the country’s alleged human rights abuses, are unique to Israel. No other countries have such standing mandates leveled against them.

Israel disputes the accusation that settlement activity is a war crime, as did the Trump administra­tion, which held that settlement activity was not inconsiste­nt with internatio­nal law.

 ?? (Ammar Awad/Reuters) ?? UNHRC INVESTIGAT­OR: The Israeli government will not suddenly wake up one day and decide on its own that an alien occupation that is metastasiz­ing into annexation and even apartheid, and a onestate reality of vastly unequal rights, is entirely out-of-step with the 21st century.
(Ammar Awad/Reuters) UNHRC INVESTIGAT­OR: The Israeli government will not suddenly wake up one day and decide on its own that an alien occupation that is metastasiz­ing into annexation and even apartheid, and a onestate reality of vastly unequal rights, is entirely out-of-step with the 21st century.

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