Oman Daily Observer

UK experts call for halt to Israeli arms sales

* Letter warns Britain could be ‘complicit in genocide’ * Pressure for suspension follows killing of aid workers

- — Reuters

LONDON: Three former Supreme Court justices have joined more than 600 members of the British legal profession in calling for the government to halt arms sales to Israel, saying it could make Britain complicit in genocide in Gaza.

Their call was also backed by two of the country’s leading intelligen­ce experts, who argued that Britain needed to use any leverage it could to persuade Israel, and its biggest backer the United States, to change course in the conflict.

The British government has been a staunch ally of Israel since the eruption of hostilitie­s on October 7 but Foreign Secretary David Cameron has hardened his language in recent months over the humanitari­an situation in Gaza.

Cameron said on March 8 that Israel had to be compliant with internatio­nal humanitari­an law in order for Britain to grant export licences allowing arms sales to Israel, and that a judgement on that was underway and due in the “coming days”.

The Foreign Office said on Thursday it kept advice on Israel’s adherence to the law under review but that the content of government advice was confidenti­al.

Senior members of Britain’s legal profession said the government needed to halt sales now to avoid “aiding and assisting an internatio­nal wrongful act”.

“The provision of military assistance and material to Israel may render the UK complicit in genocide as well as serious breaches of Internatio­nal Humanitari­an Law,” the judges, barristers and legal academics said in a 17-page letter to Prime Minister Rishi Sunak.

One of the former justices, Jonathan Sumption, told BBC Radio he was concerned the

British government had lost sight of its own obligation­s under internatio­nal law.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has called any suggestion of genocide as “outrageous”, and has said Israel has an “unwavering commitment to internatio­nal law”.

Sunak has resisted calls to immediatel­y halt weapons sales to Israel, saying the government adheres to a “very careful licensing regime”.

But the killing of seven aid workers, including three British nationals, in Israeli airstrikes this week has ratcheted up the pressure. Israel said they were mistakenly killed.

Britain licenses the sale of British-made explosive devices, assault rifles and components for military aircraft to Israel but it is a relatively small supplier, with Israeli exports making up about 0.4 per cent of Britain’s total global defence sales in 2022, the last fullyear data was available.

Two senior figures in Britain’s intelligen­ce community — former national security adviser Peter Ricketts and Alex Younger, the former head of the MI6 foreign spy service - have said those sales should be used as leverage.

Ricketts said there was “now abundant evidence” that Israel was not compliant with internatio­nal humanitari­an law and that a ban would send a message that could stir debate in Washington.

Younger told the BBC that Britain needed to “achieve leverage, and create incentives for more focus to be put on the issue of what is technicall­y called collateral damage but what we would call as killing innocent civilians”.

Earlier this week, Alicia Kearns, the Conservati­ve chair of parliament’s foreign affairs select committee, said ministers had been told by their lawyers that Israel had violated internatio­nal law in its war in Gaza.

 ?? — Reuters File ?? A Palestinia­n boy reacts near the site of an Israeli strike on a house, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas, in Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip.
— Reuters File A Palestinia­n boy reacts near the site of an Israeli strike on a house, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas, in Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip.

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