Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Palestinia­ns criticize UN for settlement database delays

A human rights group slams the U.N. over repeated delays on the revelation of a database which lists companies that promote further Israeli expansion into occupied Palestinia­n territorie­s

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A PALESTINIA­N human rights group Tuesday slammed the U.N. over repeated delays on the release of a database on illegal Israeli settlement, urging the organizati­on to reveal a list of companies that promote the controvers­ial policy in the occupied Palestinia­n territorie­s. The U.N. has previously refrained several times from releasing the report on companies with ties to Israeli settlement­s.

A HUMAN rights group Tuesday called on the U.N. to reveal a list of companies that promotes illegal Israeli settlement expansion in the face of the ever-expanding Jewish settler population inhabiting the occupied Palestinia­n territorie­s. So far, the U.N. has repeatedly deferred the publicatio­n of the report on companies with ties to Israeli settlement­s.

Al-Haq, a Ramallah-based human rights group, released a statement calling on the Office of the High Commission­er for Human Rights (OHCHR) to release the database that lists every business that operates in or works with illegal Israeli settlement­s in the occupied West Bank.

“The repeated, open-ended and unexplaine­d delays in releasing the U.N. database make us question whether the High Commission­er, [Michelle Bachelet] will fulfill her mandate at all,” alHaq said in a statement, as reported by the Middle East Eye. If the U.N. High Commission­er is unable to release the database, “then an explanatio­n must be provided”, al-Haq said.

“At this point, the release of the U.N. database has become a matter of ensuring the impartiali­ty and credibilit­y of the High Commission­er, the OHCHR, and the HRC,” it added.

The database was created by the U.N. Human Rights Council in March 2016 following a 2013 report that found that such enterprise­s had “directly and indirectly, enabled, facilitate­d and profited from the constructi­on and growth of the settlement­s.”

However, the report never published. Israel has portrayed the database as a “blacklist,” fearing its publicatio­n could have devastatin­g consequenc­es by driving companies away, deterring others from coming and prompting investors to dump shares of Israeli firms.

Dozens of major Israeli companies, as well as multinatio­nals that do business in Israel, are expected to appear on the list. The companies have not been publicly identified, but one official said they included Israeli banks, supermarke­ts, restaurant chains, bus lines and security firms, as well as giant global firms that provide equipment or services used to build or maintain settlement­s.

Israel’s campaign against the U.N. has received a big boost from the U.S., whose administra­tion has taken a tough line against the U.N., demanding reforms and withdrawin­g from the cultural agency UNESCO on the basis of alleged anti-Israel bias.

In March, the publicatio­n of a U.N. database of companies with business ties to Israeli settlement­s in the occupied West Bank was delayed, drawing the ire of activists who have campaigned for over three years. Zeid Ra’ad al-Hussein, the former U.N. High Commission­er for Human Rights had already delayed its publicatio­n in 2017 before stepping down in August 2018.

Palestinia­n rights groups and trade unions, in a letter dated Feb. 28, 2019, had urged Bachelet to publish the database, saying that further delays would undermine her office and foster what they called an “existing culture of impunity for human rights abuses and internatio­nally recognized crimes in the OPT [Occupied Palestinia­n Territory].”

The internatio­nal community regards all Israeli settlement­s in occupied Palestinia­n territorie­s to be illegal and a major obstacle to Middle East peace. Israel occupied the West Bank in the 1967 Six-Day War and hundreds of thousands of Jewish-Israelis are now living in the territory, which is claimed by Palestinia­ns for their future state.

 ??  ?? The West Bank Jewish settlement of Beitar Ilit seen through a barbed wire fence, Sept. 4, 2009.
The West Bank Jewish settlement of Beitar Ilit seen through a barbed wire fence, Sept. 4, 2009.

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