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Foreword
Dear friends
and colleagues,
Thank you for
taking the time to examine our document on the proposed Gaza
“disengagement plan”. The current plan has not been publicly debated
in any fashion which strikes at the core of the Israeli strategy.
This document intends to provide the reader with an explanation of
the real ramifications of the proposed plan.
It is
important that human rights organisations evaluate the legal and
political context within which they are operating. In the final
analysis of this plan PCHR contends that the occupation will
continue and that the Israeli government is seeking to make life
even more unbearable for Palestinian civilians. This will have long
term implications for our work as an organization trying to realise
human rights in the oPt.
In 1993, after
the Oslo Accords were signed, we flowed against the euphoria of
peace and clearly stated that Oslo was a flawed settlement which
would not bring a lasting peace because of its failure to address
substantive issues of human rights. Now we are concerned to
illustrate the real effects of a document which once again displaces
human rights and democracy from the centre of the debate.
I hope that
upon reading this document you will understand our genuine concerns
that this plan is a step away from peace, human rights and democracy
– not closer to it. I hope that you will combine this understanding
with positive and real action taken to ensure that Israel complies
with its obligations under international law so that the Palestinian
civilians can be guaranteed their full complement of rights.
Thank you for
your ongoing support of PCHR and the cause of human rights and
democracy for all in Palestine.
Warm regards
Raji Sourani
Director
PCHR
*
Introduction
The Palestinian Centre for Human rights (PCHR) expresses grave
concern regarding a “disengagement plan”[1]
proposed by Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, on April 14th 2004,
for military redeployment in the Gaza Strip, including limited
redeployment in some areas of the West Bank. PCHR is particularly
concerned that, according to details published so far by the Israeli
Prime Minister’s Office[2],
this proposed plan of “disengagement” and additional related
statements will facilitate Israel’s continued abrogation of its
legal and moral obligations under international law, including: the
right of return for refugees; the derailment of the implementation
of the ICJ decision regarding the Annexation Wall; and
the right of self determination.
The full disengagement plan has neither been published nor finalised
however the structure and the concept which has been released, so
far, is of deep concern to human rights organisations who can be
confident that the plan does not serve international humanitarian
law or human rights law. The plan does not amount to an end of the
occupation. In fact it reinforces the position of the Israeli
authorities as the occupying power. Israel will still be able to
exert complete control over the Gaza Strip and consequently the
Fourth Geneva Convention should remain the primary legal document
governing the occupied Palestinian territory (oPt).
Prime Minister Ariel Sharon first announced in December 2003 a
proposed “Disengagement Plan” for the Gaza Strip and related action
in the West Bank as a unilateral action to be taken outside of any
negotiated settlement with Palestinian counterparts[3].
The plan itself is a political and military strategy which has grave
implications for the economic, social, political status of the
Palestinian people. Human Rights organisations must consider the
legal, political and military aspects of this plan as part of their
strategy of actively seeking the implementation of the Fourth Geneva
Convention, the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights
and the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural
Rights in the oPt.
PCHR is
concerned that the attempt to implement this plan, which fails to
respect international human rights and humanitarian law, will result
in a further deterioration in the military, political and economic
situation on the ground. This position paper seeks to demonstrate
the failings of this proposal in respect of both Israel’s
obligations under international law and the impact of such a plan on
the human rights and humanitarian situation in the occupied
Palestinian territory.
The paper will
provide a critical analysis on the plan which has so far been
severally lacking from the debate. To date the “disengagement plan”
has been portrayed variously as an end to the occupation of Gaza
(both in the media and by the Israeli government) or victory (by
some elements in Palestinian society). In fact it is neither of
these.
The members of
the Quartet issued a statement after the announcement of the
“disengagement plan” which included a fundamental misunderstanding
of the nature of the plan:
“The
Quartet took positive note of the announced intention of Israeli
Prime Minister Sharon to withdraw from all Gaza settlements and
parts of the West Bank. The Quartet welcomes and encourages
such a
step, which should provide a rare moment of opportunity in the
search for peace in the Middle East.”
The Quartet
further emphasised that the “disengagement plan” supported the
Road-Map process. In fact the plan is neither one of peace nor
opportunity. Its scope is designed to limit the progress of peace by
forcing a deterioration in the economic, social and political status
of the oPt, while excluding the PLO/PNA (in clear breach of the
Road-Map) and tightening real control over the West Bank and the
Gaza Strip.
PCHR is deeply
concerned that the “Disengagement Plan” is actually a method of
facilitating a strategy by the Israeli government to:
(i) deflect
the focus from the deteriorating human rights situation in the oPt,
characterised by an increased number of killings of civilians, house
demolitions and extra-judicial executions, among others;
(ii) eliminate
the role of the PLO from negotiations on the future status of
Palestine[4];
(iii) Continue
the economic and social stranglehold being imposed on the Gaza Strip
and in so doing continue the belligerent occupation;
(iv) Stop the
debate over the implementation of the ICJ advisory opinion regarding
the Annexation Wall, which aims to annex some 58% of the territory
in the West Bank. In so doing this will give Israel an increased
opportunity to accelerate construction and to implement its
fait a
complis
strategy which
ultimately aims to render a Palestinian state completely untenable;
(v) Place
responsibility for the security situation in the Gaza Strip with the
Egyptian government while still permitting the IOF to make
incursions into Gaza;
(vi)
Facilitate the accelerated expansion of Israeli settlements, which
are illegal under international humanitarian law, in the West Bank;
(vii) Prevent
the return of Palestinian refugees, which is their legal right under
international law;
(viii) Put an
end to the demands set out by the international community in various
resolutions at the UNSC and UNGA.
PCHR firmly
contends that the plan, which amounts to a redeployment of Israeli
forces in the Gaza Strip, will mean the continuation of the Israeli
military occupation. Further, the continued military presence of the
occupation power does not involve a transfer of sovereignty to a
Palestinian state. This further illustrates the fact that the
Israeli plan is a means of destroying the scope and the capacity of
the Palestinian people to build an independent state while wishing
to create the illusion of an end to occupation.
*
Status of the
occupied Palestinian territory
The Gaza Strip
and West Bank, including occupied East Jerusalem, have been under an
ongoing belligerent occupation by Israel since 1967. As a
consequence, the Geneva Convention Relative to the
Protection of
Civilian Persons in Time of War, 1949, which governs the protection
of civilians during conflict and under occupation, is the primary
legal framework for all activities in the Gaza Strip and West Bank,
including occupied East Jerusalem. The
de jure
applicability of this Convention to the oPt has been repeatedly
reconfirmed by the international community, including UN fora,
governments, the International Court of Justice and international
organizations. Israel is the only state in the world which does not
recognise the
de jure
applicability of the Convention.
The Gaza Strip
is 365 square kilometres in area. It has an 11km land border with
Egypt and 51 km land border with Israel. These borders and the coast
(45km) are controlled by Israel. The Israeli military has
established an electronic fence around the land borders of the Gaza
Strip and continue to expand a buffer zone of cleared land between
the fence and Palestinian areas. More than 1.3 million Palestinians
live in the Gaza Strip, most are refugees from 1948. Since the Oslo
Accords, Israel has taken direct control over 58% of the Gaza Strip,
for the exclusive use of the military and settlers, including
settlements, military posts, roads and buffer zones designed to
protect the settlements. Approximately 6000 settlers currently
reside in the 19 settlements in the Gaza Strip. As the land razing
and confiscation policy of the Israeli military has continued, the
area of land under
de facto
Israeli control continues to be expanded.
The Israeli
military regularly truncates the Gaza Strip into three separate
areas using military checkpoints to close roads in the north, middle
and south of the Strip. This means that the military effectively
exerts control over the movement of the entire civilian population
of the Gaza Strip.
Alongside
this, a number of areas, including al Mawasi and al Sayafa, are
completely fenced off from the rest of the Gaza Strip and access is
controlled through Israeli military checkpoints.
Despite the
presence of an electronic fence around the Gaza Strip, Israeli
military operations in the Gaza Strip have escalated since September
2000. These military operations have been characterized by regular
and repeated ground incursions and aerial attacks on residential
areas in the north, middle and southern areas of the Gaza Strip. The
existence of this electronic fence is the model used to justify the
construction of the West Bank Annexation Wall - yet the failure of
this “security” model is clearly indicated by the escalation in
incursions into residential areas of the Gaza Strip. In addition to
their intention to annex large parts of the West Bank the Israeli
authorities will be able to impose the same regime of economic and
social strangulation on the West Bank under the pretence of
“security concerns”.
*
The
Gaza Strip: IOF Control of land, sea and air.
It is clear
from the details provided in the plan that, if implemented, the
Gaza Strip will effectively remain under Israel’s economic and
social control, including, through an ongoing presence internally
and on all border areas.
The plan
specifically provides that Israel will
“relocate
military installations and all Israeli villages and towns in the
Gaza Strip”[5],
thereby retaining some internal military posts and bases. The plan
also provides that:
“Israel
will continue to maintain a military presence along the border
between the Gaza Strip and Egypt (Philadelphi Route)…At certain
locations security considerations may require some widening of the
area in which the military activity is conducted.”[6]
Thus not only
will this military presence continue, it will also be expanded.
Recent announcements regarding the construction of a trench along
the border line further highlight concerns regarding expansion of
Israeli military presence in this area[7].
This area of the Rafah refugee camp along the border with Egypt has
seen the most frequent Israeli military activity, largely in the
form of destruction
of civilian
homes. Land has been cleared of Palestinian homes in a broad buffer
zone parallel to the border line. This buffer zone extends up to
200metres from the original border line, resulting in destruction of
hundreds of refugee homes. This buffer zone is now an “area
of military activity”
which Palestinians are not allowed to enter.
It is further
explicitly stated in the plan that Israel will retain control of the
airspace, coast and all land borders. The letter from the US
President on the plan states that
“…after Israel
withdraws from Gaza and/or parts of the West Bank, and pending
agreements on other arrangements, existing arrangements regarding
control of air space, territorial waters, and land passages of the
West Bank and Gaza will continue”[8].
The decision
by the Israeli authorities to prevent the reopening of Rafah
International Airport indicates their intention to prevent free
movement of people, services and goods in and out of the Gaza Strip.
Further to
this Palestinian fishermen will still be restricted from travelling
outside of a 8-10km area along the coast of Gaza, which is patrolled
by the Israeli navy[9].
Fishermen are also prevented from travelling more then half way down
the coastal waters of the Gaza strip. This also denies the
Palestinians access to resources of natural gas in their territorial
waters. Combine this with the destruction of the international port
in Gaza (and the denial of the Egyptian request to allow its
reconstruction) and it becomes clear that the occupying power will
increase the level of suffocation on
the economic
and social life of the Gaza Strip.
In parallel to
the “disengagement plan” Israel has made an application to the World
Bank to move the Rafah international crossing to Israeli territory.
Although the plan is opposed by the Egyptians, whose consent is
required, the aim of Israel is to claim complete legal and military
control over the passage of Palestinian goods and people. If this
strategy is successful the closures, hardships and humiliations
afflicted on the Palestinian people will be under the sovereignty of
Israel and will not be subject to the observations of the
international community. In effect the moving of the Rafah crossing
point will mean the final act of isolating the Gaza Strip from the
rest of the world.
Heavy
restrictions will be increased on the export of agricultural and
other products from Gaza because the IOF will maintain control of
all the borders and crossing points. As well as this, Israel has
committed itself to ending all access for Palestinian workers to
Israel by 2008. However the strict closure imposed on the Erez
Military Checkpoint, in the north of Gaza, already means that these
workers are being denied access to their workplaces on a daily
basis. This ongoing stifling of the economic and social growth of
the Gaza Strip will escalate if the proposed plan is implemented.
The Gaza Strip
is an isolated, occupied area which, under optimal circumstances,
trades using Egypt’s Port Said and Cairo airport[10].
Under the
“disengagement plan” this will become increasingly difficult,
particularly if Rafah international crossing is moved. The effect of
this increased economic strangulation will be to increase the
suffering of Palestinians while peddling the illusion of withdrawal
to the international community. Increased economic suffering will
have multiple effects. In the first instance it will drive hundreds
of thousands of Palestinians out of the Gaza Strip on a permanent
basis.
Secondly,
for those Palestinians who remain in Gaza, life will become almost
completely unbearable.
This level of
suffering will force an inevitable political and, more
significantly, military reaction by some elements of Palestinian
society. Such a reaction will provide further justification for
Israel to increase the level of military activity (which manifests
itself in various forms of breaches of humanitarian law; collective
punishment, extra-judicial executions, disproportionate and
indistinct attacks against civilians). The plan provides for this
eventuality when it specifies that Israel will retain the right to
undertake military actions in the Gaza Strip:
“Israel
reserves for itself the basic right of self defense, including
taking preventive steps as well as responding by using force against
threats that will emerge from the Gaza Strip.”
In effect,
under the plan as published to date, the status of the Gaza Strip as
occupied territory will not change; article 42 of the Convention IV
Respecting the Laws and Customs of War on Land, 1907 (Hague
Convention 1907) clearly states that:
“Territory
is considered occupied when it is actually placed under the
authority of the hostile army. The occupation extends only to the
territory where such authority has been established and can be
exercised”.
Israel
contends that this plan will serve to “dispel
claims regarding Israel’s responsibility for the Palestinians in the
Gaza Strip”.
Israeli policies and practices demonstrate that Israel currently
retains effective authority over the Gaza Strip and the details of
the disengagement plan strongly indicate that this authority is not
likely to diminish, rather it will increase. As such the occupation
of the Gaza Strip will continue even in the event of the
implementation of this plan and the Fourth Geneva Convention will
remain applicable. The Convention, in Article 6, specifies that the
occupying power shall be bound by the Convention until such time as
the occupation ends.
Even if this
plan is implemented Israel will remain the Occupying Power with
clear and broad ranging obligations to the Palestinian civilian
population in the oPt who will continue to be defined as protected
persons under article 4 of the Fourth Geneva Convention,
"Persons
protected by the Convention are those who, at a given moment and in
any manner whatsoever, find themselves, in case of a conflict or
occupation, in the hands of a Party to the Conflict or Occupying
Power of which they are not nationals."
*
Unlawful
Annexation of Occupied Territory
Israel’s
settlement programme in the oPt; the settlements, settlement
outposts, settlement infrastructure, including military posts; are a
clear violation of international humanitarian law. Specifically, the
transfer of parts of the population of the Occupying Power to
occupied territory is a grave breach of the Fourth Geneva
Convention, and is further defined as a war crime in article 85 of
the First Additional Protocol to the Geneva Conventions. Settlements
also contradict the general principle of international law that an
Occupying Power cannot alter the character of the territory occupied
with the exception of military necessity and where such changes will
benefit the occupied population.
Israel’s
settlement programme, including the policies and practices
implemented in order to maintain it, neither benefits the
Palestinian population, and can not be considered a militarily
necessary. That settlements are a grave breach of international
humanitarian law, and a war crime, has been reiterated repeatedly by
numerous international and inter-governmental bodies, including the
United Nations.
However, the
“Disengagement Plan” also explicitly confirms the Israeli government
intentions regarding the unlawful annexation of Palestinian land in
the West Bank;“It
is clear that in the West Bank, there are areas which will be part
of the State of Israel,including cities, towns, and villages,
security areas and installations, and other places of special
interest to Israel.”[11]
This latest
expression of Israel’s annexationist aims is further supported by
the statement by the US President;
“In light
of new realities on the ground, including already existing major
Israelipopulation centres, it is unrealistic to expect that the
outcome of final status negotiations will be a full and complete
return to the armistice lines of 1949…”.
Israel’s
“Annexation Wall”, currently under construction in the West Bank, is
the largest manifestation of Israel’s policy of annexation. The UN
Special Rapporteur to the oPt, John Dugard, most recently stated
that
“…the main
purpose of the Wall is the annexation, albeit by de facto means, of
additional land for the State of Israel.”[12]
The plan provides for the accelerated construction of Israel’s
Annexation Wall. Israel has claimed, including in this plan, that
the Wall is
“a security
rather than political barrier, temporary rather than permanent, and
therefore will not prejudice any final status issues, including
final borders”.
However, such
statements are entirely contradictory to the facts on the ground;
the Wall is being constructed not along the Green Line, the 1967
border, but rather largely within the West Bank; its construction is
currently estimated to cost approximately US$ 4.7 million per
kilometre[13];
the construction has included destruction of large areas of
Palestinian agricultural land and crops, destruction of homes,
civilian infrastructure and facilities; the wall consists of
permanent 8 metre high concrete structures, trenches, electric
fences, sophisticated monitoring equipment and roads. The Wall is
neither
intended as a temporary barrier, nor is it specifically for security
reasons. Israeli Deputy Attorney General Malchiel Balass was
reported in Haaretz as saying that even if there was a total end to
infiltration by Palestinian militant groups into Israel the Israeli
government would only “dismantle segments” of the Wall.[14]
This further indicates the Israeli government aims to erect the Wall
as a
permanent
structure.
The strategy
behind the “disengagement plan” is closely linked to that behind the
“Annexation Wall”.
The Israeli
plan is to redeploy from 4 of the West Bank settlements. However
this will be coupled with
a
comprehensive annexation of large parts of the West Bank so the
total effect will be to impose the
same
restrictive regime, as exists in Gaza, on the Palestinian bantustans
of the West Bank: restrictions on
freedom of
movement, denial of right to food, right to water, destruction of
social and cultural life, imposition of cruel, inhuman and degrading
treatment (particularly at checkpoints), eradication of work and
educational opportunities.[15]
Israel
continues to allow its own political and military considerations to
override international humanitarian law. This is indicated by the
condemnation which emanated from the Ministry of Defence in response
to the comments by the Israeli Attorney General that Israel should
“thoroughly examine” the possibility of applying the Fourth Geneva
Convention
de jure.
The Attorney General was told that his department did not understand
matters of “defence and security”. The Israeli rejection of the
applicability of the Fourth Geneva Convention, and the ICCPR and
ICESCR, is motivated by a desire to assert Israel’s absolute control
over the legal and political status of the occupied Palestinian
territory. As Israel insists on its right to determine the legal
future of the oPt, through abandonment of the negotiating process
and partner, it follows that Israel remains in complete legal
control of the oPt (despite its attempts to deny such a
responsibility through the claim of “withdrawal”).
Because of its
allusions to “withdrawal” the “disengagement plan” has deflected the
focus on implementation of the ICJ advisory judgment against the
Wall. The plan has created space for the Israeli military and
political authorities to accelerate the construction of the Wall and
in so doing create more, permanent, “facts on the ground”. As stated
earlier, the “security” justification for the construction of the
Wall has been completely undermined by the failure of the Gaza
security model. The key strategic goal is to ensure annexation of
territory and to facilitate economic and social strangulation of the
West Bank.
*
Refugees
As a longer
term component of this plan, Israel and the US appear to have also
reached agreement of the refugee issue. The US President stated in
his letter to the Israeli Prime Minister that
“It seems
clear that an agreed, just, fair, and realistic framework for a
solution to the Palestinian refugee issue as part of any final
status agreement will need to be found through the establishment of
a Palestinian state, and the settling of Palestinian refugees there,
rather than in Israel”.
The right of
return for those forcibly exiled from their homes is guaranteed in
international law. Article 12.4 of the International Covenant on
Civil and Political Rights, to which Israel is a state party,
specifically provides that
“No one should
be arbitrarily deprived of the right to enter his own country”.
This has been
broadly interpreted by the UN Human Rights Committee to include
“at
the very least, an individual who, because of his or her special
ties to or claims in relation to a given country, cannot be
considered to be a mere alien. This would be the case, for example,
of nationals of a country who have been stripped of their
nationality in violation of international law, and of individuals
whose country of nationality has been incorporated in or transferred
to another national entity, whose nationality is being denied them."[16]
Thus, Israel’s
intention to settle Palestinian refugees outside the land from which
they were exiled is contrary to the fundamental rights of refugees,
including the right to compensation and to choose to resettle in the
land from which they were exiled or elsewhere.
*
Conclusion
This plan
proposed by the Israeli Prime Minister is an attempt to circumvent
Israel’s absolute legal obligations as the Occupying Power. Israeli
authorities, backed by the United States, are proposing to engage in
a unilateral move that will deny the right of return, continue
illegal military activities, continue the siege and closure of the
oPt, and increase the economic and social suffocation of Palestinian
civilians and in so doing exert control over all aspects of
Palestinian life. As such, this initiative is entirely contrary to
international human rights and humanitarian law.
As an
initiative that undermines fundamental legal obligations as defined
in international humanitarian and human rights law, support for this
plan from other states, particularly the US, raises serious issues
regarding their own legal obligations, particularly as High
Contracting Parties to the Fourth Geneva Convention. Article 1 of
the Convention confers an absolute obligation on all High
Contracting Parties to respect the Convention and to ensure respect
for the Convention. In relation to the oPt, this obligates the High
Contracting Parties to ensure Israel respects the Convention and
that they themselves respect the Convention in their activities
related to the oPt. Failure to act to ensure Israel’s respect for
the
Convention is
a breach of this obligation. A further breach may occur where a
state actively supports Israeli violations of the Convention,
including those perpetrated in the context of the “Disengagement
Plan”.
PCHR thus
calls upon the High Contracting Parties to the Convention to demand
a resolution to the situation in the oPt that is founded on
international law, including through the enforcement of the
provisions of the Fourth Geneva Convention until such time as the
occupation ends. A just and sustainable peace in this region can
only succeed where it is based on the fulfilment of the rights
afforded to the Palestinian civilian population under international
law, including the rights of refugees, the non-admissibility of
acquisition of territory by force, the right of self-determination.
*
PCHR Recommendations to the International Community regarding the
“disengagement plan”:
(i) Full
implementation of the Fourth Geneva Convention in the oPt,
de jure,
including after any redeployment of Israeli forces;
(ii) An
immediate end to economic and social suffocation of the Gaza Strip,
by allowing full control of air, sea and land space;
(iii)
Implementation of the ICJ opinion regarding the West Bank Annexation
Wall as a preventative measure against increased economic and social
strangulation of the West Bank, in accordance with the “Gaza model”;
(iv) A
comprehensive and genuine handover of sovereignty to the Palestinian
people and the establishment of an independent Palestinian state;
(v) The
inclusion of international human rights and international
humanitarian law as an integral part to any final settlement on the
future of Palestine.
[1]
The Hebrew word used to describe the plan is
Hitnatkut
which literally means “cutting-off” or “disengagement”– this
illustrates the intention of the Israel authorities to cut off
the their political and legal responsibilities towards
Palestinian
civilians in the Gaza Strip, as well as to cut-off the Gaza
Strip from the rest of the world and in so doing increase the
suffocation of civilians in the oPt.
[2]
See “The Disengagement Plan – General Outline”, 18 April 2004,
available at
www.mfa.gov.il
. This paper will also make
reference to the letters exchanged between the Israeli Prime
Minister and the US President during their meeting on 14 April
2004 and a letter from the Chief of the Prime Minister’s Office
to the US National Security Adviser.
[3]See
“Prime Ministers Speech at the Herzliya Conference/Translation”,
18 December 2003 available at www.pmo.gov.il.
[4]The
Oslo Accords, of September 13th 1993, established the PLO as the
negotiating partner with the Israeli authorities, on
behalf of
the Palestinian people. The PNA was the product of these
accords.
The plan to
redeploy Israeli troops around the Gaza Strip is the most recent
manifestation of the Israel strategy to exclude the
PLO from
the negotiation process. The plan was formulated without
reference or consultation with the PNA (and so
contravenes
the stipulations of the Road-Map). In fact it has been agreed
that Israeli settlements in Gaza will be handed
over to the
World Bank. This is a further indication of the desire by the
Israeli authorities to exclude the PNA, to end the
opportunity
for sovereignty and to attempt to pass responsibility for Gaza
to an international body (and in so doing try to
relinquish
Israeli responsibility, which remains clear under international
humanitarian law).
[5]The
“Israeli villages and towns” referred to are in fact Israeli
settlements which constitute a grave breach of international
humanitarian law. Cf. Article 49, para 6 of the Fourth Geneva
Convention on the transfer of persons into an occupied
territory.
[6]
“A widening of the area in which military activity is conducted”
can be understood as the demolition of civilian properties,
including
houses, agricultural land, schools, playgrounds for children,
business and so on.
[7]
See Harel,
Amos, “IDF Plans to Build Trench Along Philadelphi Road”,
Haaretz, 28 April 2004 at www.haaretz.com.
[8]
The use of
the word “withdrawal” in Bush’s letter is an indication of the
gap between the rhetoric and reality of this plan. The plan does
not facilitate “withdrawal” rather it consolidates the
occupation
[9]
From the
start of the
Intifada
up until year end 2003 fishermen were prevented from having any
access to the sea at all for
600 days.
[10]
Port Said
is approximately 275km from Rafah. Palestinian civilians will be
expected to travel the length of Gaza, to wait at Rafah crossing
point for the Israeli military to facilitate passage and then
travel this distance through desert before being able to reach
Port Said. Agricultural goods, generally perishable, will be
destroyed by such a journey so in effect the export of goods
from Gaza will be impossible.
[11]
Many of
the West Bank settlements are built in order to control
strategic points, such as water supplies which are denied to
Palestinians. This is the kind of thing referred to by the term
“ places of special interest to Israel.”
[12]
See UN Doc.
E/CN.4/2004/6/Add.1. 27 February 2004.
[13]
9th
November 2003, OCHA Fact Sheet.
[14]
Haaretz,
25/08/2004 by Yuval Yoaz.
[15]
All of
which are breaches of the Universal Declaration on Human Rights
(cf. Articles, 5,17, 23, 25, 26, 27) and the derivate Covenants
and Declarations which are associated with it.
[16]
UN Human
Rights Committee General Comment # 27 (1999), para 20.
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