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General Assembly
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A/ES-10/248
24 November 2003
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11
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Tenth emergency special session
Agenda item 5
Illegal Israeli actions in Occupied East Jerusalem and
the rest of the Occupied Palestinian
Territory
Report of the Secretary-General prepared pursuant
to General Assembly resolution
ES-10/13
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Summary
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The
present report is submitted pursuant to General Assembly resolution ES-10/13
of 21 October 2003, adopted
at the resumed tenth emergency special session of the Assembly. In paragraph
1 of the resolution, the Assembly "demand[ed]
that Israel stop and reverse the construction of the wall in
the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including in and around East Jerusalem, which is in departure of the Armistice Line of
1949 and is in contradiction to relevant provisions of international
law". In keeping with the request of the General Assembly in paragraph 1
of resolution ES-10/13, I have concluded that Israel is not in compliance with the Assembly's demand
that it "stop and reverse the construction of the wall in the Occupied Palestinian Territory".
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Contents
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Paragraphs
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Page
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A. Introduction
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1–2
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2
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B. Compliance with
resolution ES-10/13
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4
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2
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C.
Route of
the Barrier
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4–22
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2
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D. Humanitarian and
socio-economic impact
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23–27
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6
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E. Observations
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28–31
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7
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Annexes
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I. Summary legal position
of the Government of Israel
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8
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II. Summary legal position
of the Palestine Liberation Organization
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10
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A.
Introduction
1. The present report is submitted
pursuant to General Assembly resolution ES-10/13 of 21 October 2003, adopted at the resumed tenth emergency special
session of the Assembly. In paragraph 1 of the resolution, the Assembly "demand[ed] that Israel stop and reverse the construction of the wall in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including in and around East Jerusalem, which is in departure of the Armistice Line of 1949
and is in contradiction to relevant provisions of international law". In
paragraph 3, the Assembly requested the Secretary-General to report
periodically on compliance with the resolution, but with the first report on
compliance with paragraph 1.
2.
This report focuses on the period from 14 April 2002, when the Government of
Israel first decided to build a system of fences, walls, ditches and barriers
in the West Bank ("the Barrier"),* * Palestinians often
call this system the Separation Wall and Israelis use the term Security Fence.
For the purposes of the present report, the more general term "the
Barrier" is used. to 20 November 2003. It is primarily based on publicly available research
carried out by United Nations offices on the ground. Other materials available
to the United Nations, including those in the public domain, were used in the
preparation of this report. The Government of Israel and the Palestinian
Authority were consulted in the preparation of this report and asked to provide
information they deemed relevant. Some of that information is attached in
annexes I and II.
B.
Compliance with resolution ES-10/13
3. Paragraph 1 of resolution ES-10/13
states that the United Nations General Assembly "demands that Israel stop and reverse the construction of the wall in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including in and around East Jerusalem, which is in departure of the Armistice Line of 1949
and is in contradiction to relevant provisions of international law". Israel has not complied with that demand. It has not stopped
or reversed the ongoing construction of the Barrier. This is shown by the
following information from United Nations field monitoring:
•
Ongoing construction in the occupied Palestinian territory, along the
north-east boundary of the West
Bank and east of Jerusalem
•
Levelling of land for a section in the north-west of
the West Bank
•
Ongoing issuance of land requisition orders
•
Release of the first official map showing the planned route of the Barrier and
declaration of intent to complete it by 2005.
C. Route of the Barrier
1.
Background to the construction of the Barrier
4. The Government of Israel has since 1996 considered plans to halt infiltration
into Israel from the central and northern West Bank, with the first Cabinet approval of such a plan in July 2001. After a
sharp rise in Palestinian terror attacks in the spring of 2002, the Cabinet
approved Government Decision 64/B on 14 April 2002, which called for construction of 80 kilometres of the Barrier in the three areas of the West Bank. The Seam Zone Administration, headed by the director general of the
Israeli Ministry of Defence, was established to
implement that decision.
5.
On 23
June 2002, Israel's Cabinet Decision 2077 approved the first phase of a
"continuous" Barrier in parts of the West Bank and Jerusalem. The decision stated that the Barrier "is a
security measure" that "does not represent a political or other
border". The route discussed was not made public; the decision stated that
the "exact and final route of the fence will be decided by the prime
minister and minister of defence". On 14 August 2002, the Cabinet approved the final route for Phase A construction, which ultimately included 123 kilometres in the northern West Bank and 19.5 kilometres around Jerusalem, almost entirely on land occupied by Israel in 1967.
2.
The overall route
6. On 1 October 2003, after nearly a year of construction on various
sections, the Israeli Cabinet approved a full Barrier route in Decision 883.
Ministry of Defence documents say the planned route
of the Barrier will form one continuous line stretching 720 kilometres
along the West Bank. A map of the route, which shows both completed and
planned sections, was posted on the Ministry of Defence
web site on 23 October 2003, two days after the General Assembly approved
resolution ES-10/13.
7.
Much of the completed Barrier, excluding East Jerusalem, runs close to the Green Line, though within
Palestinian territory. The completed Barrier deviates more than 7.5 kilometres from the Green Line in certain places to
incorporate settlements, while encircling Palestinian population areas. The
part of the Barrier that roughly hews to the Green Line is along the
northernmost part of the West
Bank. A
1-2 kilometre stretch west of Tulkarm appears to run on the Israeli side of the Green
Line. The planned route, if fully constructed, would deviate up to 22 kilometres in places from the Green Line.
8.
Based on the route on the official map, including depth barriers and East Jerusalem, approximately 975 square kilometres,
or 16.6 per cent of the entire West
Bank, will lie between the
Barrier and the Green Line. This area is home to approximately 17,000
Palestinians in the West Bank and 220,000 in East Jerusalem. If the full route is completed, another 160,000
Palestinians will live in enclaves, areas where the Barrier almost completely
encircles communities and tracts of land. The planned route incorporates nearly
320,000 settlers, including approximately 178,000 in occupied East Jerusalem.
3.
Description of the Barrier
9. According to Israeli Ministry of Defence documents and field observation, the Barrier
complex consists of the following main components: a fence with electronic
sensors designed to alert Israeli military forces of infiltration attempts; a
ditch (up to 4 metres deep); an asphalt two-lane
patrol road; a trace road (a strip of sand smoothed to detect footprints) that
runs parallel to the fence; and a stack of six coils of barbed wire marking the
complex's perimeter. This complex has an average width of 50-70 metres, increasing to as much as 100 metres
in some places.
10.
Ministry of Defence documents say that "various
observation systems are being installed along the fence". These apparently
include cameras and watchtowers in some places where the Barrier consists of
concrete walls. A planned allied component is "depth barriers",
secondary barriers that loop out from the main Barrier to the east. Two depth
barriers are part of the planned route in the central West Bank. Another three "depth barriers" in the northern West Bank that have appeared on some unofficial maps have not been built and are
not part of the 23 October official map.
11.
Concrete walls cover about 8.5 kilometres of the
approximately 180 kilometres of the Barrier completed
or under construction. These parts of the Barrier, which the
Israel Defense Forces (IDF) terms "gunfire protection walls", are
generally found where Palestinian population centres
abut Israel, such as the towns of Qalqiliya and Tulkarm, and parts
of Jerusalem. Some
are currently under construction, while others were planned and built
separately from the current project, such as part of the wall next to Qalqiliya, which was built in 1996 in conjunction with a
highway project.
4.
Phases of the route completed or under construction
12. Phase A (excluding occupied East Jerusalem). This
initial part of the Barrier, which runs 123 kilometres
from the Salem checkpoint north of Jenin
to the settlement of Elkana in the central West Bank, was declared completed 31 July 2003, although work continues in some parts. Much of Phase A construction
deviates from the Green Line, and incorporates Israeli settlements. United
Nations offices on the ground calculate that the Barrier has put approximately
56,000 Palestinians in enclaves, areas encircled by the Barrier that open into
the West Bank. They include about 5,300 Palestinians in
"closed areas" between the Barrier and the Green Line where Israel requires permits or identity cards for Palestinians
who reside there or want to enter the area. The enclaves include the town of Qalqiliya (pop. 41,606) and, to its south, a cluster of
three villages with about 7,300 residents.
13.
Phase B. This section is planned to run 45 kilometres
east from the Salem checkpoint along the northern part of the Green Line
to the Jordan Valley, and is scheduled for completion in December 2003. It
does not incorporate any settlements or create any Palestinian enclaves.
14.
Jerusalem. The existing barrier and planned route around Jerusalem is beyond the Green Line and, in some cases, the eastern
municipal boundary of Jerusalem as annexed by Israel. Completed sections include two parts totalling 19.5 kilometres that
flank Jerusalem, and a 1.5-kilometre concrete wall in the eastern Jerusalem neighbourhood of Abu Dis.
The planned route includes a section due east of Jerusalem that links up with the existing Abu Dis wall; levelling of land has
started at its southern end. A second section runs through the northern Jerusalem suburb of Al-Ram, which will be cut off from Jerusalem, and links with the existing northern barrier section
at the Qalandia checkpoint. A third section will
surround five Palestinian communities north-west of Jerusalem, creating a 2,000-acre enclave with 14,500 people. A
gap remains in the planned route due east of Jerusalem near the settlement of Maale
Adumim.
5.
Planned phases of the route
15. Elkana
to Ofer Camp. This section links the
north-western end of the Jerusalem Barrier with the southern point of Phase A
construction at Elkana. It includes two "depth
barriers" that together create enclaves encompassing around 29,000 acres
and 72,000 Palestinians in 24 communities. The route deviates up to 22 kilometres from the Green Line to include several large
settlements and approximately 52,000 settlers in the "Ariel salient".
Cabinet Decision 883 of 1 October does not explain the nature of the Barrier
around this area, where the Government of Israel has said it would build
disconnected "horseshoes" around the settlements. However, the
official map shows a planned route that seamlessly encompasses the settlement
block.
16.
Southern West Bank. According to the official map, this route of the
Barrier in the southern West Bank runs 115 kilometres
from the Har Gilo settlement
near Jerusalem to the Carmel settlement near the Green Line south-east of
Hebron. It cuts several kilometres into the West Bank to encompass the Gush Etzion settlement
block and the settlement of Efrat, creating enclaves
with around 17,000 Palestinians. Ministry of Defence
documents say that construction on this stage, which has not started yet, is
slated for completion in 2005.
6.
Process of land requisition as part of the Barrier's construction
17. Land obtained for the building of the Barrier is
requisitioned by military orders in the West Bank and by the Ministry of Defence in Jerusalem Municipality. The orders generally become effective on the date
they are signed and are valid even if they are not personally served on the
property owners. Most orders are valid until 31 December 2005 and can be renewed.
18.
Orders are sometimes left on the property itself or served on the village
council without personal service being given to the property owner. Landowners
have one or two weeks from the date of signature to object to the relevant
committee. The property owner can also petition the High Court of Israel.
According to IDF, over 400 first-instance objections have been submitted and 15
petitions have been lodged with the High Court on behalf of families or entire
villages.
7.
The establishment of closed areas
19. On 2 October 2003, IDF issued a
series of legal instruments ("the Orders") pertaining to land in the
north-west part of the West Bank that lies between the Barrier and the Green
Line ("Closed Area"). The Orders provide that "no person will
enter the seam zone and no one will remain there" and will affect 73
square kilometres and approximately 5,300
Palestinians living in 15 communities.
20.
The Orders introduce a new system of residency status. Only on issuance of a
permit or ID card by IDF will residents of the Closed Area be able to remain
and will others be granted access to it. Israeli citizens, Israeli permanent
residents and those eligible to immigrate to Israel in accordance with the Law of Return can remain in or
move freely to, from and within the Closed Area without a similar permit.
21.
At the date of writing, most residents in the Closed Area had received permits
although they were only generally valid for a period of one, three or six
months. As for those non-residents seeking access to the Closed Areas,
indications are that a majority of those who need or want access to the Closed
Area had not yet received permits.
22.
Even with a permit or ID card, access and egress are regulated by the schedule
of operation of the access gates, which is reportedly limited at present to
openings of 15 minutes three times a day. However, if residents are denied
regular access to their farmlands, jobs and services, a concern is raised that
Palestinians may leave the area. In this connection, it should be noted that in
the past, Israel has expropriated land for not being adequately
cultivated, pursuant to military orders or through enforcement of domestic
legislation in the West Bank inherited from the Ottoman and Jordanian regimes.
D.
Humanitarian and socio-economic impact
23. The Barrier, in both completed and
planned sections, appears likely to deepen the fragmentation of the West Bank created by the closure system Israel imposed after the outbreak of hostilities in
September/October 2000. The main component of the closure system is a series of
checkpoints and blockades that severely restrict the movement of Palestinian
people and goods, causing serious socio-economic harm. Recent reports by the
World Bank and the United Nations show that construction has dramatically
increased such damage in communities along its route, primarily through the
loss of, or severely limited access to, land, jobs and markets. According to
the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics, so far the Barrier has separated
30 localities from health services, 22 from schools, 8 from primary water
sources and 3 from electricity networks.
24.
Palestinians living in enclaves are facing some of the harshest consequences of
the Barrier's construction and route. For example, the Barrier surrounds the
town of Qalqiliya, with the only exit and entry point controlled by an Israeli military
checkpoint. This has isolated the town from almost all its agricultural land,
while surrounding villages are separated from its markets and services. A
United Nations hospital in the town has experienced a 40 per cent decrease in
caseloads. Further north, the Barrier is currently creating an enclave around
the town of Nazlat Issa, whose commercial areas have been destroyed through Israel's demolition of at least seven residences and 125
shops.
25.
Completed sections of the Barrier have had a serious impact on agriculture in
what is considered the "breadbasket" of the West Bank. In 2000, the three governorates of Jenin, Tulkarm and Qalqiliya produced
US$ 220 million in agricultural output, or 45 per cent of total agricultural
production in the West Bank. Palestinian cultivated land lying on the Barrier's
route has been requisitioned and destroyed and tens of thousands of trees have
been uprooted. Farmers separated from their land, and often also from their
water sources, must cross the Barrier via the controlled gates. Recent harvests
from many villages have perished due to the irregular opening times and the
apparently arbitrary granting or denial of passage. According to a recent World
Food Programme survey, this has increased food
insecurity in the area, where there are 25,000 new recipients of food
assistance as a direct consequence of the Barrier's construction.
26.
The Barrier's route through Jerusalem
will also severely restrict movement and access for tens of thousands of urban
Palestinians. A concrete wall through the neighbourhood
of Abu Dis has already affected access to jobs and
essential social services, notably schools and hospitals. The northern section
of the Barrier has harmed long-standing commercial and social connections for
tens of thousands of people, a phenomenon that will be repeated along much of
the route through Jerusalem. The residences of some Jerusalem identity card holders are outside the Barrier, while
those of some West Bank identity card holders are inside the Barrier. This
raises concerns about the future status of residency for Palestinians in
occupied East Jerusalem under current Israeli laws.
27.
If Israel persists in its construction of the Barrier, some of its economic and
humanitarian impact can be limited if Israel allows regular movement through a
series of 41 gates to Palestinians living east of the Barrier who need to
access their farms, jobs or services in the "Closed Area" to the
west. Despite posted opening times, the gates are not open with any regularity.
Moreover, such access cannot compensate for incomes lost from the Barrier's
destruction of property, land and businesses. This raises concerns over
violations of the rights of the Palestinians to work, health, education and an
adequate standard of living.
E.
Observations
28. In keeping with the request of the General
Assembly in resolution ES-10/13, I have concluded that Israel is not in compliance with the Assembly's demand that
it "stop and reverse the construction of the wall in the Occupied Palestinian
Territory".
29.
Israel has repeatedly stated that the Barrier is a temporary
measure. However, the scope of construction and the amount of occupied West
Bank land that is either being requisitioned for its route or that will end up
between the Barrier and the Green Line are of serious concern and have
implications for the future. In the midst of the road map process, when each
party should be making good-faith confidence-building gestures, the Barrier's
construction in the West
Bank cannot, in this
regard, be seen as anything but a deeply counterproductive act. The placing of
most of the structure on occupied Palestinian land could impair future
negotiations.
30.
I acknowledge and recognize Israel's right and duty to protect its people against
terrorist attacks. However, that duty should not be carried out in a way that
is in contradiction to international law, that could damage the longer-term
prospects for peace by making the creation of an independent, viable and
contiguous Palestinian State more difficult, or that increases suffering among the
Palestinian people.
31.
After so many years of bloodshed, dislocation and suffering, it should be
clear to all of us, as well as to the parties, that only through a just,
comprehensive and lasting peace settlement based on Security Council
resolutions 242 (1967) and 338 (1973) can the security of both Palestinians and
Israelis be assured. There is wide support in the international community for a
two-State solution — Israel and Palestine living side by side in peace and
security within secure and recognized borders, as called for by the Security
Council in resolutions 1397 (2002) and 1515 (2003). That support must urgently
be marshalled to assist the parties in achieving that
end.
Annex I
Summary legal position of the Government of Israel
1. Much of the information in this annex
is derived from materials provided to the United Nations by the Government of
Israel. Other information comes from publicly available sources.
2.
Israel's Parliament has not incorporated the Hague
Regulations into domestic legislation; however, Israeli authorities have relied
on article 23 (g) of those Regulations, which permits the seizure of property
if demanded by the necessities of war.
3.
Despite having ratified the Fourth Geneva Convention, Israel has not incorporated it into its domestic
legislation. Nor does it agree that the Convention is applicable to the
occupied Palestinian territory, citing the lack of recognition of the territory
as sovereign prior to its annexation by Jordan and Egypt and, therefore, not a territory of a High Contracting
Party as required by the Convention.
4.
Israel denies that the International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights and the International Covenant on Economic, Social and
Cultural Rights, both of which it has signed, are
applicable to the occupied Palestinian territory. It asserts that humanitarian
law is the protection granted in a conflict situation such as the one in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, whereas human rights treaties were intended for the
protection of citizens from their own Government in times of peace.
5.
Regarding the route, the Government of Israel states that neither the
"Green Line" nor the armistice line were confirmed as international
boundaries in Security Council resolutions 242 (1967) and 338 (1973), which call
upon the parties to negotiate. The legal status of the occupied Palestinian
territory remains disputed.
6.
According to its statement made before the General Assembly on 20 October 2003,
the Government of Israel believes the construction of the Barrier is consistent
with Article 51 of the Charter of the United Nations, its inherent right to
self-defence and Security Council resolutions 1368
(2001) and 1373 (2001). Israeli officials say the Barrier has contributed to a
significant decline in the number of attacks inside Israel. According to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs,
between 1 April 2002 and 31 December 2002, 17 suicide bombers crossed into Israel from the central West Bank and killed 89 Israelis. Between 1 January 2003 and 5 November 2003, after part of the Barrier had been completed, eight
suicide bombers entered Israel from the central West Bank and killed 51 Israelis.
7.
The Government of Israel has asserted that land requisitions issued to enable the building of
the Barrier are proportionate given the number of deaths and injuries sustained
by Israeli citizens and are carried out in accordance with both international
and local law.
8.
The Government of Israel argues: there is no change in ownership of the land; compensation is
available for use of the land, crop yield or damage to the land; residents can
petition the Supreme Court to halt or alter construction and there is no change
in resident status. It says that the completion of the Barrier will in fact,
allow the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) to reduce its presence in the West Bank and remove roadblocks and checkpoints, thereby improving overall
humanitarian conditions in the West
Bank.
9.
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs emphasized that the permit process for the
Closed Area is still in its early stages and that Israel is "committed that residents and those that use
the area will be able to live in and use the area with minimal
interference".
10.
As for access to the Closed Area by non-residents, the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs has advised that permits, as opposed to ID Cards, will be issued based
upon need. They explain that the activity of the individual will affect the
nature of the permit; for example, a teacher would receive a permit for an
entire school year and an olive farmer based on seasonal needs, and the
health-care worker might have a permit for all occasions. While legal proof of
ownership or residence would be best, it will not be necessary to receive
official documentation proving ownership. Those wishing to visit friends and
family would be permitted access subject to the security situation.
Annex II
Summary legal position of the Palestine Liberation Organization
1. The Palestine Liberation Organization legal opinion requested for
this report cites several provisions and principles of international law as
bearing on the question of the legality of the construction of the Barrier
within the occupied Palestinian territory. Among them:
•
Israel has a right to undertake certain limited measures in
cases of strict military necessity and to protect its legitimate security
interests. However, these measures must be taken in accordance with
international human rights and humanitarian law.
•
The measure of constructing the wall within the occupied Palestinian territory
and related measures taken by the Government of Israel constitute violations of
international humanitarian law because those measures are not justified by
military necessity and violate the principle of proportionality. The harm those
measures have caused include:
–
Extensive destruction of Palestinian homes and other property and appropriation
of property not justified by military necessity, contrary to the Fourth Geneva
Convention;
–
Infringements on the freedom of movement contrary to the International Covenant
on Civil and Political Rights and in violation of the obligations of the
Government of Israel under the Fourth Geneva Convention;
–
Infringements on the rights to education, work, an adequate standard of living
and health care contrary to the Convention on the Rights of the Child and the
International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights and in violation
of the obligations of the Government of Israel pursuant to the Fourth Geneva Convention;
–
Violations of the prohibition against arbitrary interference of home contrary
to the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights and the
freedom to choose one's residence contrary to the International Covenant on
Civil and Political Rights and in violation of the protections provided in the
Fourth Geneva Convention as a result of the permit system established in the
Closed Area.
2.
This violation of these Palestinian rights, including facilitating the entry
into and residency of Israeli civilians in the Closed Area while restricting
Palestinian access to and residency in that Area, are causing long-term,
permanent harm, including the transfer of Palestinians, contrary to the Fourth
Geneva Convention and the International Covenant on Economic, Social and
Cultural Rights.
•
Because these Israeli measures are neither necessary nor proportionate, they
give rise to criminal liability by the Government of Israel for violations of
human rights and some prima facie grave breaches of the Fourth Geneva
Convention.
•
The requirement of proportionality can more likely be met by building the
Barrier within Israeli territory or even on the Green Line and by evacuating
the Israeli civilian nationals currently residing in the Occupied West Bank
contrary to international law.
•
The construction of the Barrier is an attempt to annex the territory contrary
to international law.
•
The de facto annexation of land interferes with the territorial sovereignty and
consequently with the right of the Palestinians to self-determination.