1,000 Jurists to EU: Settlements are Legal - Mammoth petition delivered to Catherine Ashton states: ’1967 lines’ don’t exist.HT: INN.By Gil Ronen.
A mammoth jurists’ petition delivered to European Union foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton states that the EU is wrong in holding that Jewish communities in Judea and Samaria are illegal, and that the term “1967 lines” does not exist in international law.
The letter is signed by over 1,000 jurists
worldwide.
Among the signatories are former justice minister
Prof. Yaakov Ne’eman; former UN Ambassaor Dr. Meir Rosen; Britain’s Baroness
Prof. Ruth Deech, Prof. Eliav Shochetman and Prof. Talia Einhorn. They include
legal scholars from the U.S., Australia, Belgium, Bolivia, Brazil, Canada,
Switzerland, Chile, Czechoslovakia, Greece, India, Ireland, Italy, Mexico,
Malta, Holland, Norway, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore, Taiwan, South Africa,
Sweden and, of course, Israel.
The man behind the initiative is Dr. Alan Baker,
Israel’s former ambassador to Canada and legal adviser to the Foreign Ministry,
who currently heads the International Action Division of the Legal Forum for
Israel.
Baker was also a member of the three-person
committee headed by former Supreme Court judge Edmond Levy, known as the Levy
Committee, which pronounced that Judea and Samaria were not occupied
territory.
Dr. Baker explained to Arutz Sheva that there is
“no such thing” as the 1967 lines. “There never was such a thing. The matter of
the borders is on the agenda of the negotiations, The EU cannot dictate a
subject that is on the agenda of the negotiations. The pre-1967 lines are (1949)
armistice lines. These are not recognized lines or security lines. In the Oslo
process, it was agreed between us and the Palestinians that the matter of
borders will be negotiated. The term ’1967 lines’ does not appear anywhere in
our agreement with the Palestinians, therefore it is a legal and factual
aberration to determine that these are our lines.”
“The second thing is the determination that the
settlements are illegal according to international law. It is true that most of
the world thinks so, but that does not make it true legally. Legally, the clause
in the Geneva Convention that they use to say that settlements are illegal, was
not intended to refer to cases like our settlements, but to prevent the forced
transfer of populations by the Nazis. This is not relevant to the Israeli
settlements.”Read the full story here.
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