Madam Deputy Speaker (Dame Rosie Winterton) We have 14 speakers for
this debate. It is a Back-Bench debate, which is why we try to
limit the Front-Bench contributions. It is normally six minutes for
the SNP, eight minutes for the Opposition and eight minutes for the
Minister. I believe the opening speech will last about 15 minutes,
so all other contributions will have to be about seven minutes. I
would prefer not to put a time limit on speeches. I think that will
give...Request free trial
Madam Deputy Speaker ( )
We have 14 speakers for this debate. It is a Back-Bench debate,
which is why we try to limit the Front-Bench contributions. It is
normally six minutes for the SNP, eight minutes for the
Opposition and eight minutes for the Minister. I believe the
opening speech will last about 15 minutes, so all other
contributions will have to be about seven minutes. I would prefer
not to put a time limit on speeches. I think that will give
everybody an equal opportunity to get in, because it is a very
well subscribed debate. That is why I was hurrying things along
in the previous debate.
2.30pm
(Dundee West) (SNP)
I beg to move,
That this House has considered the matter of human rights
protections for Palestinians.
Since the start of this year, the security situation in Israel
and the Occupied Palestinian Territories has deteriorated
rapidly. Israelis have been killed outside a synagogue in East
Jerusalem. During Ramadan, Palestinians have been beaten by
police while worshipping in al-Aqsa mosque. Car-ramming attacks
have claimed the lives of Israeli citizens and visiting tourists.
Extensive military raids have caused the deaths of numerous
Palestinians and injured many more. This unnecessary loss of
innocent life is of deep and grave concern, and I want to begin
this debate by paying my respects to all the victims who have
been killed. In particular, I am sure all of us here today will
want to send our sincerest condolences to the family of
British-Israeli sisters Maia and Rina Dee and their mother Lucy,
who were murdered in a horrific attack in Tel Aviv earlier this
month.
Extremist ideology, rhetoric and violence carried out by any
party to the conflict is never acceptable and cannot be ignored
or swept under the carpet. Silence is complicity. It is not until
we visit the region, bear witness and listen to the testimonies
of people on all sides that we really learn the depth and scale
of the horrors of what life is like for the people who live
there. Last October, I made my first visit to Israel and the
Occupied Palestinian Territories with the International
Development Committee and heard at first hand stories that are
the stuff of nightmares. Things that we take for granted such as
freedom of speech and freedom of movement—basic human rights that
we would wish for all peoples—either do not exist for many or are
under constant threat.
I am a strong believer in a two-state solution based on the 1967
borders. It should go without saying that the state of Israel has
the right to exist and prosper and should be our friend and ally.
However, for the two-state solution to be realistic, the state of
Palestine must also be recognised. Similarly, the actions of the
Israeli Government, which undermine the feasibility of that peace
process and seek to deny the rights, identity and legitimacy of
the Palestinian people, must be called out.
While the shocking images of violence between Israelis and
Palestinians that we see in newspapers, on television and online
often prompt statements of condemnation and renewed calls for
peace, these are not isolated incidents that we can simply push
aside with sympathetic platitudes and move on from. In order to
achieve a sustainable peace, we cannot ignore the fact that
systematic discrimination and human rights abuses are the daily
reality for all Palestinians living under occupation, 365 days of
the year, and the UK Government have a significant role to play
in ensuring that this is brought to an end.
During Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office questions
last month, the Foreign Secretary told the House:
“The UK enjoys a strong bilateral relationship with Israel, which
allows us to raise issues where we disagree.”
He went on to say:
“We seek to protect the viability of a sustainable two-state
solution. We raised with the Israeli Government our concerns
about activities that might put that future at risk.”—[Official
Report, 14 March 2023; Vol. 729, c. 672-673.]
In the face of ever increasing human rights violations at the
hands of the Israeli authorities, when will simply “raising
issues” with our Israeli counterparts no longer be enough?
I know that other Members will want to examine many of the points
I am about to make in more detail in their speeches, but we must
open this debate by acknowledging how the Israeli Government
discriminate against and violate the human rights of Palestinians
on a regular basis. As I have said, unlawful killing and the
excessive use of force, illegal under international law, are
commonplace within the Occupied Palestinian Territories, despite
the Israeli military having an international legal obligation to
protect the Palestinian population under its control.
The use of lethal force has escalated, with the UN reporting that
last year was one of the deadliest years for Palestinians. At
least 151 Palestinians were killed by Israeli forces in the west
bank—the highest in 18 years. Tragically, that pattern is
seemingly spreading into this year as well. Already, nearly 100
Palestinians have been killed in the west bank, including,
shockingly, 17 children. That is more than three times as many as
in the same period last year.
In many instances, it is not only the military and police that
are responsible for these fatalities but settler violence, aided
and abetted by Israeli authorities. This state-sanctioned
impunity has been aptly highlighted in Huwara in recent weeks,
where Israeli settlers have set Palestinian property and
possessions on fire with no intervention. Sakir, a 22-year-old
mechanic from Huwara, said:
“We have never seen anything like this. The settlers have nothing
to be afraid of anymore; they know they can do whatever they
like.”
In February, a 27-year-old Palestinian was shot in the head and
killed by a settler. Despite all this, Israeli human rights group
Yesh Din collated data from 2005 to 2022 that demonstrates,
shockingly, that 93% of all investigations into ideologically
motivated crime committed by Israeli settlers in the west bank
are closed without an indictment.
To go back to the role of the UK Government, the FCDO often talks
of its strong relationship with its counterparts in Israel and
its ability to raise human rights concerns, so my first question
is this: does the Minister accept that, with ever increasing
provocations and bloodshed, more needs to be done? It is a simple
question. The UK Government must move beyond hollow promises to
raise concerns, as the situation on the ground is too critical
and serious to be cryptic and dismissive of the facts. Once
again, silence is complicity.
The process of settlement expansion, forced evictions,
demolitions and dispossessions is further evidence of systematic
aggression designed to force Palestinians from their land and
deny them their rights. Despite regularly pledging to pause
settlement expansion, 7,000 settlement homes in 35 settlements
are set to be approved by Israel—the largest number of settlement
homes ever agreed in a single planning meeting. At the same time,
in Masafer Yatta in the south Hebron hills, over 1,000
Palestinians face losing their homes—the largest eviction of
Palestinians since the 1970s. What a stark and blindingly obvious
contrast. Similarly, in East Jerusalem, demolition of Palestinian
homes has escalated, with 30 homes being demolished since the
beginning of this year.
The displacement of Palestinians and the demolition of
Palestinian property is a violation of international law and can
never be tolerated or ignored. The systematic forced displacement
through home demolitions and building of settlements is a
deliberate attempt to re-engineer the demographic make-up of the
Occupied Palestinian Territories and is illegal under
international law. When will the Government finally acknowledge
that? What concrete steps will the UK take to hold Israel to
account for its repeated and flagrant breaches of international
law, including continuing settlement expansion? If illegal
Israeli settlement construction does not stop, will the UK
Government commit to suspending trade deal talks with Israeli
counterparts until we can ensure that human rights are being
safeguarded?
Many will be aware that Palestinians’ rights to freedom of
movement are restricted by the Israeli authorities. In the west
bank and East Jerusalem, the separation barrier, checkpoints,
arbitrary closures, a complex permit system and biometric
surveillance are used to control, fragment and dominate
Palestinians. This June will mark the 16th year of Israel’s
illegal blockade of the Gaza strip, which has effectively been
turned into the world’s largest open air prison. The 2 million
Palestinians trapped there face a permanent humanitarian crisis.
It is virtually impossible for Gazans to travel to the west bank,
violating their rights to work, education, family life and
healthcare. For example, human rights organisation B’Tselem has
uncovered that in 2022, Israeli authorities rejected more than
one third of all medical exit permits requested by ill or dying
Palestinians to leave the Gaza strip to seek treatment in Israel,
the west bank or East Jerusalem.
The unequal and discriminatory policies pursued by the Israeli
Government have led to divergent health outcomes for Israelis and
Palestinians, and these are growing. The evidence is stark. For
example, Israel has three times more doctors per 1,000 people
than the Occupied Palestinian Territories; women are nine times
more likely to die due to complications from pregnancy and
childbirth in the Occupied Palestinian Territories than in
Israel; and, on average, Israelis live nearly nine years longer
than Palestinians, with the gap between the two increasing by
almost a year in the past 20 years.
How is it for children? Four out of five Gazan children
reportedly live with depression, grief and fear, and it is
Palestinian children who often bear the brunt of Israeli
discrimination and aggression. Even the fundamental right to
education has been destroyed. Some 58 schools in the west bank,
serving around 6,500 students, are currently under threat of
demolition. In November, Israeli authorities carried out the
demolition of a school in Masafer Yatta while children—get this,
Madam Deputy Speaker—were still in the school building. Israel
stands out as the only country in the world that systematically
prosecutes children in military courts, with up to 700 prosecuted
each year. Right now, there are 151 Palestinian children held in
an Israeli prison, of whom 70% have been unlawfully transferred
out of the Occupied Palestinian Territories.
While Israel ratified the UN convention on the rights of the
child in 1991, Palestinian children living under Israeli military
occupation are routinely denied their rights to life, education
and adequate housing, and are denied access to healthcare, among
other rights denials inherent in the decades-long Israeli
military occupation, with no end in sight. Everyone in this House
will agree that that is no way to treat any child, anywhere.
In all these instances, it is evident that the Israeli Government
are acting with impunity and without accountability. As a result,
they are emboldened and determined to continue with these
policies. The nub of the issue is that this should come as no
surprise to any of us, as Israeli politicians are open about
their plans for the Occupied Palestinian Territories and their
attitudes towards Palestinians. The evidence is staring every one
of us in the face. The country now has the most far-right and
extreme Government in its history. The de facto annexation of
large parts of the west bank was an overarching principle in the
December 2022 coalition agreements for the new Israeli
Government, which stated that
“the Jewish people have an exclusive and incontestable right on
the entire land of Israel. The government will advance and
promote settlement in all parts of the land of Israel, in the
Galilee, the Negev, the Golan Heights and Judea and Samaria”.
Where are the UK Government in all of this?
Last month, Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich triggered
international outrage by saying that the Palestinian village of
Huwara in the west bank should be “wiped out” following a rampage
by Israeli settlers. He also said that the Palestinian people are
“an invention” of the past century, and that there is
“no such thing as Palestinians because there’s no such thing as
the Palestinian people”.
Is this not the language of ethnic cleansing that we have heard
from other states around the world? Throughout my time in this
House, I have time and again called out Governments and
politicians who have used this abhorrent rhetoric, whether it be
Russians talking about Ukrainians, Chinese talking about Uyghurs
or, indeed, Tibetans, or Azerbaijanis talking about Armenia and
Armenians. Nobody can stand by and condone this disgusting,
hateful language, but equally importantly, we cannot let it be
put into practice. I say again: silence is complicity. Those
words are reality for Palestinian people. They are entrenched in
their day-to-day lives, in the policies of the Israeli
Government, and in law.
(Birmingham, Selly Oak)
(Lab)
I am extremely grateful to the hon. Gentleman for giving way. I
have been listening to his speech with interest. Is he concerned
about the human rights of Palestinians only in relation to
Israel, or is he also concerned about the abuses of Palestinian
human rights by Hamas and the Palestinian Authority?
That is a very valid and good question, but right now I am
particularly focused on the occupied territories, which of course
are under the command of Israel. That is why I am pertinently
directing my points to that today.
In February 2022, Amnesty International published a report
concluding for the first time that Israel is committing the crime
of apartheid against Palestinians. Under international law—just
to be clear, because most of us assume apartheid was solely in
South Africa—apartheid is defined as systematic discrimination
and domination, and inhumane acts committed in order to maintain
that system. That is set out in the international convention on
the suppression and punishment of the crime of apartheid and the
Rome statute of the International Criminal Court. This is not
about politicising language: this is language that is respected
in international law.
Amnesty International’s report is the result of more than four
years of research and analysis, and I recommend that everyone in
this room read it, as other international, Israeli and
Palestinian organisations have previously drawn similar
conclusions, including the respected Human Rights Watch,
B’Tselem, Yesh Din, Al Mezan and others. If the UK Government are
serious about protecting the human rights of Palestinians, it is
fundamental that the problem—the crime being committed against
them—is first acknowledged, then investigated; that perpetrators
are brought to justice; and that it is not allowed to
continue.
I will now move to the last part of my speech, which is the most
pertinent point about where the UK stands: the UK Government are
actively blocking action, and that is the biggest crime at all.
Why do I say this? Let us look at the UK Government’s position,
which is that
“we do not recognise the terminology about apartheid. Any
judgment on serious crimes under international law is a matter
for judicial decision, rather than for Governments or
non-judicial bodies.”—[Official Report, 13 December 2022; Vol.
724, c. 876.]
Let us follow that logic. Why is it that the UK Government have
quite rightly called out war crimes being committed by Russia in
Ukraine without any judicial decision, or called out in this
House crimes against humanity—language that includes ethnic
cleansing and, indeed, genocide—against Xinjiang by China? How
can we pick and choose when we apply this logic? The UK
Government must make a choice: they either unequivocally champion
human rights around the world, or they turn the other way when it
is not politically expedient to call out what they see.
Here is the evidence that the UK is standing in the way of courts
and other bodies making such a judicial decision. First, the UK
stated its strong opposition to the International Criminal
Court’s Palestine investigation in 2021. How can the UK continue
to oppose the investigation on the basis that it does not
recognise Palestinian statehood, while at the same time allegedly
respecting the independence of that court—which, incidentally,
has ruled by majority that it has jurisdiction? Secondly, the UK
voted against the Human Rights Council’s resolution in 2021
establishing the current independent UN commission of inquiry on
the situation in Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territories.
Finally, the UK Government voted against the UN General
Assembly’s resolution to request that the International Court of
Justice provide an advisory opinion on the question of the
legality of Israel’s occupation, and only last month, the UK and
Israeli Governments signed the 2030 road map for UK-Israeli
bilateral relations. The only pathetic concrete reference to
Palestinian people in that document is this:
“We will cooperate in improving Palestinian livelihoods and
Palestinian economic development.”
Not a mention of those suffering human rights abuses, and not a
slight glimmer of hope for them.
The evidence is clear: the treatment of the Palestinian people is
not primarily an economic or poverty concern, but one of
systematic discrimination, erosion of human rights, and denial of
identity and legitimacy. Therefore, under no circumstances can
the UK Government continue to bury their head in the sand on this
issue. As I have said throughout, silence is complicity.
2.47pm
(Henley) (Con)
For me—like many people in this House, I suspect—human rights are
universal and indivisible. That is why I want to start by telling
Members a little about the relationship of Israel and Palestine
to the Council of Europe, which owns, as it were, the European
Court of Human Rights.
At the institutional level, the Israeli Knesset has enjoyed
observer status with the Parliamentary Assembly since 1957, and
the Union of Local Authorities in Israel was granted observer
status with the Congress of Local and Regional Authorities of the
Council of Europe in 1994. Israel has signed and ratified 11
Council of Europe conventions and signed but not ratified a
further two. Israel participates in four partial agreements and
18 inter- governmental committees.
With respect to high-level meetings, the secretary-general of the
Council of Europe paid a couple of official visits to Israel, and
the President of the Knesset has paid similar visits to the
Council of Europe. We at the Council of Europe have just
completed a study on Israel and Palestine, which was led by the
former Mayor of Turin, Piero Fassino, who has taken a strong
stand on this issue.
The Palestinian National Council was granted partner for
democracy status with the Parliamentary Assembly in October 2011.
The Association of Palestinian Local Authorities was granted
observer status with the Congress of Local and Regional
Authorities in 2005. I mention those things not as an example
just to show that we are linked with Palestine and Israel, but
because the Council of Europe looks after the convention on human
rights. Israel signed and ratified the convention in 1986. I
personally put a lot of effort into using that link with Israel
to establish a firm place where we can not just talk about human
rights, but actually get Israel to do something about human
rights, and I think that is important. It would help us
enormously if the Palestinians would accept the same approach to
human rights in their own territory and deal with those human
rights themselves. We cannot have one side following one rule and
another side following a completely different rule—they both have
to fulfil the same conditions.
I want to concentrate somewhat on how Hamas and the Palestinians
do not protect Palestinian rights. The first place to start with
that is LGBT matters. Tel Aviv Pride, as the House will have
seen, is the largest LGBT pride festival in the middle east and
Asia. Israel welcomes people no matter how they choose to
identify. It is not the same in Gaza, where people in LGBT
communities fear for their lives, and where same-sex couples are
so afraid that they will be condemned that they do not bring
themselves forward. We need to protect that fundamental human
right of the Palestinians, and we need to put pressure on the
Palestinians to be able to do that. The more we can do that, the
more it will influence our ability to put pressure on Israel in
other areas.
A second issue is freedom of journalism and freedom of
expression. We have some very good examples of how the
Palestinians have gone out of their way to systematically torture
those in detention. I am not aware of anyone in Israel
systematically torturing people in detention, but if we can put
pressure on the Palestinians to bring forward measures to curb
the instincts to have a go at Palestinian journalists, it will
help us enormously in resolving the human rights issues in the
region.
(Middlesbrough) (Lab)
The hon. Gentleman talks about torture. He may not be aware that
Palestinian children are often deported into solitary
confinement, where they spend hour after hour. If that is not
torture, I do not know what is. They emerge from those situations
with Stockholm syndrome. Perhaps he will reflect on that in his
comments.
I am aware of that, but that is completely different from how
Fatah security forces in Hebron dispersed a peaceful protest
against the rising cost of living. That protest was not against
political things, but domestic things. Those security forces
detained the organisers. What the hon. Gentleman talks about is
also completely different from the security forces banning the
Palestinian People’s Congress, an umbrella organisation of
activists and politicians calling for reform of the Palestine
Liberation Organisation.
A third area where there is great difficulty on both sides and
where we need to do more to push forward human rights is freedom
of women and gender differentiation. Neither side has signed the
Istanbul convention, and Israel has said that it is not going to
sign the Istanbul convention at the moment. I think that is such
a shame, because it is a landmark piece of international treaty
work that protects women from domestic violence. In the
Palestinian territories, there is plenty of domestic violence
against women, and women suffer severe inequality under Hamas
rule and have no protection against domestic violence. If they
have been raped, they are seen as tainted and can be subjected to
honour killings if that is known.
The final point I will mention is the death penalty. Israel at
the moment has a ban on the death penalty, in compliance with its
signing and ratification of the convention on human rights. The
Palestinians do not have a ban on the death penalty. I know there
has been considerable talk in Israel about restoring the death
penalty, and I absolutely deplore that. I have told the Israeli
authorities that I deplore it and that they should not do it. We
should have parity on both sides to move away from the use of the
death penalty, as a fundamental part of helping to establish
human rights on both sides.
When we look at the Palestinian situation, there is quite a lot
to have a go at in order to protect human rights. If we can get
its human rights system working properly, it will help enormously
in our negotiations with the Israeli side.
2.56pm
(Bradford West) (Lab)
Before I get into my substantive speech, I would like to put on
record that my hon. Friends the Members for Sunderland Central
() and for Blackburn () both wanted to be here. In
particular, my hon. Friend the Member for Blackburn wanted to
raise the issue of her constituent Mr Ismail Adam, who on 5 April
witnessed his son—they are British nationals—being beaten when
visiting al-Aqsa, and she would have wanted the Minister to
comment on that. Both are unable to be here because of
constituency engagements.
I am grateful to the hon. Member for Dundee West () for securing today’s debate and
the Backbench Business Committee for granting it. The motion is
simple—human rights protections for the Palestinians. Therefore,
the logical and very simple question that must be addressed, and
it is glaringly obvious, is: why are the Palestinians’ human
rights not being protected? When it comes to protecting the human
rights of the Palestinians, not only do our Government maintain a
position that is morally indefensible, but they fail in their
responsibility to protect the Palestinians from the most
egregious violations of international law.
It is an indisputable fact for any rational person that
Palestinian human rights are being violated. The massive amount
of evidence that has been lodged at the International Criminal
Court provides forensic detail of the thousands of criminal acts
perpetrated by Israel. The evidence of Israel’s human rights
violations is not in doubt. What is in doubt is the international
community’s will to do something about it. To put it simply,
because of the United Kingdom Government’s position, they have
failed in their responsibility to uphold even the most basic
international principles of human rights norms and laws.
What do I mean when I say basic human rights? I mean the right to
be born free and equal in dignity and rights; the right to
freedoms without any distinction of any kind; the right to life,
liberty and security; the right to privacy, family and a home;
the right to freedom of movement; the right to freedoms without
any discrimination; the right not to be persecuted; the right to
nationality; the rights to freedom of opinion and expression; the
right to leave any country, including your own, and return to
your home; the right to recognition; the right to protection; and
the right to justice. That list is not exhaustive, but these are
the international human rights that we in this country epitomise
as British values.
No one in this Chamber can honestly say that any of those human
rights are afforded in full to the Palestinian people, so these
are questions for us all: what would we do if we were forced, for
hours each day, to go through a military checkpoint because of
our race, just to get to work? What would we do if we woke up one
day and JCB bulldozers was demolishing our homes or our school?
What would we do if we were parents whose child needed urgent
cancer treatment, but we, as well as our child, were denied a
permit to access the only hospital where the care we needed was
available? What would we do if we were worshipping in church on
Christmas Day, and we were tied up, beaten and arrested on
Christmas morning? What would we do if F-16 fighter jets blew up
the BBC or ITV buildings in central London? What would we do if
we were forced to live in the world’s largest open-air
prison?
What would we do if our home had been set alight by settlers, and
our child had two options: either die of suffocation, or go
outside and be pelted by rocks thrown by settlers? What would we
do if NHS ambulances rushing to save lives were routinely stopped
at checkpoints, or if NHS doctors rushing to care were shot at?
What would we do if we were subjected to mass collective
punishment? Those might be hypotheticals for us, but they are not
hypotheticals for the people of Palestine living under
occupation. That is their daily existence, that is their lived
experience, and that is the reality they cannot escape from.
The people of Great Britain would never accept such treatment for
any of us, so why do we find it acceptable when it comes to the
people of Palestine? If we would not accept it, what do we do to
stop this from happening to the Palestinians? It is 75 years
since the Nakba, and no one is able to return home; 50 years of
growing Israeli occupation, which seemingly no one can stop; 16
years of a blockade of Gaza that has not been lifted, despite the
severe humanitarian crisis it has caused for 2 million people.
Now it is Ramadan. After Ramadan, the storming of al-Aqsa, the
third holiest site for Muslims, has become a routine practice for
the Israeli military. For Palestinians, such anniversaries
highlight decades of violations that have been continuing against
them, unaddressed. For us, they have been a stain on our
conscience, and that of the world, for more than 75 years.
Let me explain what we should be doing. We should show a real
commitment to universal rights and British values. We should show
leadership in demanding equality, justice and fairness, as
currently we clearly do not. We should support Palestinians by
holding their violators accountable for their crimes. Britain,
which prides itself on the rule of law, should set the highest
standard for Israel to follow, and insist on that in its dealings
with us. To do otherwise means that we are continuing to fail not
only the Palestinians, but the people of Israel too. In our
country, we hold our politicians to account, and even when the
Prime Minister broke lockdown rules or did not wear a seat belt,
our laws are applied equally. We should afford Palestinians the
right to self-determination, and recognise the state of
Palestine. We should immediately support the jurisdiction of the
International Criminal Court over the situation in the region,
instead of maintaining the current obstruction for justice to be
done.
However, I am under no illusion. I could expect justice only if I
had the recognition, let alone the power to advocate for my
needs. Again, returning to a point that is glaringly obvious,
this is not a clash of two equals. This is not a clash of
religions, and neither is it a clash of peoples. This is an
illegal military occupation. This is a conflict in which a
protected oppressor is persecuting the unprotected Palestinian
people. This is about Israel acting with impunity. Israel has
been gifted impunity, which means it has zero incentive to deal
with the Palestinians fairly. Indeed, we incentivise it to
continue to break international law, because the world fails to
hold it to account. That makes us complicit in the persecution
faced by the Palestinians.
Our Government have failed to support any mechanisms of
accountability, whether by opposing an investigation by the
International Criminal Court, abstaining on crucial votes, or
voting against resolutions condemning illegal settlements and the
right to self-determination. Instead, they continue to ignore
Israel’s crimes. If we truly believe in a two-state solution, it
is time to act before it is too late. Only a few weeks ago,
Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, the Israeli Minister for
responsibility for administering the occupied west bank, said
that there was no Palestinian history or culture, and no such
thing as the Palestinian people. That Israeli Minister also spoke
at a podium covered in what appeared to be a variation of a map
of Israel, which showed an Israeli state with expanded boundaries
that included the west bank, east Jerusalem, Gaza and Jordan.
Here we are talking about a two-state solution, the only fit and
proper resolution to this crisis, yet the actions of Israel show
a complete contradiction to that aim.
That leads me to my concluding remarks, and to three clear asks
of the Government. First, any relationship with Israel, or any
other country for that matter, should be based on a demonstration
of an acceptance of our values, which we hold dear. In the recent
Netanyahu visit, did the UK ensure that our trading partner would
comply with international law, or did we further signal to it
that it could continue to act with impunity at our behest for our
financial gain over the duty to protect human rights? Secondly,
the UK should immediately enable international systems of
accountability for criminal law violations in the region and must
immediately support the International Criminal Court’s
investigation. Thirdly, the UK must recognise the Palestinians’
right to self-determination, which means the immediate
recognition of the state of Palestine.
Britain has a moral duty to act on Palestine and not just present
empty words. I assure the Minister that this is an issue at the
ballot box, so soon empty words will lead to empty Tory seats in
elections. I urge the Government to do the moral thing and act on
human rights for the Palestinians. It is the right thing to
do.
Several hon. Members rose—
Madam Deputy Speaker ( )
Just a little reminder of my guidance on seven minutes—because
otherwise some people will have a lot of time and others will
have very little.
3.05pm
(Hendon) (Con)
I congratulate the hon. Member for Dundee West () on securing the debate and on
his eloquence in putting forward the case for human rights in
Palestine, as the title of the debate suggests. He acknowledged
that he only put one side of the story. I hope, in the next few
minutes, to be able to put the other side of the narrative.
We are aware that incidents in Gaza and the west bank show us
that human rights abuses are occurring and it is clear to see who
is perpetrating them. We have reports that LGBT people, women and
girls, young people, journalists and critics of the Palestinian
Authority have all been abused. These are people in Gaza and the
west bank, and their abuse occurs in Gaza and the west bank. As
my hon. Friend the Member for Henley () said, there are no LGBT rights
in Gaza. In fact, if people are identified or identify themselves
as being gay, they are thrown off buildings. If they are not
thrown off buildings, they are often prosecuted. They are
criminalised for being gay or identifying as being gay and they
are imprisoned or sometimes executed. Let us contrast that with
Israel, as has been mentioned, and Tel Aviv Pride, where all
people are welcome.
In the United Kingdom, as a democracy, we take for granted our
basic rights of freedom of speech plus a free press. However, the
same does not occur in Gaza and the Palestinian territories.
There are no rights of freedom there. Indeed, journalists are
often attacked just for criticising the Palestinian Authority. In
2022, Journalist Mujahed Tabjana was detained after publicly
criticising the PA. After being freed, he recounted:
“I was beaten on arrival. I was hit with a hose, kicked, placed
in stress positions for many hours, asked about my work, and my
friends and colleagues. This went on for days and nights.”
I am sure we all agree that no journalist, or anyone critical of
a Government, should be tortured in that way, so the Palestinian
Authority must take steps towards a free press and against human
rights abuses.
As my hon. Friend the Member for Henley also said, gender-based
violence and honour killings are encouraged in the west bank and
Gaza. Women are not treated as equals; they do not have the same
rights or protections as men. Women suffer that inequality under
Hamas itself. They have no protection against domestic violence.
If they have been raped, as my hon. Friend said, they are seen as
tainted and can be subject to honour killings. In 2022, the Gazan
authorities prevented sisters Wissam and Fatimah al-Assi, aged 20
and 24, from pursuing domestic violence complaints through the
courts by impeding them from accessing a prosecutor to testify on
their behalf in court. I would therefore like to see the United
Kingdom Government assess where we are spending aid and introduce
a strategy, such as on violence against women and girls, in these
areas.
In July last year, the United Nations Committee Against Torture
said it was “seriously concerned” about the consistent reports of
torture taking place in Palestinian detention centres and
stations. Tens of millions of pounds of British taxpayers’ money
has been spent on training Palestinian security forces. Despite
that, Palestinian security forces have a terrible record on
beating and torturing detainees in interrogation centres. These
are Palestinians they are torturing. I know the hon. Member for
Dundee West will condemn that, as well as others, but it would be
useful if other Members acknowledged the abuse that is occurring
in Gaza and the west bank.
We need to ask ourselves why this is happening. In recent weeks
we have seen some terrible violence. I agree with the hon. Member
for Dundee West that some of the inflammatory statements made by
politicians in Israel have contributed towards that—they are
unacceptable and I certainly would not condone such behaviour,
but it has led to incidents such as the murders of my former
constituents, and it is having a great impact on many people who
visit Israel. We need to ask why there has been an upsurge in
violence in recent weeks.
Last Friday marked Quds day, which Iran used to stoke violence in
Israel and the west bank. Iran called for resistance to protect
Jerusalem, and the Speaker of the Iranian Parliament Mohammad
Qalibaf told demonstrators in Tehran that Israel is the root of
problems in the region, and that Palestinians are actively
confronting Israeli aggression from Gaza to the heart of Tel
Aviv. That is a clear promotion of violence by Iran. Those words
have effect, particularly among younger, more impressionable
people. That is how the violence starts. It is worth repeating: I
encourage the Government to proscribe the IRGC because its malign
activities have an effect on the human rights of Palestinians in
Gaza and the west bank.
3.10pm
(Hammersmith) (Lab)
I am grateful to the hon. Member for Dundee West () and the Backbench Business
Committee for securing this debate.
The conditions on the ground in the occupied Palestinian
territories are the worst they have been for nearly 20 years.
That is directly related to the new far-right Government in
Israel, and their willingness to terrorise or to allow the
terrorising of the Palestinian civilian population and to ignore
international law in the quest for the formal and actual
annexation of large parts of the occupied Palestinian territory.
We have heard that 98 Palestinians— 17 of them children—have been
killed so far this year, and 17 Israelis. That includes a
15-year-old Palestinian boy killed by Israeli troops in the
Aqabat Jaber refugee camp in Jericho. As we heard earlier, it
also includes the murder of three British-Israeli women. Every
one of those deaths is a tragedy, but they are the most serious
instances of brutality, and include state-backed settler
violence, as in Hawara, and the massive expansion in illegal
settlement building and the violence that occurs around that. It
includes the 1,000 Palestinians at imminent risk of forcible
transfer from Masafer Yatta.
I am grateful to Medical Aid for Palestinians, Lawyers for
Palestinian Human Rights and others who have briefed us for this
debate. MAP says that 2,560 Palestinians have been injured so far
this year, and there have been 260 settler attacks against
Palestinians and their properties. It is very worrying that not
only are there attacks on health workers and not only are
ambulances routinely used as cover for Israeli troops engaged in
military operations, but medical staff are prevented from
reaching wounded people.
We have heard about the effect on children. I was briefed by
Defence for Children International, which has been in the UK this
week. It is one of six organisations proscribed—on no evidence—as
a terrorist organisation, along with Al-Haq and other well-known
Palestinian human rights organisations. It told us about the
thousands of children who have been imprisoned, some in
administrative detention, which is a disgrace. The majority are
in Israeli prisons, which is a breach of international law. My
hon. Friend the Member for Middlesbrough () mentioned solitary
confinement—a quarter of Palestinian children are detained in
solitary confinement, for an average of 16 days but in some cases
up to 40 days. That is a form of torture being practised on a
widespread basis.
Let me mention Gaza briefly, as I suspect there will not be much
mention of it. It is a trap that we all fall into, because Gaza
is blockaded and is kept away from the rest of the world. It is
under occupation, effectively, despite the withdrawal of Israeli
troops. Some 2.2 million people are in that open prison; there is
about 50% unemployment and 60% of people rely on food aid. A
whole generation has grown up in those abhorrent and appalling
traditions. Again, those are breaches of international law. The
Government should be asking for an immediate end to the
occupation and the blockade, but I fear they are stuck in time
and the only moves that the current Government have made are in
the wrong direction.
Let me turn briefly to the issue of international law. The whole
apparatus of occupation has been in effect for 56 years, and in
three weeks’ time it will be the 75th anniversary of the Nakba,
when 750,000 Palestinians were displaced from their homes. That
occupation, which has gone on, has an apparatus that controls
every aspect of the daily lives of Palestinians, whether through
home demolition, forced displacement, illegal settlement
construction—there are now 750,000 illegal settlers, if east
Jerusalem is included—greatly increased settler violence,
movement restrictions, arbitrary detention and systematic
discrimination.
What do we expect from the UK Government? I return to the point I
made earlier, when I talked about annexation. The Minister, who
is always very courteous and thoughtful in these matters, said
that my analysis was right, so I hope that he will have got some
more briefing notes from his civil servants and will be able to
say a little more about that.
Two things have happened so far this year. First, there has been
a clear statement, both in the coalition agreement and from Prime
Minister Netanyahu, to the effect that
“the Jewish people have an exclusive and uncontestable right on
the entire land of Israel. The government will advance and
promote settlement in all parts of the land of Israel,”
including in Judea and Samaria, which is their description of the
occupied west bank. It does not matter whether we are talking
about de facto or de jure annexation—that is what is happening on
the ground. When this was previously threatened, by a previous
Netanyahu Government, the Government and the Opposition said that
they would ban settlement goods if annexation took place.
Annexation has taken place and it is now time for action, not
simply for words. I am sorry that I do not have more time to
expand on these thoughts.
There are very clear legal principles. The International Criminal
Court investigation, which will investigate the crimes of all
combatants not just Israel, and the UN investigation deserve the
support of the British Government. They would have had that
support in previous years, but now, consistently, this Government
are voting against that and blocking independent, international
investigations. That is a disgrace. The Palestinians deserve
justice, peace and a country of their own. We should recognise
Palestine immediately and I hope we will hear some movement from
the Minister when he responds.
3.17pm
(Meon Valley) (Con)
I thank the hon. Member for Dundee West () for bringing forward this
important debate. I declare an interest as I visited Israel and
Palestine in 2016 with some other MPs, and that is recorded in
the Register of Members’ Financial Interests.
I want to concentrate on one aspect that is not often raised in
public: the detention and imprisonment of Palestinian adults and
children from the Occupied Palestinian Territories, which is a
central part of Israel’s military occupation.
In 2016, we visited the Israeli military court at Ofer and saw
how it works in person. Only Palestinians are tried in military
courts. Settlers in the OPTs are tried in Israeli civil and
criminal courts. As part of his report in October 2018, the UN
special rapporteur wrote about how
“the extension of Israeli laws to the West Bank”
since 1967 has created “a discriminatory legal regime”.
If an Israeli settler child and a Palestinian child throw a stone
in the same area, the former will almost certainly not land up in
a court and will be protected by Israel’s legal system. However,
the Palestinian child will face a military court. Israel’s
military court at Ofer has, by its own figures, a 99.74%
conviction rate. Why? Because lawyers advise Palestinians to
plead guilty in order to get out earlier. I will leave it up to
hon. Members to weigh whether that is justice.
International law is very clear on the legal authority to impose
military law and establish military courts to try civilians. The
key provisions are found in the Hague regulations and the fourth
Geneva convention. Articles 64 and 66 of the fourth Geneva
convention state that local laws
“may be repealed or suspended…where they constitute a threat
to…security”
and replaced with military law, enforced in
“properly constituted, non-political military courts”.
That is what the Israeli military authorities use as the
jurisdictional basis for establishing military courts in the west
bank. However, international law also stipulates that occupation
should be on a temporary basis, including the prosecution of
civilians under military law. As we have heard, Israel’s military
court policy has been in existence for 56 years—hardly a
temporary solution.
The PLO Ministry of Detainees and Ex-Detainees’ Affairs estimates
that more than 850,000 Palestinians have been detained since
1967. Wide-ranging military regulations govern every aspect of
Palestinian life. Military orders provide for a wide range of
offences, divided into five categories—some credible, some not.
Hostile terrorist activity and disturbance of public order are
classified in that way, which I think is acceptable, but so are
classic criminal offences, illegal presence in Israel and traffic
offences committed in the OPT. Do the last three categories of
offence really need to be tried in a military court? Are the
sentences proportionate? Under military order No. 1651 of 2009,
for example, throwing stones is considered a security offence
with a punishment of up to 20 years’ imprisonment.
There is also detention without trial. Palestinians may be held
without charge for up to six months under an administrative
detention order issued by an Israeli military commander.
Recently, with Breaking the Silence, we met a military commander
who I think had made such orders when he was 21—a very young age
to have such an impact on somebody. The orders can be renewed
without charge or trial. As of October 2022, there were 798
Palestinian prisoners being held under an administrative
detention order, including eight members of the Palestinian
Legislative Council. The majority of those prisoners have served
more than six months behind bars.
It is important that I give the House some detail about what
happens. Detainees, including children, are handcuffed and
blindfolded. Some are kept in total isolation, as we have heard,
and there are widespread allegations that they are threatened
during interrogation. Some 70% of child detainees and 80% of
adult detainees have been unlawfully transferred to prisons in
Israel, in violation of the fourth Geneva convention and the Rome
statute of the International Criminal Court.
I want to concentrate on what happens to children. Israel is the
only country in the world that systematically prosecutes children
in military courts. Some 95,000 children have been detained since
1967 in the west bank. The most common charge is stone throwing,
and it is often unclear who has thrown the stones. Stone throwing
is not acceptable, but no child should be arrested in the middle
of the night, roughed up, taken by the army without a parent or a
responsible adult and interrogated without a lawyer present.
Worst of all, families are not informed where their children are
taken, even though military order 1676 requires that a police
officer inform the parents of the child’s detention. In most
cases, Palestinian children are taken to detention centres in
larger Israeli settlements across the west bank, and parents take
the time to find out where their child is. In 99% of cases,
children are denied access to their parents or a lawyer and are
unaware of their right to remain silent. During covid, families
were unable to visit their children. Confessions are often signed
in Hebrew, which few of the Palestinian children understand, and
90% plead guilty regardless of whether they committed the
offence.
Children should be offered the same protections that would be
granted in a civil court. In all of this, Israel is violating the
numerous provisions of the UN convention on the rights of the
child, which it ratified in 1991. The criminal age of
responsibility is 12. In 2011, military orders raised the age of
majority from 16 to 18. Under-18s must therefore be tried in
juvenile courts, which brings Israel into line with international
standards. However, that does not apply to sentencing: 16 and
17-year-olds are still sentenced as adults.
All of this is common knowledge if anyone cares to look. It was
confirmed in the legal report that the Foreign Office funded in
2012, which found that Israel was in breach of eight of its
international legal obligations under the UN convention on the
rights of the child and the fourth Geneva convention. Eleven
years on, sadly little has changed. As of 31 March 2023, 151
Palestinian children are in military detention, an 11% increase
on the 2022 figure. I urge the Minister to revisit that report
and push for change.
Following UNICEF’s report “Children in Israeli Military
Detention”, which found that there was ill treatment of children
in the military detention system, Israel reduced the maximum time
for which a child could be detained before appearing in front of
a judge, from four days to 24 hours for children aged 12 and 13
and from four to two days for children aged 14 and 15. However,
there was no change in the period for 16 to 17-year-olds, which
is still 96 hours. Settlers’ children enjoy much shorter periods
of detention before seeing a judge, and are allowed access to
parents and lawyers.
The resentment towards the Israeli defence force that each of
those 95,000 children must grow up with must be huge, and to say
that it is counterproductive must be one of the biggest
understatements I have made in the House. As the right hon. Sir
Stephen Sedley writes in his foreword to the Save the Children
report “Defenceless”,
“Whatever one’s view of the ongoing conflict and its causes,
there is no excuse for the systematic infliction of psychological
harm on a generation of young Palestinians.”
Sadly, most Palestinian children’s only experience of Israelis is
framed by such experiences, and violence from Israeli soldiers
and illegal Israeli settlers. I urge Israel to ensure that
throughout the arrest, interrogation and court process,
Palestinian children are given the same safeguards as Israeli
children in civil courts. The UK Government and their partners
have a direct responsibility to ensure that that happens, as high
contracting parties to the fourth Geneva convention. I urge the
FCDO to deal with this as a matter of urgency.
3.26pm
(Birmingham, Selly Oak)
(Lab)
One thing that I share with many others taking part in the debate
is a concern for the human rights of Palestinians. The failure to
reach a peaceful resolution of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict
means that the human rights of both Palestinian and Israeli
civilians are frequently put at risk. As the parliamentary chair
of Labour Friends of Israel, I know that all too often this
subject is presented as if only the Palestinians experienced
threats to their human rights and only the Israelis were
responsible. In response to my earlier intervention, the hon.
Member for Dundee West () said that he was talking about
the Palestinian territories, but the title of the debate is
“Human rights protections for Palestinians”, which, I suggest, is
wider.
The Palestinian Authority has full civil control over the vast
majority of Palestinians living in the west bank, and as we all
know, the Palestinian Authority is plagued by authoritarianism
and corruption. In neither the west bank nor Gaza do Palestinians
enjoy the right to vote. The Palestinian Authority has not held
presidential elections since 2005 or legislative elections since
2006. President Abbas is now in his 18th year of a four-year
term. New laws are simply introduced as presidential decrees.
Meanwhile, the Gaza strip is governed by a proscribed terrorist
group whose ambition is to destroy the state of Israel. No
elections have been held in Gaza since Hamas seized power in
2007. Freedom House, a not-for-profit democracy group, describes
Gaza as a
“de facto one-party state”.
It also rates the west bank as being on a par with Rwanda and
Ethiopia when it comes to human rights, civil liberties and
political rights. Gaza is given a score of 11 out of 100 for its
human rights record.
Freedom of speech and due process fare no better. The Palestinian
Authority has a track record of arbitrary detention, with more
than 200 Palestinians detained last year. In June its security
forces attacked a peaceful demonstration on the cost of living,
and detained the organisers. It has banned the Palestinian
People’s Congress, a pro-reform group, from convening, and
forcibly dispersed a press conference held by the same group in
Ramallah, while threatening journalists with sticks and batons.
As we have heard, torture is commonplace, with a number of
reported deaths in PA custody, including that of anti-corruption
activist Nizar Banat.
The Independent Commission for Human Rights received more than
130 complaints of torture by the Palestinian Authority last year.
Just last month, the PA refused registration to Lawyers for
Justice, an organisation that represents victims of detention and
torture. In Gaza, a general climate of repression exists
following a brutal crackdown on peaceful protest in 2019. In
2022, at least 105 Palestinians were arbitrarily detained by
Hamas, and more than 160 reports of torture were made to the
Independent Commission for Human Rights. The deputy programme
director of Human Rights Watch, Tom Porteous, concluded that
where the Palestinian Authority and Hamas have autonomy, they
have developed parallel police states.
As we have heard, women and girls in the Palestinian Authority
territories continue to face discrimination, including early
enforced marriage, partner and family violence, rape, incest,
psychological abuse and sexual exploitation. We would not ignore
such abuses here in this country; we should not ignore them in
the Palestinian territories.
My hon. Friend makes an important point. We would not ignore
those abuses against women and girls in the UK, and rightly so.
As an advocate for women and girls, especially on the issue of
honour killing, it seems to me that there is a thread running
through the speeches today when we talk about the rights of women
in Palestine. Does he agree that when it comes to discussing
women in Palestine, all of a sudden everyone becomes a women’s
advocate, because we are not talking about anything on the other
side? Women are always used when it comes to Islamophobic tropes
too.
I have a great deal of respect for my hon. Friend, and what I
would say to her is that I am citing something that we are all
very familiar with and would raise if it was happening here. I am
saying that we should not ignore it when it happens there.
As the hon. Members for Henley () and for Hendon (Dr Offord)
said, among the communities who face the most threats to their
human rights are Palestinians who are gay. LGBT+ Palestinians
routinely face harassment, torture and physical attacks,
including directly from the Hamas Government. Although
homosexuality is not illegal in the Palestinian Authority, the PA
does little to defend the rights of LGBT+ Palestinians. It has
restricted the activity of LGBT+ organisation Al Qaws for
violating
“the ideals and values of Palestinian society”.
In December 2019, a trans woman and a gay man were beaten and
robbed by a group of men in Kafr Aqab, south of Ramallah, while
the PA police stood idly by. The human rights situation faced by
LGBT+ Gazans is even worse. Homosexual acts are illegal in Gaza,
in line with Hamas’s fundamentalist ideology, with the most
serious punishment for offences being the death penalty. Perhaps
unsurprisingly, at least 100 Palestinians have claimed asylum in
Israel on grounds of their sexual orientation.
I conclude by asking colleagues to consider this damning record
when discussing the topic of Palestinian human rights. There is
no doubt that the absence of a Palestinian state and Israel’s
continued military presence in the west bank have a pernicious
impact on the lives of many Palestinians, but human rights abuses
against Palestinians take place on a daily basis by their own
governing bodies.
As my right hon. Friend the Member for Leeds Central () said during the earlier
statement, we need fresh and enlightened leadership on both
sides. The Palestinian Authority’s failure to act as a credible
partner for peace is one of the significant barriers to the
negotiated two-state solution that many of us wish to see.
Human rights are virtually non-existent for the long-suffering
people of Gaza under the violent and bloodthirsty rule of the
Hamas terrorist group. Palestine is under occupation, as my hon.
Friend the Member for Hammersmith () suggested—occupation by
Hamas. We will not do the Palestinian people any favours by
turning a blind eye to the record of Hamas and the Palestinian
Authority. [Interruption.] Do you want me to finish, Madam Deputy
Speaker? I thought I had an extra minute because of the
intervention.
I am happy and willing to criticise the excesses of Israeli
politicians and Israeli forces, but we have to be honest and
criticise the excesses of the Palestinian Authority and Hamas,
too, if we want a balanced and reasonable debate.
Madam Deputy Speaker ( )
Just to be clear, the time limit is an advisory one so that
colleagues think of each other and everyone has an equal
shot.
3.36pm
(Ilford South) (Lab)
I commend the hon. Member for Dundee West () for securing this important and
timely debate on human rights protections for the Palestinian
people at a crucial moment in Palestinian history and, as I know
from talking to my Israeli friends, at a time when many people in
Israel are fearful of the dangerous political direction being
taken by their own Government, who are becoming more extreme with
each election. Palestinians across the occupied territories are
currently subject to an explosion of violence from illegal
settlers and the state-sanctioned Israeli Defence Forces alike,
under what is widely seen as one of the most extreme and
inflammatory Governments in Israel’s history.
I take this moment to remember the British rabbi Leo Dee,
following the awful death of his wife and daughters—British
nationals who lost their lives in the west bank 13 days ago. I
also remember those who were injured in Tel Aviv. Every life lost
in this 75-year-old conflict is to be mourned.
This year alone, 98 Palestinians, including 17 children, have
been killed by Israeli forces—not by terrorists or by a
semi-legitimate Government but by a Government who want to be
seen to be on a par with their European, middle eastern and
Mediterranean neighbours. The number is three times as many as
during the same period a year ago. The UN reports that last year
was the deadliest year for Palestinians in the west bank since
2005, with at least 151 Palestinians killed by Israeli forces, 35
of them children. Settler violence is also rising. Since January,
the UN has recorded 260 settler attacks against Palestinians and
their property, including the devastating rampage through Huwara
in February that left 418 Palestinians injured.
In the past few days, I have received nearly 1,000 emails and
letters from local residents in Ilford South, not just from my
Muslim community but from my Jewish community and local churches,
expressing their sincere concern about the abuse of Palestinians’
human rights and the horrendous violence on both sides of the
conflict.
When the al-Aqsa mosque was raided and Palestinians were evicted
from their homes in Sheikh Jarrah during the holy month of
Ramadan in 2021, I received more than 5,000 emails from
constituents expressing their concern about these illegal acts
and calling for justice for the Palestinian people. Just last
week, I met worshippers outside my local Islamic centre, with
many telling me of their profound kinship with the Palestinian
people and their deep feeling of injustice over the ongoing
violence.
Churches are supporting organisations such as the Amos Trust to
raise money to support people in Palestine. For people in Ilford
South and in many seats like mine, this is not a remote issue on
the other side of the world; it is one of the foremost issues in
their minds, and it should be taken seriously and with the
gravity it rightly deserves.
I first visited Palestine and Israel in 1999. I went with a group
of young people from Ilford—Jews, Christians and Muslims alike.
At the time, people believed that the Oslo accords might still be
enacted. I have visited the Holy Land about half a dozen times
over the years. I recall a time when one could sit in Ramallah,
where I sat, with people from the Palestinian negotiation support
unit and Israeli Knesset Members, talking about what might be
enacted. I recall at that time walking through the checkpoint at
Qalandia, which was just a few barbed wire stacks on the floor,
and people could walk through, showing their passport. When
people go through Qalandia now, all these years later, they see
the size of the gun turrets, the encasement and the brutality of
the occupation. It is so visceral and so wrong.
I still speak to the Israelis and Palestinians we met back in
1999, many of whom have remained friends because of that
experience. I also still speak to those in my community in
Ilford, and there is hope that one day this conflict could be
resolved. But we need to be clear in calling out honestly what is
happening in Israel and Palestine, the asymmetry of that conflict
and what we can do in this country, using our foreign service and
our Government, to bring real pressure for genuine change.
There are so many aspects to this, including the ever-worsening
health crisis, which further compounds the situation in
Palestine. According to research by Medical Aid for Palestinians,
attacks and obstructions on health workers on the ground have
risen exponentially, with a 290% increase in the rate of
violations against Palestine Red Crescent Society medical teams.
During the recent attacks on al-Aqsa, Red Crescent ambulances
were fired upon by the IDF with rubber-coated steel bullets, and
a paramedic was severely assaulted and injured by an Israeli
soldier. In total, nine ambulances were denied access to the
courtyards of al-Aqsa, preventing them from reaching the wounded
inside.
In another raid in Nablus, the IDF obstructed Red Crescent
ambulance crews from accessing a two-year-old girl who had heart
problems and was suffering from tear gas inhalation. The
ambulance crews had to rush to the child’s home, under gunfire,
to reach her. Israel is supposed to be a democratic country. Is
this really what people in Israel voted for—the brutality of an
occupation such as this? First responders and hospitals cannot
cope with the influx of fresh casualties, and that is compounded
by a severe shortage of essential medicines and basic supplies,
such as syringes, bandages and painkillers. These instances, and
many more, are a clear violation of international humanitarian
law. As an occupying power, Israel is required under the Geneva
convention to ensure the adequate functioning of health services
and to allow medical personnel to carry out their duties. Article
59 obliges Israel to permit the free passage of humanitarian
relief and to protect, not fire upon, any such relief.
Turning closer to home, last month the Government published their
2030 road map for UK-Israel bilateral relations. The road map has
been widely condemned by a host of international organisations as
poorly timed and the most egregious effort to date to try to
insulate the relationship between the British and Israeli
Governments from anything to do with Israel’s behaviour towards
the Palestinians. This is clearly unacceptable. In my view, it is
a breach of the approaches of Governments of many different
stripes to that conflict over the decades. Perhaps most
concerning is the agreement’s rejection of the latest ICJ
referral, which requests that the Court render its opinion on the
legal consequences arising from Israel’s ongoing violation of the
right of the Palestinian people to self-determination and its
prolonged occupation, settlement and annexation, on the grounds
that it undermines efforts to achieve a settlement through direct
negotiations between the parties.
I have a few questions that I hope the Minister will be able to
answer when he sums up. Is it the Government’s view now that the
situation in Israel/Palestine should be exempt from international
scrutiny and that Israel should be held to a lower standard when
it comes to human rights violations against Palestinians?
Although no one would expect Israel to be held to a different or
higher standard, we should certainly not be granting Israel the
kind of impunity that has led to the extreme behaviour exhibited
in today’s Netanyahu Government.
Will the Minister also clarify whether it is still the
Government’s view that this is an occupation, that the
settlements are illegal, and that bilateral co-operation should
not include co-operation with Israel’s illegal settlements or
allow for violations of international law and Palestinian human
rights? I and my constituents believe that our Government, and
all of us in this House, have an historical obligation, arguably
going back to the Balfour declaration, to support the creation
and recognition of an independent and viable Palestinian state
and to ensure that people in the Holy Land can co-exist one day
on the same land. This Government must start right now by looking
again at that bilateral agreement and, in my view and the view of
my constituents, by formally recognising a Palestinian state.
Mr Deputy Speaker ( )
Following Madam Deputy Speaker’s strictures, I call on Members to
try to stick to seven minutes.
3.45pm
(Birmingham, Hodge Hill)
(Lab)
Let me add my thanks to the hon. Member for Dundee West () for securing this debate, and
associate myself with every word of the condolences that he
offered to those who have lost loved ones.
We must send a clear message from this House this afternoon that
the spiral of violence has to stop. It has to stop because the
dream of Palestine, the dream of justice and the dream of dignity
are disappearing before our very eyes. They are being destroyed
outrage by outrage, stun grenade by stun grenade, and bullet by
bullet. Palestinians today are now losing all hope that there
will ever be a future where two people and two nations can
co-exist side by side in peace.
I am afraid that I have to tell the Minister that there are now
too many people in this House who see this Government as standing
by idle, in silence, when they should be taking the initiative,
when they should be acting, and when they should be determined to
ensure that there is justice for Palestine.
This House today has already heard a catalogue of horror. We have
heard about the 98 Palestinians who have lost their lives already
this year—far more than in previous years—the Israeli citizens
who have been killed, and the children who have been killed with
live ammunition. We have also heard about the 1,000 Palestinians
in Masafer Yatta who are at imminent risk of forced transfer,
which is in complete violation of Geneva conventions. We have
heard about the brutality at the al-Aqsa mosque, where even UN
observers said that there was blatantly excessive and unjustified
force, with stun grenades and rifle butts used in a holy
place.
All of us in this House would stand four-square behind Israel’s
right to self-defence. Many of us would associate ourselves with
the words of the hon. Member for Henley () that we should be proscribing
organisations such as the IRGC and taking a tougher line on Iran.
Most of us here know that the Palestinian Authority needs radical
reform, and most of us would condemn the brutality of Hamas, but
all of us also know that this is not a time for whataboutery.
This is a time to call out the root cause of the violence today,
which is the radical spread of settlers illegally through the
west bank. The fact that we now have 279 settlements, almost all
of them illegal and now home to 700,000 people, must surely draw
our attention to the root cause of the problem, and that is the
fundamental sin that the Government should be calling out.
If the Government are serious—and they might be—about their idea
of a rules-based order, then we in this House must insist that
those rules also apply in the west bank, in Gaza and in
Jerusalem. If the Government do not insist that the rules-based
order extends to the places that the Palestinians call home, how
can we ever be credible in our arguments for peace and justice
for Palestine? How can we avoid the charge of double standards in
international affairs, and how can we contribute meaningfully to
keeping the dream of a two-state solution alive? It is time for
the Government to turn their rhetoric about a rules-based
international order into some red lines.
We have to ask this: when are the Government going to accept that
those red lines have indeed been crossed? When we have a UN
rapporteur saying that what is going on is now getting close to
the legal definition of apartheid, how much more evidence do the
Government need to call out a violation of the red lines? When we
have Israeli Cabinet Ministers appearing in Paris before a map of
greater Israel that includes the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan, and
when we have members of the Israeli Cabinet leading the protests
for the expansion of settler communities, how much more evidence
do we need? It is time for the UK Government to act.
My constituents are very clear about the five things this
Government need to do. They need to implement a ban on settler
goods. They need to ensure there are no trade deals with Israel
until it demonstrates a fundamental respect for human rights.
They need to ban weapons sales until it is clear that there is a
strong regime for supporting human rights. They need to start
using UN mechanisms for delivering accountabilities and, as many
people in this House have said and have voted for, it is time for
immediate recognition of the state of Palestine. Those are
practical, determined steps that we can take—and take now.
I conclude by reminding the House of what was in the Balfour
declaration. When this country said that it would support the
establishment of a state of Israel, it came with the words,
“it being clearly understood that nothing shall be done which may
prejudice the civil and religious rights of existing non-Jewish
communities in Palestine”.
The rights of those communities are being violated every day, and
it is time the Government not only called that out, but did
something about it.
3.51pm
(Middlesbrough) (Lab)
I too congratulate the hon. Member for Dundee West () on securing this debate and on
his eloquent and thoughtful speech.
Since the formation of the far-right Israeli Government at the
end of last year, we have seen opposition spilling out across
civil society in the region, and it has continued to escalate as
Israeli Ministers pursue their very frightening agenda. Last
month it came to a head and we saw tens of thousands of people
protesting not only on the streets of Israel, but in Germany and
the UK, as they voiced their opposition to Benjamin Netanyahu’s
plans to override the Israeli judiciary. Of course, that move on
Netanyahu’s part is central to his attempt to avoid being put on
trial for corruption. Although he has put those plans on pause
for the moment, that has come at the price of concessions to his
coalition partners.
First, there is National Security Minister Ben-Gvir, who just 15
years ago was convicted of inciting racism and supporting a
terrorist organization. It appears that Netanyahu is set to hand
Ben-Gvir control over his personal militia as part of a deal over
putting the judicial overhauls on pause—a truly terrifying
prospect that will see many Palestinian lives put in danger.
Then there is Finance Minister Smotrich, who describes himself as
a “fascist homophobe” and only recently said that
“there is no such thing as the Palestinian people”.
This is the same man who called for the Palestinian village of
Huwara to be wiped out, following what an IDF spokesperson called
a “pogrom” at the hands of illegal settlers and some Israeli
soldiers. Smotrich has been given powers over the west bank,
transferring authority away from the Israeli Defence Ministry to
Israeli civilian control.
Human rights groups consider that the latest example of the
irreversible entrenchment of the occupation of Palestine as de
facto annexation by the Israelis becoming de jure. Occupied
territory is supposed to be under temporary military control, but
this temporary occupation has now endured for more than half a
century and is the root cause of all the violence that we witness
day in, day out across the territory. Not only is it morally
indefensible, but the imposition of Israeli civilian control over
settlers and Palestinians in the west bank is illegal under
international law. We heard the Minister say earlier that he was
totally at one with the need for adherence to international
law.
The Israeli newspaper Haaretz has concluded:
“In light of the fact that there is no intention of granting
civil rights to the millions of Palestinians living in the West
Bank, the result of the agreement is a formal, full-fledged
apartheid regime.”
That is the direction in which the Israeli Government are moving,
and they will not stop unless they face robust consequences. Yet
for all the demonstrations against Netanyahu’s Government, only
certain parts of the opposition are joining the dots between the
attacks on Israel’s democratic structures and the broader
ideology that denies democracy to millions of Palestinians, whose
lives are under the control of the occupying Israeli regime and
who are being subjected to gross human rights abuses.
For Palestinians, that far-right Government are no different from
the Government who came before them. In fact, 2022 was the
deadliest year for Palestinians in decades: hundreds were killed
at the hands of Israeli soldiers and illegal settlers in the West
Bank, including dozens of children. Yesterday, I met
representatives of Defence for Children International Palestine.
Ayed Abu Eqtaish, the director of its accountability programme,
told me that Netanyahu’s far-right Government are really nothing
new for the Palestinian people who live under the brutality of
Israel’s illegal occupation.
Israel automatically and systematically prosecutes children in
military courts that lack fundamental fair trial rights and
protections. Between 500 and 700 Palestinian children are tried
in military courts each year, and around 150 children are
currently in detention. Of those 150 children, 11 are being held
by the Israeli military in administrative detention—a relic of
the British mandate that is a form of detention without charge or
trial. Children can be held indefinitely, and some have even been
locked up for more than a year.
The way in which Palestinian children are detained by Israeli
forces is horrific. About one in four are placed in solitary
confinement for interrogation purposes. On average, a Palestinian
child placed in solitary confinement will be isolated for 15
days. In at least one case, a child was isolated for around 40
days. As DCIP says, that is no way to treat a child. It is no way
to treat any human being. I hope to hear from the Minister an
outright condemnation of such inhumane and unjust practices. For
far too long, the UK Government’s approach has failed to
discourage the Israeli regime from inflicting such abuses.
First, it is high time that Ministers looked at the more
impactful options available to them to bring an end to those
practices. That could begin today if the Minister had the courage
to do the right thing and recognise the state of Palestine with
immediate effect. Secondly, he could abide by international law
and impose economic sanctions to bring an end to Israel’s illegal
settlements in occupied Palestine. Thirdly, he could revoke the
Government’s statement on the investigation of Israeli war crimes
by the International Criminal Court. Finally, he could heed the
calls of the Palestinian people by pushing for an international
peacekeeping mission in the region to ensure that there are human
rights protections for Palestinians.
I look forward to hearing what the Minister has to say, but we
need more than strong words; we need actions from our Government,
and we need them now.
3.58pm
(Bath) (LD)
I, too, put on record my sadness that this debate should come in
the context of the awful recent violence in the region—the
terrible scenes in Huwara a few weeks ago, the raid of the
Al-Aqsa mosque by Israeli security forces earlier this month and
the awful footage of dreadful beatings, the escalation that
followed, and the tragic death of British-Israeli nationals Rina
and Maia Dee and their mother, Lucy. I and my party join others
in paying tribute to them.
The violence over the last few weeks has been sickening to watch,
and we cannot afford for it to spiral out of control any further,
as we have heard many times this afternoon. The terrible violence
of May 2021 also started in a similar fashion, with a raid on the
al-Aqsa mosque during Ramadan. We need to do all we can now to
prevent this from deteriorating any further, which includes
ensuring that the status quo arrangements at holy sites are
upheld.
The reality is that this comes at a very concerning time for the
peace process. The aims of the new far-right Israeli Government
and the conduct of their Ministers are hugely concerning. It is
not just Itamar Ben-Gvir, with whom our Government will rightly
not engage. What about Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich,
who stood up in Paris just weeks ago and said
“there is no such thing as a Palestinian people”?
Will the Government condemn these deeply racist remarks and rule
out engaging with Smotrich too?
One of the new Government’s aims is promoting the continued
expansion of illegal settlements in the occupied territories, and
we have heard about the large number of them. They have continued
to progress with the proposed E1 settlement in the west bank,
which would involve the construction of thousands of units and
create a hugely challenging physical barrier to the territorial
contiguity of the west bank and, accordingly, to a Palestinian
state. If we in this place care about peace, we must understand
that settlements such as this make a two-state solution much
harder to attain.
The United Kingdom must be absolutely clear that we stand on the
side of international law. It is therefore hugely disheartening
that the Government are opposed to the International Criminal
Court’s investigation into international crimes in the west bank.
It damages our credibility in the region, and it undermines our
efforts to speak out when international law is violated in other
parts of the world, including on our own continent. We cannot
pick and choose. We must acknowledge the UK’s historic
obligations to the region, and we have heard this afternoon the
powerful words of the Balfour declaration. It is vital that we do
what we can.
The reality of the situation right now is that hope is
evaporating. I have already touched on the far-right Israeli
Government and the expansion of settlements, but we can add to
this the increasing violence and deaths in the last two years.
Last year was the deadliest in the west bank since 2005.
Meanwhile in the west bank, the Palestinian Authority are devoid
of any credibility and have refused to call elections. Where hope
is extinguished, radicalisation sadly thrives exponentially.
The UK has an important card that it can play now: recognition of
the state of Palestine. In the context of this deteriorating
situation, what a powerful sign that would be, not only to
demonstrate a tangible commitment to a two-state solution but to
provide real hope to Palestinians—hope that peace is possible.
Parliament has already called on the Government to recognise
Palestine as a state. I join many colleagues in the Chamber in
saying that now is the moment to do so. I hope the Minister will
realise that at moments such as this, the UK cannot simply sit
and watch in silence.
4.03pm
(Leeds East) (Lab)
As we have heard today, Israel has elected the most extreme
Government in its history. There has recently, rightly, been a
huge focus on the threat that this new Government pose to
judicial independence in Israel, which has prompted the largest
protests in Israeli history. This new Israeli Government have
also sparked widespread fears that they will deepen and entrench
the illegal military occupation in the Occupied Palestinian
Territories, not least because the Government include extreme
right-wing figures such as National Security Minister Itamar
Ben-Gvir, previously convicted of inciting racism and supporting
a terrorist organisation and who campaigned in the election on
aggressively extending military control over Palestinians.
Meanwhile, the Government’s new Finance Minister, Bezalel
Smotrich, recently said:
“There is no such thing as a Palestinian nation. There is no
Palestinian history. There is no Palestinian language.”
That is truly chilling.
This is all deeply alarming for those of us who wish to see an
end to all violence, and a future based on peace and justice.
Already, 2023 is set to be even more deadly than 2022—itself one
of the deadliest of recent years—with around 150 Palestinians
killed in the west bank and East Jerusalem, and 30 Israelis
killed. The United Nations has reported that already this year,
by the end of March, 16 Palestinian children have been killed in
the west bank, compared with two in the same period in 2022.
Today, I want to make a few remarks about the human suffering
that I witnessed when, as a new MP in 2016, I visited the
Occupied Palestinian Territories and Jerusalem. I met Palestinian
families struggling against Israeli state-sanctioned human rights
abuses, and I met Israeli human rights groups. In those few days,
I got a glimpse of the daily suffering that the Palestinian
people have endured for over 50 years under the Israeli state’s
illegal occupation of the west bank, including East Jerusalem and
Gaza. I saw Israeli settlements that were illegally seizing land,
and which do more than anything else to prevent a two-state
solution. I visited a Palestinian village that had been
repeatedly demolished. I spoke with Palestinians cut off from
family and friends as a result of Israel’s illegal separation
wall that divided Palestinian communities and annexed more
land.
I attended military courts where Palestinian children are tried
in a language they cannot read or speak, and in the old city of
Jerusalem I visited the home of a Palestinian family who had
lived there since 1953, who Israeli settlers were trying to force
out of their home. Sadly, in recent weeks, that elderly couple
whom I and other Members met—Nora Ghaith-Sub Laban, who is 67
years old, and her husband Mustafa, who is 72—faced imminent
eviction. I have written to the Foreign Secretary about this. The
spokesperson for the United Nations High Commissioner for Human
Rights has called on Israel to halt any such actions that lead to
a risk of forcible transfer, which he said
“may amount to war crimes”.
On my visit, I did not have the opportunity to visit Gaza. It is
almost impossible to imagine what it must be like to live on that
tiny strip of land, smaller than the Isle of Wight, where 2
million inhabitants are unable to move freely, and whose access
to clean water, electricity and healthcare is restricted by
Israeli state actions.
A long-lasting peace for both Palestinians and Israelis can only
be secured through a solution that tackles the underlying
injustices faced by the Palestinian people. A two-state solution
means that Palestine must have the right to exist, but Israeli
state actions make that ever less likely. As the former colonial
power in Palestine, Britain has a special responsibility to do
all it can to end Israel’s illegal occupation of Palestinian
land, its colonial settlements, its denial of the right of
Palestinian refugees to return, the siege of Gaza, and Israel’s
violations of human rights and international law.
But words alone are not enough. We need action too. That means—it
has to mean—that the British Government should recognise the
state of Palestine, as this Parliament voted to do back in 2014.
It means that we should end all trade with illegal Israeli
settlements, and that we should impose an embargo on arms sales
to Israel. The Government cannot pose as an honest broker when
Britain has licensed around half a billion pounds-worth of arms
exports to Israel since 2015. Without such actions, the Israeli
state is effectively given the green light to continue its
illegal actions, which are likely to kill all hope of a
Palestinian state.
4.09pm
(Bradford East) (Lab)
What we saw at al-Aqsa in Jerusalem this month, with Israeli
security forces storming the mosque, firing stun and smoke
grenades within its grounds and brutally beating worshippers, was
one of the most concerning incidents, because it marks a worrying
escalation in the abuses being perpetrated by the Israeli
security forces. While the desecration of a holy site is wrong at
any time, to march heavily armed soldiers into al-Aqsa to use
weapons on the site of one of the most revered places of worship
during the holy month of Ramadan, at the start of Passover and
just before Easter, and in one of the holiest cities in the
world, is frankly outrageous. Let us be clear in this House that
what we saw was not a policing operation, but a clear and
deliberate provocation by the Israeli security forces.
For hundreds and hundreds of years, the sanctity of places of
worship and the convention that they should as far as possible
remain untouched during conflict has been respected, whether in
law or in unspoken practice. It is clear, however, that this
reverence, this convention and this respect for one of the most
fundamental human rights—for people to worship and practise their
religion—is being rapidly eroded, because that was not the first
raid on al-Aqsa; nor was it even the first raid during Ramadan.
It is now becoming an all-too-common occurrence, with the
international community failing to take a stand to end this
abuse. It leaves us with this question: how much blood must be
spilled on consecrated ground, how many bullets must be fired in
hallowed halls and how many holy sites must be trampled upon
before the UK Government live up to their historical, moral and
global responsibilities towards the region?
We must also remember that the raid on al-Aqsa came just weeks
after the riot of settlers through Palestinian villages. This
violence by settlers towards Palestinians should not be
surprising, because rather than being deterred by action from the
international community, the Israeli Government, security forces
and settlers have instead been emboldened by their silence. The
UK Government and the rest of the world have a lot to answer for
in failing to present a united front against these illegal
settlement plans that are in deliberate violation of
international law under the fourth Geneva convention. By de facto
annexing Palestinian land, these illegal settlements, approved by
the Israeli Government, are undermining the future viability of
Palestine as part of a two-state solution. We have to ask: just
how much more land do the Palestinians have to lose? How many
more Palestinian homes have to be razed to the ground by army
bulldozers? How much more does the future state of Palestine have
to shrink before the UK Government will consider recognising a
viable and independent state of Palestine?
The raid on al-Aqsa, the settler violence and the expansion of
illegal settlements is just the tip of the iceberg, because there
is a long and exhaustive catalogue of human rights abuses still
being committed by the Israeli Government against the
Palestinians. Living under occupation, Palestinians have their
freedom of expression and assembly heavily restricted. They are
subject to arbitrary detention, and they are beaten and tortured.
Palestinians face the prospect of enforced disappearances, they
see children subjected to military detention and, in a worrying
number of cases, they face what is best described as summary
execution by the Israel Defence Forces.
However, we know that the human rights abuses faced by
Palestinians will not end there, and nor will they lessen in
intensity, because in office right now is the most worryingly
right-wing Government under Benjamin Netanyahu. That Government
are composed of some of the most racist, anti-Palestinian
Ministers, including those who have called for the Palestinian
town of Huwara in the west bank to be erased. It is therefore
clear to everyone that more innocent blood will continue to be
spilled on all sides if the international community does not set
clear red lines and if it does not do more to end the
violence.
We are not even halfway through what is already one of the
deadliest years since 2005, and we therefore cannot escape the
urgency of reaching a lasting solution to the conflict. That
solution lies in a real two-state solution, and the need for the
UK Government and others to immediately recognise a full and
independent state of Palestine to give effect to this two-state
solution. From what we have seen with the escalating violence
towards civilians and the increasing persecution that
Palestinians face, the region simply cannot wait any longer. If
the UK does not act now, when the UK Government finally recognise
the state of Palestine, all this future Palestinian state will
control will be nothing more than a thin strip of land, and the
Palestinians will be denied forever the state they were promised
more than 75 years ago.
4.15pm
(Hayes and Harlington)
(Lab)
I associate myself in particular with the words of my hon. Friend
the Member for Bradford East ().
I have simply one issue to raise and one question. I am the
secretary of the National Union of Journalists parliamentary
group, which is a cross-party group. We have campaigned for the
freedom of journalists to undertake their profession free from
censorship, intimidation and, indeed, risk to their lives. We
link with the International Federation of Journalists. We have
raised issues of journalistic freedom across the globe, to be
frank, including Iran, Saudi Arabia, Russia, Iraqi Kurdistan,
China and Colombia—you name it, we have raised it—but we have
consistently expressed the NUJ’s and the IFJ’s concerns about the
harassment, intimidation, physical abuse and, unfortunately,
murder of Palestinian journalists by Israeli state forces.
Last year, on behalf of the NUJ, I attended the commemoration of
the life of Shireen Abu Akleh. People may remember that Shireen,
who was an al-Jazeera correspondent, was shot dead by the Israeli
armed forces on 11 May 2022, while she was reporting in Jenin.
Shireen fulfilled her duty as a journalist until her last moment.
She was wearing her blue protective vest and helmet, and she was
preparing to report on the Israeli raid on the west bank city of
Jenin when an Israeli sniper fired a bullet into her face and
killed her instantly.
Since then, Reporters Without Borders has compiled video and
audio evidence about at least 11 other journalists who have been
targeted or aggressed by Israeli security forces in the west
bank. In fact, we now know that at least 30 journalists have been
killed by Israeli security personnel over the last few decades.
What has also been occurring—this has been reported time and
again, and we have raised it in this House before—is that, as the
Palestinian Centre for Development and Media Freedoms has
reported, the number of infractions of Palestinian journalists
has increased over the last decade. Some 368 Israeli offences
against Palestinian journalists have been recorded.
It has also been reported that Palestinian journalistic
organisations have been subject to closure or complete
destruction by Israel, resulting not just in the loss of jobs,
but in some instances in the loss of life. Some 31 news
organisations were either closed or destroyed by Israel in 2021
alone, 30 of them during the attack on Gaza in May 2021. A report
from the International Federation of Journalists, which has world
standing and respect, has referred to the violations as
“a clear attempt by Israel to silence media reporting on the
ground”,
and has said that
“no one has been held to account.”
In 2018, two deaths of journalists along with many injuries were
reported by Reporters Without Borders to the International
Criminal Court, and these were reported as what were regarded as
war crimes. In 2022, a group of organisations came together and
submitted further reports to the International Criminal Court.
Those organisations were the International Federation of
Journalists, the Palestinian Journalists’ Syndicate, and the
International Centre of Justice for Palestinians. They were
working with human rights lawyers—Bindmans, Doughty Street
Chambers—all of which have a reputation for upholding human
rights, and they put a formal complaint into the ICC. That
complaint detailed the systematic targeting of Palestinian
journalists. It was on behalf of four named victims in
particular—Ahmed Abu Hussein, Yaser Murtaja, Muath Amarneh and
Nedel Eshtayeh—who were killed or maimed by Israeli snipers while
fulfilling their duties as journalists covering the
demonstrations in Gaza. We have now also submitted the name of
Shireen, so her case will be investigated as well. At the moment,
the ICC’s Prosecutor’s Office has formally acknowledged receipt
of the complaint, and that complaint alleging war crimes will
have to be investigated.
I am raising the issue of the protection of journalists, and the
harassment and murder that has taken place. The specific request
I have of the Government is for them to assist in putting
pressure on the ICC’s Prosecutor’s Office to bring these
investigations to an early conclusion, so that we can have some
justice in relation to what many of us believe to have been
murders committed by the Israeli defence forces. We must also
send a message to the Israeli state that it can no longer act
with impunity when it harasses, intimidates, and indeed murders
journalists who are trying to fulfil their profession of
reporting freely and willingly on the circumstances for the
Palestinian people.
4.21pm
(Islington North) (Ind)
I completely agree with the remarks made by my Friend the Member
for Hayes and Harlington (). The loss of Shireen Abu
Akleh is deeply felt by Palestinians all over the world. She was
the iconic voice of reporting on behalf of al-Jazeera from
Palestine, and she was the trusted voice that many Palestinians
woke up to every day, to find out what was happening in their
land. The case was exposed by some other journalists at the time,
and we should also pay tribute to the school of forensic
architecture at Goldsmiths University, which managed to
reconstruct her death scene. That will no doubt help the
prosecution, and although that will never bring justice for her
because she has been killed, it will at least bring some comfort
to her family and to all those who miss her so much.
This debate is about human rights for Palestinians, and
fundamentally the whole overarching issue is that of the
occupation. Everything we say should be measured against the
situation facing Palestinians. The Nakba of 1948 occurred on 15
May, which has now been declared Nakba Day around the world. It
saw 750,000 people expelled, and 500 towns and villages destroyed
as a result of that, with people for ever living in exile. I have
never forgotten on the first visit I made to Gaza in the 1990s,
meeting an elderly woman and I asked her about her life. She
described the way she lived until 1948, and then she described
her life since 1948. She said, “Thanks to UNWRA I’ve had food and
water, but that’s all.” She had her whole life under occupation,
and she brought up her family under occupation.
It is hard for anyone outside to understand what it is to live
under occupation, where a simple journey down the road requires
going through several checkpoints, and the humiliation that goes
with that. Many of us in the House have visited the west bank and
Gaza on various occasions, and found the checkpoints irksome,
annoying, irritating, they wind us up and so on, but we are there
for only a few days or a week or two. For others it is every
single day, and I wonder what goes through the mind of a
Palestinian building worker who has to go into Israel to work
during the day, and go through the humiliation of dozens of
checkpoints. Then, when he is on his way home, he gets delayed
for no reason whatsoever, often for hours and hours, while
exhausted from a day’s work, and he has to do it all again the
next day. That plays on people’s minds. Then, when an ambulance
cannot get through and medical aid cannot be delivered because of
it, that is where the anger gets worse and worse.
As others have pointed out, the settlements now contain over
700,000 people. There is an interesting synergy on the numbers.
Some 750,000 Palestinians were expelled in 1948 and now 750,000
settlers have chosen to live on the west bank. There, they are
given protected status, access to water and access to roads. The
wall that has been constructed goes through much Palestinian
land, and destroys and divides farmland. The occupation is
utterly brutal and the UN is not wrong when it describes the
situation on the west bank as an apartheid state, where some
people are allowed to use some roads and some are not, some are
allowed to travel and some are not, and some are allowed to get
through borders and some are not. That is the brutality of the
situation facing them.
When the settlements are built, house demolitions take place to
get ready for them. I have in mind the memory of the late, great
Tom Hurndall, whose mother I know very well, because I supported
the campaign to try to get justice for Tom. Tom was in Rafah. He
was carrying a child across the road. He was helping to save
children, because the Israeli defence force was demolishing their
homes. He was shot dead on the street.
Eventually—eventually—somebody was prosecuted for it. The memory
of Tom, Rachel Corrie and so many other internationals who went
there to try to help and bring about justice will never go away.
This year alone, 98 Palestinians have been killed, including 17
children, and over 2,500 have been seriously injured. The settler
violence towards local Palestinian communities largely goes
unpunished and the brutality gets worse and worse.
There is an issue about access to healthcare. Even within the
terms of the fourth Geneva convention, the occupying power,
Israel, is required to do two things. One is not to make any
long-term decisions on the future of the people’s existence. That
is one of the conditions. The other is to ensure that necessary
medical services and aid are provided. It is failing on both
counts, never mind on many other counts as well.
My hon. Friend the Member for Middlesbrough () spoke very well about human
rights abuses. He was also quite right about the anger in Israel
about the new laws Netanyahu is introducing. What I find
mind-blowing is that there are so many on those demonstrations in
Israel—I support them if they want to defend their independent
judiciary; I absolutely agree with them that that is a
fundamental in any democracy—but join up the dots. If you are
defending democracy in your own society, why are you denying
democracy and denying human rights in the occupied territories
such a very short distance away? That is not to say there are not
many very brave people in Israel. B’Tselem and other groups have
done a great deal to speak up for the human rights of
Palestinians, and recognise that the brutality of the occupation
inflicts a brutality on the occupier as well. The brutality with
which they have dealt with the protests in Israel is an
indication of the desperation of Netanyahu and his ilk.
Surely to goodness, the Palestinian people have suffered enough.
The least we can do as a country is recognise the state of
Palestine—no qualifications—to show that we are serious in
speaking up against the abuse of human rights and for an end to
the siege of Gaza. Sieges and occupation bring about horrors.
They affect people’s minds. They affect the way people behave and
they affect the country that is doing the occupying. In this
debate today, let us just make the call. We are there supporting
the human rights of everybody in the region; we are there calling
for an end to the occupation and the settlements, and for the
recognition of Palestine.
Mr Deputy Speaker ( )
Tom, you can take an extra minute in your contribution, as we go
into the wind-ups.
4.29pm
(Edinburgh East) (SNP)
Thank you, Mr Deputy Speaker.
Since we are having this debate at a time of escalating tension
and violence in the middle east, I want to start by putting on
record what I did not have time to do in the statement, which is
to add my condemnation to any assault on, or murder of,
civilians, no matter from what quarter. My sympathy is with the
families of those who have lost loved ones in recent weeks and
months.
However, as violence increases, I caution against slipping into
what we used to call the politics of the last atrocity, whereby
we try to understand and explain an event by seeing it as a
reaction to the event that happened before. We need a wider,
longer-term view that looks at the context and the factors behind
what is happening in Israel-Palestine, if we are to have any
prospect of beginning to rejuvenate moves towards peace. When we
do that, the obvious and glaring thing in front of us is that
within 20 years of the state of Israel coming into existence, it
began a military occupation of territories outwith its borders
that belong to other countries or that were designated by the
United Nations as a future homeland of Palestine.
Fifty-six years later, that military occupation continues. That
has the biggest bearing on human rights for the people who live
in the occupied area, not just because—obviously—by occupying it
militarily, basic human rights such as the right to exist and to
be, the right to self-determination and the right to for someone
to come back to the land from which they were displaced cannot
happen, but because it is in the essence of occupation that the
population in the occupied area has to be controlled, constrained
and subjugated. That is what an occupation has to do to work.
Therefore, across every aspect—education, health, travel and
everywhere—the human rights of Palestinians have to be
suppressed. Until we commit to ending that military occupation,
it will be impossible to properly establish human rights for
Palestinians.
I am unashamedly an advocate for the human rights of
Palestinians, but I also want to see a future where Israel exists
in harmony with its neighbours and at peace with itself, as a
partner for progress in humanity. That can properly happen only
once the occupation ends. It is distressing that we never hear
talk of ending the occupation or even pathways towards
it—certainly not from the Israeli Government and, most
importantly, not from the UK Government. I ask the Minister to
comment on how the UK, as a matter of policy, will work towards
ending the military occupation.
(Glasgow North) (SNP)
My hon. Friend speaks with passion and knowledge on this issue. I
hear regularly from constituents in Glasgow North who express
solidarity with Palestinians and want to ensure that their human
rights are fully recognised. He is right about how the UK
Government respond to all that. One of the ways to get us on the
road to an end to the occupation and the achievement of a
two-state solution—still the global consensus of the best way to
achieve a long-lasting peace—would be to recognise the state of
Palestine, as many Members have said in the debate. Should the
Government not follow this Parliament’s lead by making that
recognition?
They should, and I will come to that in a moment. I want to say
first that there are two major factors in the recent past that
ought to dictate a change and a review of UK Government policy.
The first is the stated policy of the Israeli Government. People
have commented throughout the debate that they are the most
extreme right-wing Government in the history of the state of
Israel, and that is true. People have commented on Ben-Gvir and
Smotrich and some of the vile statements they have made, but it
is not just them. As was quoted by the hon. Member for
Hammersmith (), Prime Minister Netanyahu
himself made clear in the mission statement of the new coalition
Government that the Jewish people have the right to claim all of
Israel. By all of Israel, he means all the land that Israel
occupies, from the Jordan river to the Mediterranean sea. There
is no room in that perspective for a two-state solution and an
independent state of Palestine.
Why do we not stop pretending that the current Israeli Government
are a good actor and believe in a long-term two-state solution,
when they have clearly stated that they do not? Everything they
are doing on the ground is designed to remove the building blocks
that would be needed to ever move talk forwards to a two-state
solution.
The other factor that needs to be addressed is the escalating and
widespread problem of settler violence. Among the settler
communities that have been established in the occupied areas,
there are now effectively armed militias operating a campaign of
violence and intimidation against the local Palestinian
population, often with the connivance of, or certainly with the
turning of a blind eye by, the official Israeli authorities.
We saw that in Huwara, in what people described as a pogrom, with
settlers on the rampage, attacking any Palestinian they could
come across in that village. The IDF went in, and as a result of
the IDF action, more than 400 Palestinians needed treatment
because of tear gas and other injuries. That is an unprecedented
situation that ought to require the British Government to change
their mind.
I also want to mention the word apartheid. I expect in his notes
the Minister has something that says that the British Government
do not consider that to be a relevant word in the context of
Israel and Palestine, because it is about South Africa, and that
they do not agree with the description. Let us be clear: the word
apartheid is not an adjective, but a noun. It has a precise legal
definition. Respected international and Israeli organisations
have spent a lot of time considering the matter and have come to
the conclusion that the legal test for the crime of apartheid has
been met in the occupied territories and that it is being
practised by the Israeli authorities.
We cannot just ignore that. The British Government may wish to
come to a different view, but they should do so not by pretending
that this is about some sort of linguistic choice about what
words people use, but by looking at the coherent and compelling
evidence that has been provided and saying whether or not they
want to refute that evidence and come to a different conclusion.
To simply make no comment on it seems to me to be a gross
dereliction of duty.
I finish by putting forward a couple of asks to the Minister. The
first is about recognition. This has been said many times, so let
me rephrase it: can the Minister explain how British policy in
the region would be undermined or compromised in any way by
deciding to recognise the state of Palestine now? If that is not
to be undermined, then what is the reason for delay? The more
delay happens, the more it looks as if this country is not really
serious about a two-state solution, when it is prepared to
recognise only one of the states in question.
Finally, I come back the road map. Can we have a commitment, as
we would with other countries, to make sure that our trading
relationships with Israel are centred on the protection of human
rights and the rule of international law, and that we are
prepared to use the development of those trading relationships to
that end?
4.37pm
(Enfield, Southgate)
(Lab)
I begin by thanking the hon. Member for Dundee West () for securing this timely and
important debate. We have had an excellent debate and covered a
wide range of issues concerning human rights violations against
Palestinians, ranging from the targeting of journalists, which
was raised by my right hon. Friends the Members for Hayes and
Harlington () and for Islington North
(), to checkpoints and
permits.
This has been one of the deadliest years for Israel and the
Occupied Palestinian Territories, with 98 Palestinians having
been killed by Israeli forces, including 17 children, and 17
Israeli civilians having been killed so far, including three
British-Israelis. That point has been made by my right hon.
Friend the Member for Islington North, my hon. Friend the Member
for Leeds East () and many other hon.
Members. Each life lost is a tragedy, and every Palestinian and
Israeli deserves a just solution to this conflict, but we cannot
deny that the ongoing occupation of the Palestinian territories
has led to significant human rights violations against the
Palestinian people. It is in that context that we consider the
human rights protections for Palestinians.
I will focus on only three areas, because many points that I
wished to raise have been covered by other hon. Members. The
first area is the treatment of children in the Occupied
Palestinian Territories. Under the UN convention on the rights of
the child, children have special protection and must be protected
from violence at all times. Every action necessary must be taken
to keep children safe. According to Save the Children, last year
alone 34 children were killed by Israeli security forces and
settlers in the Occupied Palestinian Territories. The use of
violence against children can never be justified. I ask the
Minister to condemn its use and to tell the House whether he
supports the calls from the British consulate general in
Jerusalem for thorough and transparent investigations of the
deaths of children killed by the Israeli security forces.
(Twickenham) (LD)
In November, I visited the occupied west bank with the Council
for Arab-British Understanding and with Medical Aid for
Palestinians; I refer the House to my entry in the Register of
Members’ Financial Interests. We heard eyewitness accounts in the
south Hebron hills of the demolition of a school in Masafer
Yatta. Israeli forces threw in stun grenades while children were
inside. We saw videos of children and teachers trying to get out.
The school was rebuilt as a temporary school; a few weeks later
it was demolished again. The Israeli Government are currently
threatening to demolish 58 Palestinian schools in occupied
territory. I hope the hon. Gentleman will join me in condemning
the proposed demolitions, and I hope the Minister will comment
that it is not right even to threaten to demolish schools.
The hon. Lady makes an excellent point. I condemn any demolitions
of schools, an issue that I will come to later in my speech. It
is harrowing to hear her testimony and her account.
The treatment of children who are detained and held in the
Israeli military detention system, often in solitary confinement
and with limited access, if any, to lawyers when interrogated, is
also deeply concerning. That point was made eloquently by my hon.
Friend the Member for Hammersmith (). In its 2019 report, Save
the Children found that child detainees
“face inhumane treatment such as beatings, strip searches,
psychological abuse”.
Last year, three parliamentary colleagues and I visited the
military courts at Ofer in the Occupied Palestinian Territories;
the hon. Member for Meon Valley (Mrs Drummond) spoke today of her
experiences visiting those courts and gave a vivid description of
what she saw. We attended a bail hearing of a teenage boy who had
been shot and had been questioned without a parent or guardian
present. Several colleagues have made the point that Israel is
the only country in the world that routinely tries children in
military courts, a clear breach of international law.
The next area on which I wish to focus is forcible evictions and
demolitions. Paragraph 2 of article 17 of the United Nations
universal declaration of human rights states:
“No one shall be arbitrarily deprived of his property.”
Despite that, Israel seems to be pursuing a policy of forced
evictions and demolitions. More than 1,000 Palestinians face
eviction in Masafer Yatta in the south Hebron hills. Palestinians
in the Silwan and Sheikh Jarrah districts of East Jerusalem and
Khan al-Ahmar—which the shadow Foreign Secretary, my right hon.
Friend the Member for Tottenham (Mr Lammy), visited last
year—face a similar fate. So far this year, there have been 63
demolitions in East Jerusalem alone. In area C, 58 schools are
under threat of demolition because it is claimed that they do not
have building permits, which I understand are almost impossible
to obtain for Palestinians.
After demolition, land is often used to expand or develop
settlements, which is illegal because international law requires
occupying powers not to move their civilian populations into
occupied areas, as my right hon. Friend the Member for
Birmingham, Hodge Hill () mentioned. He also pointed out
that settlements are a risk to a two-state solution. They make it
much harder.
In 2019, the then Foreign Secretary, the right hon. Member for
Esher and Walton (), described Israel’s
settlement expansion as an “effective annexation”. It would be a
very serious development in international law if it were found to
be so. The Minister for the Middle East, Lord Ahmad, visited
Masafer Yatta in January and tweeted:
“The UK continues to urge Israel to desist demolitions and
evictions that cause unnecessary suffering and are illegal under
IHL”—
international humanitarian law—
“in all but most exceptional circumstances.”
However, it seems to have had little effect on the Israeli
Government’s actions, so what steps do the Government intend to
take to ensure that demolitions and evictions do not carry on at
pace, as they have since the start of this year?
The final area on which I wish to focus is the imposition of
restrictions preventing Palestinians from moving freely in the
Occupied Palestinian Territories. The permit system operated by
the Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories
limits the ability of Palestinians to travel freely and creates
uncertainty and additional layers of bureaucracy and delays,
whether people are trying to access medical care in the Occupied
Palestinian Territories or to work, study or travel abroad. That
point was raised by my hon. Friend the Member for Bradford West
(), who made a very passionate
speech.
Similarly, there are visa restrictions on those coming from
abroad to work in the Occupied Palestinian Territories, such as
academics. Israel will argue that a permit system is necessary
for security purposes, but the way in which the system is applied
can be seen as punitive and unjust. A report published last year
by Breaking the Silence, an organisation established by former
soldiers in the Israel Defence Forces, described Israel’s
military permit system as “bureaucratic violence” used on
occasion as “collective punishment”, when an entire family’s
travel permits can be revoked, which denies them access to work
and to medical care in an instant.
All those human rights violations are a result of the occupation.
The solution to these problems must be a two-state solution, with
a thriving, prosperous Palestinian state alongside a safe and
secure Israel, but sadly we have seen little progress towards
that for the past eight years. The onus should be on both sides
to get around the table and start talking, a point made by my
hon. Friend the Member for Birmingham, Selly Oak () at the start of his speech. I
fear that if this does not happen there will be an escalation in
the violence, given the steps already being taken by the Israeli
Government, such as giving Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich
control over much of the Israeli civil administration, the
military body that administers the occupied west bank. That was
mentioned by my hon. Friend the Member for Middlesbrough () and by my hon. Friend the
Member for Bradford East (), who also referred to last
month’s raid on the al-Aqsa mosque.
However, the UK is resisting efforts to hold Israel to account
within international institutions. The 2030 road map makes no
reference to a two-state solution, and contains commitments that
raise concerns about the Government’s willingness to apply
diplomatic scrutiny to breaches of international law and their
support for the role and independence of international legal
institutions such as the ICJ and the ICC. The UK’s capacity to be
an honest and consistent diplomatic interlocutor with credibility
on all sides relies on a consistent approach to the application
of international law. There needs to be more accountability, and
the UK Government should be challenging human rights abuses
wherever they occur. I therefore ask the Minister these
questions. What steps are the Government taking to bring about a
two-state solution? Does he support the call for thorough and
transparent investigations of the deaths of children killed by
Israeli security forces? What further steps will the Government
take to put pressure on Israel to stop the evictions and the
demolitions?
I began my speech by saying that this had been one of the
deadliest years so far in Israel and the Occupied Palestinian
Territories. Let me end by saying that unless urgent action is
taken, there is a real risk that the situation will become much
worse over the months ahead. The time for action to de-escalate
the violence and protect human rights is now.
Mr Deputy Speaker ( )
I call the Minister, and ask him to leave at least two minutes
for the hon. Member for Dundee West () to wind up the debate.
4.48pm
The Minister of State, Foreign, Commonwealth and Development
Office ( )
I am grateful to the hon. Member for Dundee West () for securing the debate, and l
am also grateful for the contributions made by all Members this
afternoon. I will try to respond to the points that they have
raised. It has been a passionate debate, featuring many eloquent,
informed and heartfelt speeches from senior and distinguished
parliamentarians.
As I said in my statement earlier today, the Government condemn
the horrific murder of Lucy, Maia, and Rina Dee by a
terrorist—this was also mentioned at the outset of this
debate—and we offer our deepest condolences to Rabbi Leo Dee. The
decision of the family to donate Lucy’s organs is an act of
compassion that stands in extraordinary and vivid contrast to the
senseless violence that robbed a family of its mother and two
sisters. The United Kingdom unequivocally condemns this and all
other acts of terrorism perpetrated against Israel and her
citizens.
This is, sadly, a timely debate. Last year, as has been pointed
out throughout the debate, was the deadliest in Israel and the
Occupied Palestinian Territories since the second intifada,
according to UN records. So far in 2023, 89 Palestinians have
been killed by Israeli security forces and 19 Israelis killed in
acts of terrorism. The UK is actively encouraging de-escalation.
We welcome the leadership shown by the Israelis and the
Palestinians when they attended the meetings in Aqaba and Sharm
El Sheikh to discuss ways to de-escalate the rising tensions. We
are grateful to the Governments of Jordan, Egypt, and the United
States for instigating those discussions. The UK is now working
with both sides and international partners to support the
process, and calls on both Israel and the Palestinians to honour
the commitments made in those meetings. We call on the
Palestinian Authority to denounce incitement to violence and to
resume its security co-operation with the Israeli authorities,
and we say to the Israeli Government that Israel has a legitimate
right to self-defence, but its security forces must keep their
obligations under international humanitarian law.
On al-Aqsa, also referred to in the debate, both Palestinians and
Israelis must avoid actions that risk escalating tensions,
including around the holy sites of Jerusalem. The UK calls for
all parties to respect the historic status quo arrangements at
Jerusalem’s holy sites, and we welcome Israel’s decision to
prevent non-Muslims from visiting the al-Aqsa compound for the
final days of Ramadan—an important step in support of
de-escalation.
I want to address directly the four points that have been made in
the debate and that were emphasised by the Opposition spokesman
and the hon. Member for Dundee West. First, on demolitions and
evictions, the UK is clear that the demolition of Palestinian
homes and forced evictions cause unnecessary suffering to
ordinary Palestinians and call into question Israel’s commitment
to a viable two-state solution. In all but the most exceptional
of cases, demolitions by an occupying power are contrary to
international humanitarian law. Officials from the British
embassy in Tel Aviv have repeatedly raised our concerns about
demolitions with Israeli Ministers and senior officials, and
urged them to cease the policy of demolitions and to provide a
clear, transparent route to construction for Palestinians in area
C. The UK Government are also focused on preventing demolitions
from happening in the first place, and support Bedouin
communities and Palestinians facing demolition or eviction in
area C of the west bank through our legal aid programme. The
programme helps residents challenge decisions inside the Israeli
legal system.
Secondly, the hon. Member for Enfield, Southgate () asked me about child
detention in Israel and Save the Children’s 2020 report. We
remain committed to working with Israel to secure improvements to
the practices surrounding children in administrative detention in
Israel. We have made clear our concern about the continued
reports of ill treatment of Palestinian minors in Israeli
administrative detention. Reports of the heavy use of painful
restraints and the high number of Palestinian children who are
not informed of their legal rights, in contravention of Israel’s
own regulations, are particularly troubling, as is the continued
transfer of Palestinian child and adult detainees to prisons
inside Israel in violation of the fourth Geneva convention. We
continue to make representations to the Israeli authorities on
this issue and urge them to comply with their obligations under
international law and either charge or release those
detainees.
Thirdly, the hon. Gentleman raised access and movement. We
continue to stress to the Israeli authorities the damage that
their restrictions on movement, access and trade are doing to the
living standards of ordinary Palestinians, especially in Gaza.
While we welcome the steps that Israel has taken to ease some
restrictions, we want to see Israel go much further. We urge
access into and out of Gaza in accordance with international
humanitarian law for humanitarian actors, reconstruction
materials and those, including Palestinians, travelling for
medical purposes. We are in close contact with UN agencies and
key partners on the ground to assess the situation, and we will
monitor that closely.
Fourthly, on construction permits, we have repeatedly made clear
to the Israeli authorities our opposition to the demolition of
Palestinian properties in area C of the west bank and in East
Jerusalem, and we call on them to cease the policy of demolition
and to provide a clear, transparent route to construction for
Palestinians.
Will the Minister go a step further and condemn the permit
system, which is separating Gazan families? On my recent visit to
the neonatal unit at Makassed Hospital in East Jerusalem, I saw
prematurely born babies who had been separated from their mother
and their family for weeks. One baby had been waiting two weeks
to be discharged because neither her mother nor another family
member in Gaza could get a permit. Will he condemn that? Frankly,
Gaza is an open-air prison at the moment.
Mr Mitchell
I am trying to make a constructive speech, and I hope the hon.
Lady will allow me to make my points in my own way. If she reads
carefully what I have said in Hansard, I think she will find much
to please her.
The Minister has just set out four sets of sins that the UK
Government have protested about to the Government of Benjamin
Netanyahu. He must therefore accept that our words are failing to
deter egregious behaviour. When will he shift from words to
deeds, to deter things from getting any worse?
Mr Mitchell
The right hon. Gentleman, my constituency neighbour,
underestimates the effect of today’s debate. What is said in the
House of Commons will be read. He and I have focused on four
particular areas, and what I am saying, and what has been said by
Members on both sides of the House, speaks for itself.
The hon. Member for Hammersmith () asked me to elaborate on
what I said earlier, and he raised important points similar to
those raised by the right hon. Members for Islington North
() and for Hayes and Harlington
(). Of course, some years ago
and over a prolonged period, all four of us campaigned for the
human rights of Shaker Aamer.
The Government of Israel and the Palestinian Authority reaffirmed
their joint readiness and commitment to work immediately to end
unilateral measures for a period of three to six months. That
includes an Israeli commitment to stop discussion of any new
settlement units for four months, and to stop the authorisation
of any outposts for six months. I hope that is a proper answer to
the question.
The UK will always seek to advance the cause of Palestinian human
rights in a manner that is fair and balanced, and that supports
proportionate and fair international scrutiny of Israel.
I am conscious of the time, so I will draw my remarks to a close.
I reiterate that the UK Government want to see the human rights
of all Palestinians protected, as this is a vital step towards
the creation of a sovereign, independent and viable Palestinian
state, living in peace, security and side by side with a safe and
secure Israel.
I was asked to give, without equivocation, our position on
settlements. The UK’s position on settlements is absolutely
clear: settlements are illegal. I was asked about recognition of
the Palestinian state, and the UK will recognise a Palestinian
state at a time when the Government believe this will best serve
the objective of peace.
4.58pm
I thank my constituents, the people of Scotland, the people of
the UK and the people across the world who have written to me
about this very important debate, to inform and educate me.
I thank everyone in the Chamber, as they have been not only
passionate but deeply evidenced and very clear about what needs
to change. We have had so many debates on Palestine over the
years, and things are getting increasingly worse. Words, in
themselves, are not enough, although what the Minister says about
the discussions is welcome.
Members on both sides of the House have spoken about values and
human rights, as enshrined in international law. This means the
UK Government cannot take two sides. They have to take a clear
position. If they believe in human rights and international law,
they should do something about it by not repeatedly blocking
proposals at the UN and the International Criminal Court to judge
serious crimes. That would take it out of the UK Government’s
hands by allowing the courts to decide the very things for which
the UK Government are calling. I did not hear the Minister say
that.
Silence is complicity. By doing nothing, we are complicit in not
allowing judgment to be taken on these serious crimes.
Question put and agreed to.
Resolved,
That this House has considered the matter of human rights
protections for Palestinians.
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