3 practical ways New Zealand could help with the Israel-Palestine conflict from afar

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Source: University of Waikato

Last week’s ceasefire in Gaza is holding, but if history is any guide this will not be the last time the Israel-Palestine conflict flares up. In the past 12 years, Israel and Hamas have clashed seriously four times.

May’s 11 days of violence took the lives of at least 243 people in Gaza, including more than 100 women and children, and 12 in Israel, including two children. Both sides have claimed victory, and both accuse the other of crimes and intolerable actions.

Witnessed from afar, this seemingly endless cycle of violence  can seem hopeless. Nonetheless, we need to ask how New Zealand can best respond.

So far, the foreign minister has made the right calls, denouncing the violence and its underlying causes, namely the evictions in East Jerusalem. The prime minister added her voice to calls for a ceasefire, at the same time recognising the disproportionate nature of the conflict.

The problem is, none of these words will make any difference. Neither of the main belligerents listen to us. So, if New Zealand genuinely wants to contribute, there are three practical steps it should take.

Celebration in Gaza following a ceasefire brokered by Egypt between Israel and Hamas on May 21, 2021.
www.shutterstock.com

Call for a proper inquiry

At the global level, New Zealand should call for an independent inquiry, in accordance with existing obligations under international law, to set the record straight on exactly what happened during the most recent violence and whether any rules were broken.

This is not a new idea. Following the violent outbreaks in 2009 and 2014 there were thorough investigations of war crimes or crimes against humanity.




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One possible advance, however, would be to push for such an inquiry under the auspices of the International Criminal Court (ICC) to ensure an impartial and independent examination of what has just occurred.

Given Israel has vowed not to cooperate with a proposed ICC investigation, this won’t be easy. But it would still be positive for New Zealand to publicly advocate for a multilateral, rules-based response.

Be consistent on human rights

New Zealand also needs to treat assertions of serious human rights violations consistently.

This means parliament should debate alleged behaviour by Israel and the Palestinian authorities in Gaza and the West Bank in the same way it debated and passed a resolution about China’s treatment of its Uyghur population.

On the one hand, parliament needs to consider the widest and most serious allegation that Israel is practicing a form of apartheid in the territories it controls. It must also address long-standing concerns about the continued illegal annexation of territory in the West Bank, as well as the blockade of Gaza by Israel and Egypt and its extreme economic and humanitarian costs.




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On the other hand, parliament also has to examine the record of the Palestinian authorities in the West Bank and Hamas in Gaza.

Allegations include the stifling of freedom of expression and assembly, attacking journalists and detaining opponents, unnecessary or excessive force, detention without charge, torture and ill-treatment of detainees, and discrimination and violence against women.

Be clear about a Palestinian state

Finally, New Zealand should clarify its position regarding the recognition of Palestine. With 139 countries currently maintaining diplomatic relations with the State of Palestine, New Zealand is in a global minority that doesn’t officially recognise Palestine’s statehood (in company with the US, Australia and others).

This is despite its original 1947 commitment at the United Nations, when  New Zealand, agreed that “independent Arab and Jewish states” be created from the partition of Palestine (with Jerusalem to be given a special international status).

This should have been the foundation of a two-state system. Although this is not how history worked out,  many countries, including New Zealand, remain committed to the ideal.




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After wars in 1948-49, 1967 and 1973 tore the region apart, the Oslo Accords in the 1990s created a Palestinian Authority with limited self-governance in parts of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip.

This pathway for peace foundered when Yasser Arafat died in 2004. Palestinian leadership broke into two, with Hamas in Gaza and Fatah in the West Bank having very different agendas, despite various reconciliation attempts.

Seek a pathway to peace

A major sticking point remains that Hamas (or its military wing) is commonly recognised as a terrorist organisation by many western countries, including New Zealand. Although its 2017 covenant modified the 1988 version (which called for the “obliteration” of Israel), Hamas’s designation remains, and the 2017 covenant still considers Israel to be ‘entirely illegal’.

Clearly, New Zealand can’t agree to statehood for any proposed country, or part of one, that is closely associated with terrorism.

Accordingly, the government should assess whether that designation is still appropriate. It then needs to explain whether an overall peace settlement is the prerequisite for accepting Palestinian statehood.

Conversely, if parliament decides a comprehensive peace settlement is unlikely in the foreseeable future, it must outline what conditions must be satisfied before New Zealand is willing to accept a fundamental premise: that, in as much as Israel has a right to exist, so too does Palestine.

Alexander Gillespie, Professor of Law, University of Waikato

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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