Israeli settlements engine of occupation, trample on human rights law: UN experts

UN experts have condemned Israeli settlements in the West Bank and East Al-Quds as “the engine of the occupation,” saying the Tel Aviv regime’s illegal construction activities “trample”on human rights law.

In a statement issued on Wednesday, Michael Lynk and Balakrishnan Rajagopal, the UN Special Rapporteurs on the Situation of Human Rights in the Occupied Palestinian Territory and on Adequate Housing, denounced Israel’s plan to build thousands of new settler units.

In recent weeks, Israel has approved plans for more than 1,700 new units in the East Al-Quds settlements of Givat Hamatos and Pisgat Zeev, they said.

It is also advancing schemes for an estimated 9,000 units in Atarot settlement, as well as approximately 3,400 in the West Bank’s E1 area.

The rights experts also noted that the occupying entity is seeking to construct almost 3,000 units in a number of West Bank settlements, highlighting reports that the regime is planning to retroactively legalize several outposts.

“The United Nations has repeatedly stated that the Israeli settlements in Occupied Palestinian Territory are a ‘flagrant violation under international law’, and it has demanded that Israel cease its settlement expansion and remove its settlements,” they said.

The illegality of the Israeli settlements is one of the most widely-accepted issues in modern international law, they added. “As well, the Israeli settlements are a presumptive war crime under the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court, and should be treated as such by the international community.”

The rapporteurs further characterized Israeli settlements as “the engine of the occupation,” and responsible for a wide range of rights violations against the Palestinian people.

The breaches include “land confiscation, resource alienation, severe restrictions on freedom of movement, mounting settler violence, and racial and ethnic discrimination. Most seriously, the purpose of settler implantation – rupturing the relationship between a native people and its territory – is the denial of the right to self-determination, which is at the very core of modern human rights law,” they explained.

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