by Reuters and Israel Hayom Staff
European Council on Foreign Relations, whose proposals frequently inform EU policymaking, asserts that EU is in breach of its own laws by failing to distinguish its dealings with Israel from Israel's activities in Judea and Samaria and east Jerusalem.
European Union foreign
policy chief Federica Mogherini and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
|
Photo credit: AFP |
The European Union agreed this week to push
ahead with labeling Israeli goods made in settlements in Judea and
Samaria, a move that has alarmed the Israeli government; but now there
are proposals to go much further, including targeting Israeli banks.
In a paper to be published on Wednesday, the
European Council on Foreign Relations, whose proposals frequently inform
EU policymaking, argues that the EU is in breach of its own laws and
must move much more firmly to distinguish its dealings with Israel from
Israel's activities in the Judea and Samaria and east Jerusalem.
European diplomats have long said that
labeling is only the first in a series of steps the EU could take
against Israel over its settlements policy, one that in financial terms
is expected to have a relatively minor impact on the Israeli economy.
But the new proposals would go much deeper and
further, reaching into banking, loans and mortgages, qualifications
earned in settlement institutions and the tax-exempt status of European
charities that deal with Israeli settlements.
"Under its own regulations and principles,
Europe cannot legally escape from its duty to differentiate between
Israel and its activities in the occupied Palestinian territories," says
the report, titled "EU Differentiation and Israeli Settlements."
The authors argue that by pushing much further
to separate the EU's dealings with Israel from the settlements, it will
force Israel to decide what sort of relationship it wants with Europe
and in turn encourage it to return to talks with the Palestinians on a
two-state solution to the conflict.
The most significant proposal is on banking,
where large Israeli institutions have daily dealings with major European
banks, while also providing loans and financing to Israeli businesses
and individuals based in the settlements.
Under European Commission guidelines from
2013, EU- and member-state-funded lending cannot be provided to Israeli
entities operating in Judea and Samaria.
With the British government holding a
controlling stake in some banks following the financial crisis, that
would in theory prevent those banks providing financing to Israeli
counterparts that have dealings in the settlements.
"Do day-to-day dealings between European and
Israeli banks comply with the EU requirement not to provide material
support to the occupation?" the report asks, saying it is an issue that
EU member states have yet to resolve.
The issue extends into loans and mortgages. An
Israeli with dual European citizenship should, in theory, not be able
to use a settlement property as collateral for a European loan since
Israeli-issued property deeds are not recognized.
Another area in which the EU may be in
violation of its own rules relates to European charities that are
tax-exempt while using funds to support activities in the settlements,
which the EU regards as illegal under international law.
And the report questions whether Europe should
accept qualifications from academic, medical and other Israeli
institutions based in Judea and Samaria given that it does not recognize
Israel's sovereignty over the territory.
Likewise, there is a question mark over
whether the EU should be dealing with Israeli institutions -- such as
the Justice Ministry and the national police headquarters -- which are
based in east Jerusalem.
The Israeli government has described Europe's
steps on labeling as discriminatory and wrong-headed, suggesting they
are akin to the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement, which Israel
regards as anti-Semitic.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu raised his
concerns about labeling in a meeting with the EU's foreign policy chief,
Federica Mogherini in May. Mogherini raised the issue of the EU further
differentiating its dealing with Israel.
Mattia Toaldo, one of the authors of the ECFR
paper, said the EU needed to explain more clearly the legal obligation
the EU faces when it comes to differentiation, making a sharp
distinction with the BDS campaign. And the ultimate aim, he said, should
be to urge Israel toward a two-state solution.
"Differentiation is a legal prerequisite for the EU in
order to avoid violating its own laws," he said. "You have to do it
legally and by the book, but it is also beneficial to the peace process
because it changes the calculations by the Israelis."
Reuters and Israel Hayom Staff
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_article.php?id=27059
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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