Labour
shadow minister also says Israel should be held accountable before
international tribunal for war conduct in Gaza
Lisa
Nandy, the UK’s shadow minister for international development, has called for
support for the UN relief agency, Unrwa, warning that “time has run out for
hundreds of thousands” of people in Gaza.
Nandy
is in Washington this week attending the spring meetings of the World Bank and
the International Monetary Fund with a message of how the UK’s humanitarian and
development policy will change if Labour, as expected, forms the next
government by the end of this year.
However,
she accepted that she would have to address widespread perceptions across the
global south of Britain’s unreliability as a partner and its double standards
on the world stage, an image exacerbated by the war in Gaza and the consequent
famine rolling over the Palestinian coastal strip.
Nandy
said: “We are getting a very strong message that people feel there are
different rules for different countries, which is problematic and something
that we’ll have to deal with if we’re fortunate enough to be in government.”
She
promised more consistent UK support for international legal institutions like
the international criminal court (ICC) and the international court of justice
(ICJ) and said Israel should be held accountable before both tribunals for its
conduct of the war in Gaza.
Nandy
outlined ways in which Labour policy on Israel and Gaza would differ starkly
from the current government’s, starting with actions to address a famine, which
international experts and US officials say has already begun.
The
UK is one of the few major donors, alongside the US, that has yet to resume
funding Unrwa. The financing was cut off in January after Israeli allegations
of links between some Unrwa staff and Hamas, which remain unproven. Since then,
Australia, Sweden, Finland, France, Canada and the European Commission have all
resumed funding.
UK
ministers say they will make a decision on the resumption of funding after
seeing the final report from a review of Unrwa neutrality led by the former
French foreign minister Catherine Colonna, which is expected early next week.
Nandy
said the UK funding continued to be withheld “despite the fact that the
government is aware that if Unrwa can’t continue its operations, the whole
humanitarian system in Gaza collapses”.
“So
there’s new urgency to this now. Time has run out for hundreds of thousands of
people across Gaza and the world has to act,” Nandy said. All of Gaza’s 2.3
million are population suffering from food insecurity and nearly half face
famine, according to expert assessments.
Israeli
authorities are refusing to deal with Unrwa even though it is by far the
biggest aid agency in Gaza and has helped support Palestinian refugees across
the region for more than seven decades. The Israeli government is pressing for
Unrwa’s functions, staff and resources to be transferred to a new agency.
“It
is just completely unrealistic to suggest that there can be a humanitarian
response in Gaza without Unrwa and the critical role that it plays,” Nandy
said. “All the agencies, including the UK agencies, that work in Gaza rely on
its infrastructure and staff and expertise in order to deliver aid.”
In
contrast to the current government, Labour fully supports the work of the ICC,
which investigates potential war crimes in Gaza, and the ICJ, which is weighing
accusations of genocide against Israel and examining the legality of Israel’s
57-year occupation of Palestinian territories.
Britain’s
Conservative government has backed the ICC and ICJ scrutiny of Russian actions
in Ukraine, but not of Israeli conduct in Gaza.
Nandy
said a critical difference between Labour and the Tories on Israel and the
occupied territories was that “we are crystal clear that unless international
law is upheld, there can be no accountability.
“If
there is no accountability, then this is how you end up with a situation where
the two-state solution has disappeared before people’s eyes and there is no
hope of a meaningful peace process,” she added.
Labour
has called on Israel to implement the “provisional measures” ordered by the ICJ
in late January, intended to mitigate the risk of genocide.
Labour
is also calling for the British government to make public its internal legal
assessment of Israel’s conduct of the Gaza war, so that parliament can take a
view on whether British arms exports should be suspended. The foreign
secretary, David Cameron, said in Washington last week that the latest legal
assessment “leaves our position on export licences unchanged” but argued that
legal advice should be kept confidential.
Nandy
acknowledged that there could be legitimate reasons for keeping legal advice
secret, but said: “It seems to us that the greater the degree of transparency
that can be provided in this situation, the better.
“Both
the Israelis and the Palestinians know that we don’t just want to see greater
access to aid, but that there are international rules and laws that have to be
applied.”
Rishi
Sunak’s government is threatening to ignore international law in its effort to
deport asylum seekers to Rwanda and has threatened to repeal the Human Rights
Act and the European convention on human rights, policies that Labour has
pledged to overturn.
“I
think the biggest problem is the suspicion from many countries that Britain,
and this government in particular, doesn’t respect international law and
international norms,” Nandy said. “And that’s something that a Labour
government will have to restore.”
0 comments:
Post a Comment