Summary
proceedings against the Netherlands on Arms trade with Israel
The Lawsociety
3 May 2002
On May 16, 2002, a Dutch court in The Hague will hear a summary
proceedings filed by twenty one civil society organizations to ban
all export and transit of military goods to Israel. The Dutch government
has so far refused to comply with the demands as stated in a letter
sent to the Ministry of Economic Affairs on April 23, 2002.
According to the organizations, the Netherlands is not allowed
to aid and support an army that violates substantially fundamental
norms. The organizations, including LAW and the Dutch organizations
Pax Christi, Cordaid, IKV, ICCO, Campagne tegen Wapenhandel and
Novib are represented by Van den Biesen Advocaten.
The Ministry of Economic Affairs, in coordination with the Ministry
of Foreign Affairs, decides whether or not licenses should be given
for the export of military goods. According to the EU Code of Conduct
on Arms Export, export licenses cannot be given if the end-user
does not comply with one or several criteria of this code. The criteria
include, respect for human rights, international treaties and obligations.
According to the organizations it is evident that Israel does not
comply with these criteria.
Export of military goods from the Netherlands includes wheels for
armored military vehicles, components for F-16 fighter jets and
millions of ammunition stripper clips. It is assumed that a significant
part of this export still takes place according to earlier approved
licenses. In addition, transit of military goods still commences
on a large scale. The port of Rotterdam and the airport Schiphol,
as stopover for El-Al flights arriving from the United States, are
an important aspect.
The Dutch government can impose a provision to obtain licenses,
in relation to transit of strategic goods to Israel, when important
interests are at stake. The plaintiffs state that this is the case.
Israel's military operations in the occupied Palestinian territories,
include killings of Palestinian men, women and children, extra-judicial
executions, arbitrary detention and deportation of prisoners, collective
punishment, torture, the continuation of settlement policy, attacks
on hospitals and ambulances and destruction of homes. These are
violations of human rights and grave breaches of international humanitarian
law, i.e. war crimes. This has been recently documented by a.o.,
Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch and the UN Human Rights
Commission.
The civil society organizations aim to make the Netherlands comply
with existing rules on the trade of arms and to stop aiding and
abetting Israeli violations of human rights and laws of war.
For more information:
- Van den Biesen Advocaten, Phon van den Biesen, tel. +31 (0)20-5682929/(0)
6-52061266 and Ernestine Meijer, tel. +31 (0)20 - 568 29 29;
- Pax Christi Netherlands, Marjolein Wijninckx, tel. +31 (0)30-2333346/(0)6-
53772387;
- LAW, contact in the Netherlands, Ghada Zeidan, tel. +31 (0)182-570434/(0)
6-55788540); office in Jerusalem, Arjan El Fassed, tel. +972 (0)57699784;
- An overview of the Dutch arms export to Israel can be found
on: http://www.stopwapenhandel.org
- Pax Christi Nederland, P.O.Box 19318, 3501 DH Utrecht, The Netherlands,
Tel: +31 (0)30 - 233 33 46, Fax: +31 (0)30 - 236 81 99.
LAW - The Palestinian Society for the Protection
of Human Rights and the Environment is a non-governmental organisation
dedicated to preserving human rights through legal advocacy. LAW
is affiliate to the International Commission of Jurists (ICJ), the
International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH), and the World
Organisation Organisation Against Torture (OMCT).
LAW - The Palestinian Society for the Protection
of Human Rights and the Environment, PO Box 20873, Jerusalem, tel.
+972-2-5833530, fax. +972-2- 5833317, email: law@lawsociety.org,
web: www.lawsociety.org
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