It's been 107 years since the #BalfourDeclaration and Britain has not yet atoned for its grave historic mistake. It is time to make amends with the Palestinian people. |
Husam Zomlot
@hzomlot
Ambassador of the State of Palestine to the UK. Former Ambassdor to the United States.
Today, 2 November 2024, marks 107 years since the Balfour Declaration was issued in 1917.
It has never been more urgent that the injustice of that declaration be addressed and accounted for.
By ignoring the rights of the Palestinian people to their own land, the Balfour Declaration effectively cancelled the Palestinian people.
This set in motion a series of events culminating in the ethnic cleansing of two-thirds of the Palestinian people in the 1947-49 Nakba.
By then allowing Israel to ignore, without consequence, the right of return of Palestinian refugees, a long record of Israeli impunity began.
This record of impunity has emboldened Israel not only to seek to take more territory by force over the following decades, but to engage in an ongoing genocide of the Palestinian people in Gaza and across occupied territory.
It is time Israeli impunity ends.
It is time the cancellation of the Palestinian people embodied in the Balfour Declaration is addressed.
And it is time the British government accepts its historic responsibility for this state of affairs, and took action to redress the injustice at the heart of the Balfour Declaration.
How can the UK begin to make amends and work toward ending Israeli impunity?
The UK must take steps to end the ongoing genocide.
It can do this by imposing a full arms embargo, instituting sanctions against Israel for its illegal occupation of the Gaza Strip and the West Bank including occupied East Jerusalem, and demand accountability for Israeli leaders accused of war crimes.
The UK must immediately recognise the State of Palestine as a long overdue inalienable right of the Palestinian people and in compliance with international law and international resolutions.
This should come along with an official apology from the British government for the cancellation of the Palestinian people and their legitimate rights.
Simultaneously, the UK must also, in compliance with the International Court of Justice and international law and in accordance with the UK’s explanation for its the vote in the UN’s General Assembly on 18 September, ban all trade in goods and services with Israel’s illegal settlements in occupied territory, penalise British companies that operate illegally there, and affirm the UK’s support for the right of return of Palestinian refugees.
International law as expressed by the International Court of Justice is clear: third parties must end any support for Israel’s illegal occupation and recognise the Palestinian people’s right to self-determination.
Those steps are well understood. It is time to take them.
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