Belgian parliament urges sanctions against Israel
Lawmakers ask government to lead European efforts to prevent West Bank annexation
BRUSSELS
The Belgian federal parliament adopted a resolution on Friday urging the government to prepare a list of countermeasures against Israel in case it annexes the occupied Palestinian territories.
The resolution was proposed by the Green party, and passed with 101 votes in favor and 39 abstentions.
The text calls the government to “play a leading role at European and multilateral level in order to set up a list of effective countermeasures to respond proportionately to any Israeli annexation of the occupied Palestinian territory.”
The resolution acknowledges the fact that some states might veto EU sanctions. So it suggests the Belgian government to create a European coalition with like-minded countries.
The resolution is legally non-binding, but it carries a significant message from lawmakers that the government can hardly ignore.
The lawmakers were scheduled to adopt another verdict on asking for the recognition of the Palestinian state, but the vote was delayed for a week because of a last-minute amendment.
Earlier this week, more than 1,000 lawmakers from across Europe condemned the West Bank annexation plan in a joint letter.
They urged European leaders to prevent the annexation and save the prospects of a two-state solution, and expressed support for the EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell’s previous statement warning that “annexation could not pass unchallenged”.
Encouraged by US President Donald Trump’s so-called “Deal of the Century,” Israeli Minister Benjamin Netanyahu last month announced his government would formally annex the Jordan Valley and all settlement blocs in the West Bank.
The West Bank, including East Jerusalem, is seen as occupied territory under international law, thus making all Jewish settlements there – as well as the planned annexation – illegal.
Palestinian officials have threatened to abolish bilateral agreements with Israel if it goes ahead with the annexation, which would further undermine the two-state solution.
Like Turkey and much of the international community, the EU does not recognize Israel’s sovereignty over the territories it has occupied since 1967.