France and allies eye national measures to pressure Israel over West Bank, say diplomats
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Palestinians trying to extinguish smouldering farmland following an attack by Israeli settlers in the village of Huwwara, near Nablus, in the West Bank, on June 6.
PHOTO: EPA
- France, with Britain and Norway, is planning coordinated national sanctions on individuals linked to West Bank violence, due to lack of EU unanimity.
- This addresses escalating Israeli settler violence and settlement expansion, particularly the E1 project, which could fragment a future Palestinian state.
- France will host a June 12 meeting in Paris with foreign ministers and civil society to keep the Israeli-Palestinian issue on the international agenda.
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PARIS – France is working with several countries to step up pressure on Israel by pressing ahead with coordinated national sanctions targeting individuals linked to violence in the West Bank, three European diplomats said on June 6.
The measures, which would include asset freezes and travel bans, have yet to be finalised, and countries may adopt different lists of individuals, the diplomats said.
The move comes amid escalating violence by Israeli settlers in the occupied West Bank and underscores anger in many Western countries towards Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government, which has expanded settlements.
Diplomats say that expansion is aimed at undermining prospects for a Palestinian state.
No EU unanimity for tougher measures on Israel
The diplomats said that with efforts blocked at the European Union to advance tougher measures against Israel, several countries had concluded that coordinated national sanctions were the best option for now.
“There is no unanimity at the EU level, so we have moved to discussions at the national level,” one diplomat said.
Two of the diplomats said the announcement would be in the coming days.
Another diplomat said Britain and Norway were among the countries France was coordinating with, although it remained unclear who else could join.
Most countries avoid publicly discussing national sanctions for fear that potential targets could shift assets in advance.
Palestinian Saeed Odeh, 75, inspecting a sheep compound on June 6 after Israeli settlers reportedly stole his sheep, in Huwara, near Nablus, in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.
PHOTO: REUTERS
Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar said after some new EU sanctions on May 11 that the bloc had “chosen, in an arbitrary and political manner, to impose sanctions on Israeli citizens and entities because of their political views and without any basis”.
Seven Western nations, including France, Britain, Australia and Canada, accused the Israeli government on May 22 of aggravating tensions in the West Bank.
A key concern is Israel’s plan to build a settlement east of Jerusalem, known as the E1 project, which would bisect the West Bank and cut it off from East Jerusalem, fragmenting the territory Palestinians seek for an independent state.
“In the face of settlement expansion and violence in the West Bank, we have already taken measures. More could follow,” a French diplomatic source said, declining to elaborate.
Britain’s Foreign Office declined to comment.
The Norwegian Foreign Ministry did not immediately reply to a request for comment.
A Palestinian man inspecting a sheep farm compound burned after an attack by Israeli settlers, according to the locals, in Abu Falah, near Ramallah, in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, on June 2.
PHOTO: REUTERS
France hosts meeting to keep issue on the table
The push to increase pressure on Israel at the national level comes just days before France hosts a meeting on June 12 in Paris, bringing together Israeli and Palestinian civil society groups and about a dozen foreign ministers.
The meeting will mark one year since the adoption of the New York Declaration, a non-binding UN resolution endorsed by the General Assembly that set out a road map towards a Palestinian state and led to about a dozen countries, including France, recognising a Palestinian state in September.
French officials have said they want to keep the issue on the international agenda as wars in Iran and Lebanon draw attention away from the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, while talks over Gaza’s future remain deadlocked despite a fragile ceasefire. REUTERS


