EU suggests imposition of sanctions on Israel over settlements
by FalastinNews Staff
The
European Union has recommended that sanctions be imposed on the Israeli
regime over its settlement expansion policies in the occupied
Palestinian territories and its strict security measures in East al-Quds
(Jerusalem).
In
a recently-released report prepared by heads of diplomatic missions of
EU member states in the Palestinian Authority, the 28-nation bloc
described al-Quds as a city gripped by the worst "polarization and
violence" since the second Intifada (uprising) against the Zionist
regime a decade ago.
The
report noted that the Israeli regime's construction of settler units is
further compounding the problem in the occupied Palestinian lands.
The
document also lashed out at Israel for its "heavy-handed policing and
punitive measures" against Palestinian people, "including evictions and
home demolitions."
The
EU report further warned businesses of the dangers of engaging in trade
with Israeli firms that are located in the occupied territories.
Israel,
however, has rejected the report, with a regime spokesman saying, "This
is so extremely one-sided a report that it distorts reality beyond
comprehension."
More
than half a million Israelis live in over 120 illegal settlements built
since Israel's occupation of the West Bank including East al-Quds in
1967.
Much
of the international community regards the settlements as illegal
because the territories were captured by Israel in the 1967 war and are
hence subject to the Geneva Conventions, which forbid construction on
occupied land.
Israel
has also over the past months stepped up restrictions on the access of
Muslim worshippers to the al-Aqsa Mosque compound in East al-Quds.
Palestinians consider the Israeli measures as part of the regime's plan to Judaize and desecrate the holy Islamic site.
Soure: Press TV

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