In violation of international law, the Israeli High Court gave permission to multinational companies to exploit resources off the Gaza Coast for the benefit of Israelis.
Many are unaware that in addition to the hearing on Israel’s supply of gas/electricity to the Gaza Strip,
HCJ 9132/07 Jaber Albasyouni Ahmed and others v The Government of Israel
, the Israeli High Court of Justice (HCJ) also heard a petition dealing with
the supply of energy in the opposite direction – from the Gaza Strip to Israel.
In their rejection of this principle-based petition, the
President of the HCJ, Judge Beinisch, held in the opening paragraph of the
judgment that the State of Israel is under no obligation to transfer an
unlimited amount of electricity and gas to the Gaza Strip “in circumstances
where some of these resources continue to sustain the terror organizations for
the purpose of targeting Israeli civilians.”
The HCJ in complete oblivion?
The State of Israel, acting as an occupying power, has
been employing multinationals to exploit the natural gas resources of the Gaza
Strip, whilst the entire Palestinian population throughout Gaza suffers from a severe shortage in petrol
and cooking gas - bakeries are being shut down and cars are running on cooking
oil. The prohibition on exploitation of an occupied territory’s natural resources by the occupying power is
solidly grounded in international law and has been extensively discussed in the
judgment of the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in Congo v Uganda.
This prohibition is also affirmed by the UN Declaration on Permanent
Sovereignty over Natural Resources
and analysed in the arbitration of Texaco Overseas Petroleum v Libya.
Several United Nations resolutions have addressed the
Israeli exploitation of Palestinian natural resources. The UN General Assembly
(UNGA) resolution 3005 (XXVII) affirmed “the principle of the sovereignty of
the population of the occupied territories over their national wealth and
resources.”
Similarly, UNGA resolution 3336 (XXIV) affirms that the exploitation of “human,
natural and all other resources and wealth of the occupied territories [is]
illegal.”
Finally, in UNGA resolution 32/161 Israel is called to cease its exploitation
of natural resources in the occupied Palestinian territories, reaffirming that
these resources belong to the “peoples whose territories are under Israeli
occupation.”
The judges examining the Noble Energy Mediterranean
case did not stop to ponder on what grounds Israel bases its right to exploit
the gas resources of the Gaza Strip. Such a stance was possibly taken due to
its acquiesced recognition of the fact that the exploitation is done in
violation of the rules of international law, which prohibit taking advantage of
the natural resources of occupied territory for the benefits of the occupying
power (a territory, that according to the Court's legal conceptions in the Albasyouni
decision, is no longer subject to its belligerent occupation).
Selective Referencing of International law: Sidestepping
the ICJ Judgment in Congo v Uganda
In its judgment in the Noble Energy Mediterranean
case, the Israeli High Court mentions that exploitation of these new resources creates
opportunities for the development of the gas industry in Israel, which would help meet the
high demands of the Israeli market. These conclusions shed no light on the fact
that such exploitation of resources is a grave violation of international
humanitarian law which has been repeatedly voiced in the judgments of the ICJ
at the Hague.
Namely, and most recently, in the judgment of the ICJ in Congo v Uganda (19
December 2005), the Court upheld the continuing and inviolable sovereignty of a
State over its natural resources during the time of occupation; this judgment
was preceded by the UN Security Council's condemnation
of the exploitation in the Democratic Republic of Congo exactly a month earlier.
International law of occupation has clear and
unequivocal rules concerning the exploitation of natural resources found in the
occupied territory by the belligerent occupant. The Court found “ample credible
and persuasive evidence to conclude that officers and soldiers of the Ugandan
People's Defense Force (UPDF), including the most high-ranking officers, were
involved in the looting, plundering and exploitation of the DRC’s natural
resources and that the military authorities did not take any measures to put an
end to these acts” (para. 242 of the judgement). The Court concluded that the actions of the
UPDF forces who engaged in the looting and plundering should be considered
violations of jus in bello
under the Hague Regulations of 1907 (Art. 47) and the Fourth Geneva
Convention of 1949 (Art. 33), which prohibit pillage, and the African Charter
(Art. 21) which requires restitution or compensation in the case or spoliation
(para. 245 of the judgement).
The Sinai Oil Exploitation and Israel’s Position
Unlike many of the Israeli High Court's laconic
judgments, this ruling inexplicably side-stepped the very pivotal question of the
Gaza Strip’s legal status and Israel’s
obligations towards its occupied population. However, a superficial historical
survey attests to the fact that this is not the first time Israel has played
the role of belligerent occupant abusively expropriating natural resources in
occupied territory.
On 1 August 1977 Israel’s
Ministry of Foreign Affairs produced a memorandum that attempted to legitimize Israel’s illegal drilling of oil fields in the Sinai Peninsula, which was developed during the
occupation of that region.
The memorandum begins by declaring openly that Israel
boldly holds to its “rights of usufructus” to develop oil fields in occupied
Sinai. According to Israel’s understanding of the applicable law, namely,
Article 55 of the Hague Regulations,
the State of Israel is authorised to exploit oil in the region but “must not
contribute abusive exploitation.”
It claims that prevention of such exploitation, as well as the development of
new wells, would delay development of the territory by a number of years. Following
this logic, “the duty of the occupant is inter alia to maintain economic
prosperity of occupied territory and this is met by a reasonable development of
oil fields...[enhancing] the value of the land.”
The memorandum from 1977 adopts a very constructive albeit
flawed interpretation of Article 55 which, according to Israel, “specifically and
categorically allows the Occupant to enjoy the fruits of public property” [emphasis
added]. The memorandum finally notes the most impertinent of its arguments,
that “the military costs of maintaining the IDF in the occupied areas...far
exceed any income derived from the oil wells in question.”
It is only hoped that if Israel were reproached in regards to its activities in
Gaza today, that some of these less ingenious arguments would not be brought
forth in its defense.
The HCJ case concerning the multinational oil
companies, and the parallel arguments provided in the Albasyouni decision,
are not mentioned anywhere in the press. Evidence of this major ongoing scandal
can only be found in older international news pieces, which don headlines
regarding the joint venture of multinational companies for the exploitation of
gas in the Gaza Strip region.
The EU and the UN Security Council
have a prominent role to play in law enforcement and regulation in the region.
Israel should be condemned internationally for its grave violations of
international law regarding the exploitation of the Occupied Territory’s
natural resources. The country’s blatant disregard for the pronounced
international regulations has done nothing but increase Palestine’s dependency
on Israeli oil supplies while continuing to sustain and advance Israel’s
capitalist free market economy.
Valentina Azarov is a Legal
Researcher at Hamoked: Center for the Defence of the Individual.The
opinions expressed in this piece are the author’s own and should not be
attributed to Hamoked
see fn. 3, p 436-437
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