EU to impose restrictive measures on Israel

In a move to pressure Israel into a two-state solution to end the long Israeli occupation of Palestinian territories, EU-proposed sanctions against Israel were released by Hareetz



In response to Israel's reluctant commitment to a two-state solution to solve the long-lasting Israeli-Palestinian conflict, an internal document containing EU-proposed sanctions against Israel has been released by Hareetz, the Israeli daily newspaper. The sanctions include those against European companies, which work with Israeli businesses in establishing buildings for Jewish settlement projects in the West Bank and East Jerusalem, which will be prohobited from such endeavors. Israeli politicians have opposed the two-state solution, such as Reuven Rivlin, the president of Israel and Naftali Bennett, the Israeli economy minister and the leader of the right-wing party, Jewish Home.

A committee of experts on Middle Eastern affairs began working on the EU-proposed sanctions on Israel on September 11, according to some high-ranking European diplomats who spoke to Haaretz. The EU's Political and Security Committee gave the committee "the task of drafting a document containing the response measures to acts by the Israeli government that are liable to make the two-state solution an impossibility."

Regarding the increasing anger among EU member states toward Israel's violent actions towards Palestinians, "Several states, including some that are considered great friends of Israel, are the ones who conceived the move and are now hiding behind the EU's Foreign Service so that it can act as the bad cop," the European diplomats told Hareetz.

The social unrest between Israeli settlers and Palestinians continues to spread over Jerusalem following the latest attack on a Jerusalem synagogue that left four Israelis dead and seven others wounded on Tuesday. The latest attack was condemned by the international community including the Palestinian Authority (PA) President Mahmoud Abbas. "The time has come to end [Israeli] occupation and all the causes of tension and violence," said a statement released by Abbas' office, as reported by Anadolu Agency. As a response to the synagogue attack, a group of Jewish settlers attacked a Palestinian town on Tuesday in the occupied West Bank, prompting fear of escalating tension in the region.

After the first closure of the Muslim holy site, the Al-Aqsa mosque, fierce fighting between Israelis and Palestinians in Jerusalem has been continuing. The al-Aqsa compound represents the world's third holiest site and has significant importance for Muslims. The closure of the compound by the Israeli authorities was considered as a move to change the status-quo in the Muslim holy site, through issuing a decree that allows Jewish people to enter the site. The compound is allowed for Muslim prayer alone, however, Jewish Israeli visitors are also allowed to the site under the surveillance of Israeli police. Since the Israeli occupation of the West Bank, East Jerusalem, and the Gaza Strip in June 1967, the Jordanian government, known as the Waqf, has been running the holy site.

Amid growing concern over the violent clashes at the compound, the European Union urged Israel to respect the status-quo in the Muslim holy site. "The EU appeals for full respect of the holy sites," the EU Council said in a statement on Monday. "Any change of the status quo would have deeply destabilizing effects," the statement added. The EU also called on Israel to lift the blockade on the Gaza Strip stressing that Israeli commitment to a two state solution would reflect on its EU relations in a positive way.

The tension in East Jerusalem was flamed after Israeli authorities announced the expansion of its settlement project that includes major construction in the area as well as an increase in Jewish settlers. As Israel has tried to expand its influence over the enclave by allowing Jewish settlers to reside in the disputed area, the number of Jewish settlers in the occupied territories has doubled in the last four and a half years. The continued settlement threatens the pursuit of peace in the sacred territories through deepening divisions between two communities and further exacerbating the conflict.