Lawyers: EU Has No Right to Determine Israel’s Borders (VIDEO)
Error: Contact form not found.
by Anav Silverman / Tazpit News Agency
Over 1,000 international lawyers, ambassadors, and professors from 30 different countries signed a petition protesting the European Union’s recent funding ban on Israel’s settlements.
Israel’s former ambassador to Canada and legal advisor, Alan Baker, who heads the Legal Forum for Israel’s International Action Division, initiated the petition and an accompanying letter, which drew widespread support across the world.
The Legal Forum, a legal advocacy group established in 2004, sent out the petition and protest letter to EU officials earlier this week.
In July, the European Union issued a directive barring its 28 member states from funding projects and ending cooperation with Israeli institutions in in Judea and Samaria, the Golan Heights, and East Jerusalem.
According to Baker, the directive is discriminatory and based on a legal premise that is completely wrong. “The EU is incorrectly asserting that the pre-1967 lines are Israel’s borders and that the settlements are illegal. That is a misreading of international law,” Baker told Tazpit News Agency in an exclusive interview.
Baker believes that the EU’s recent calls are “absolutely unacceptable” and states that it was one of main reasons why the Legal Forum had first written the letter.
“It has not been determined that the 1949 armistice lines are Israel’s borders- that is one of the issues up for negotiations along with the settlements,” explains Baker. “The parties have to determine these issues at the negotiating table themselves; the EU has overstepped its status and has no right to take international law into its own hands.”
The 1,100 signatures supporting the letter include lawyers as well as rabbis, senior ambassadors, and professors – both Jewish and Christian – from Australia, Britain, Bolivia, Greece, Norway, Mexico, Taiwan, France, Italy, Canada, the U.S., and India, among others.
Israeli Justice Minister Yaakov Neeman, former Israeli ambassador to the United States Meir Rosenne, and UK House of Lords member Baroness Ruth Deech are among those who signed the letter.
The European Union was established following World War II to foster economic cooperation between countries that traded with one another, primarily in Europe. Today, the EU is an organization that spans policy areas, from development aid to environment while promoting human rights. According to the EU’s website, “everything that the EU does is founded on treaties, voluntarily and democratically agreed by all member countries.”
“The EU feels that it can take this liberty with Israel. It has a fixation, an obsession with the Jewish state and it has shown that it is not an impartial player in the peace process,” said Baker. “With this letter, we hope that EU members working with Catherine Ashton will consider a more impartial policy towards this area of the world.”
Watch the interview with Baker below.
Iran’s Global Terror Network Sparks Growing Alarm Across the West
Michigan Dem Senate Candidate Admits Own Party Has an Antisemitism Problem
Yad Vashem to Open First Overseas Education Center in Germany Amid Push to Combat Rising Global Antisemitism
California School District Settles Major Antisemitism Lawsuit With Victims Who Alleged Rampant Abuse
British Museum Confirms New Date for Jewish Culture Month Event Initially Postponed Amid Fears of Protests
North Miami Restaurant Becomes World’s First Kosher Establishment to Receive Michelin Star
Trump Says Will Soon Decide on Iran Deal, Says Hormuz Strait Must Open
Israeli Forces Cross Key Lebanon River in Expanded Ground Offensive
Kanye West to Perform in the Netherlands Despite Bans Elsewhere Over Antisemitic Comments
Netanyahu Directs Israeli Forces to Expand Gaza Control to 70 Percent






The Principal of a Palestinian School Is Named Hitler
Jewish Leaders Accepted Partition. Twice. Arab Leaders Rejected It. The ‘Nakba’ Followed
The Gaza Flotilla Was Never About Aid
A Message From The Torah: Live an Ordinary Life
Netanyahu Directs Israeli Forces to Expand Gaza Control to 70 Percent



