Open Letter To Murray Mccully: Support International Law
Open Letter To Murray Mccully: Invitation To Support
International Law
30 April 2012
Dear Mr McCully,
The fifth-biggest UK food retailer and biggest
Co-operative Group in Europe has ceased trading with
suppliers that are linked to Israeli settlements. The
Co-op’s decision will immediately hit four suppliers,
Agrexco, Arava Export Growers, Adafresh and Mehadrin,
Israel’s largest agricultural export company.
The
reason for the Society's action is that Mehadrin sells its
produce from illegal settlements, including Beqa’ot in the
Occupied Jordan Valley. Furthermore, grapes and dates
packaged in the settlement are illegally labelled ‘Produce
of Israel’. In addition, Mehadrin’s role in providing
water to settlement farms (illegal under international law)
and its relationship with the Israeli state water company,
Mekorot, makes the company complicit in Israel’s
ethnically discriminatory allocation of water. This
discrimination inflicts much hardship on the Palestinian
people.
In your statement supporting Israel's application for admission to the OECD you claimed that it was important to the process of what you called “dialogue” with the Zionist state. The Palestine Human Rights Campaign (PHRC) would like to offer you the opportunity to demonstrate how such dialogue has so far succeeded in persuading Israel to adhere to the norms of civilised trading, OECD rules and international law. In other words, are you able to show that Israel's admission to the OECD has in anyway modified its behaviour?
An International Women's Peace Service (IWPS)
base in Deir Istiya has informed us that the West Bank
village recently received notice from the Israeli Army that
it will be uprooting 1400 village trees on May 1. IWPS has
drafted an online petition concerning this that is addressed
to the Israeli PM and the Israeli Ministries of Defence and
the Environment. Uprooting trees is one of the many
strategies the Israeli government uses in its attempts to
suppress the spirit of Palestinians trying to continue to
live in their homeland. Is there any reason why the New
Zealand Government should not also bring pressure to bear on
the Israeli government to observe international standards of
decency?
We ask you to state (with your reasons) whether
or not you agree or disagree with the following
statement:
The Israeli government's vindictive and unnecessary acts of economic and agricultural sabotage in belligerently occupied territories are crimes against humanity. They demonstrate clearly the Zionist state's present unsuitability for membership of the OECD. Such acts are certain to strengthen support for the international Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement and it would be in Israel's own best interests to reform its behaviour. There is never any excuse for failing to abide by the provisions of the Fourth Geneva Convention.
Visitors to our website, both at home and internationally, will be very interested to read your response to this Open Letter.
Yours sincerely
Leslie
Bravery,
Palestine Human Rights Campaign, Aotearoa/New
Zealand
www.palestine.org.nz
ENDS