Dutch court rules against ban on arms exports to Israel

Displaced Palestinians sit by their tents at a makeshift displacement camp in Rafah's Mawasi area in the southern Gaza Strip on May 29, 2024, a site that was reportedly hit a day earlier during Israeli bombardment, which the army denied. - Street fighting and Israeli bombardment rocked Gaza's far-southern Rafah on May 29, Palestinian residents and officials said, a day after Israeli tanks rolled into the centre of the city near the Egyptian border. (Photo by Bashar TALEB / AFP)

 

A Dutch court on Friday rejected demands by pro-Palestinian groups for a ban on arms exports from the Netherlands to Israel.

The non-governmental groups had accused Israel of conducting a “genocide” in its war in Gaza. But the court said the Dutch government was respecting rules governing the country’s arms trade.

“The state should not be forced to impose a ban on exporting goods that can be used for military means,” the court in The Hague said in a statement.

The pro-Palestinian groups said in a statement they had expected the decision but still called it a “blow” to international justice. They said they may appeal.

The groups had said that Israel’s actions in Gaza and the occupied West Bank since the Hamas group’s October 7, 2023 attack on Israel had put it in breach of the 1948 UN genocide convention.

Zainah El-Haroun, spokesperson for the NGO Al-Haq said that the Netherlands, as the venue for the International Court of Justice and other international tribunals, had to act to “prevent genocide”.

The court said the government had carried out its obligations to assess the risk that arms exported to Israel are not used “in a way that could lead to a breach of humanitarian law in war.” It highlighted a case where a military goods export to Israel had been halted.

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