While disease, hunger and death continue to stalk the Gaza Strip and the West Bank remains occupied, United Nationsā committees deliberate on how to address this hideous state of affairs.
While committee resolutions may seem like insipid gestures, marked by ineffectual chatter, they are making Israel more isolated than ever.
The Second Committee (Economic and Financial) of the UN approved two resolutions on November 13. The Ā that Israel take responsibility for prompt and adequate compensation to Lebanon, and associated countries including Syria, affected by an oil slick arising from the destruction of storage tanks near the Lebanese Jiyah electric power plant.
The strike took place in July 2006, during Israelās previous war against Hezbollah that resulted in, to Lebanonās then-Environment Ministry director general Berge Hatjian, āa catastrophe of the highest order for a country as small as Lebanonā.
According to Lebanonās UN representative, the oil spill damage hampered the countryās efforts to pursue the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) by 2030.
Israel gruffly of the resolution, which received 160 votes in its favour, citing the usual argument that it has been unfairly targeted. Other adversaries such as the Houthis, which had been attacking ships in international waters, had been left unscrutinised by the committee. The issue of environmental damage had been appropriated āas a political weapon against Israelā.
The , introduced by the Ugandan representative, entitled āPermanent sovereignty of the Palestinian people in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem, and of the Arab population in the occupied Syrian Golan over their natural resourcesā, expressed pointed concerns about Israelās continued efforts to exercise brute force control over the territories.
There was concern for āthe exploitation by Israel, the occupying Power, of the natural resources of the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem, and other Arab territories occupied by Israel since 1967ā.
Ditto the āextensive destruction by Israel ā¦ of agricultural land and orchards in the Occupied Territoryā and āwidespread destructionā inflicted upon āvital infrastructure, including water pipelines, sewage networks and electricity networksā in those territories.
Concerns also abounded about unexploded ordnance, a situation that despoiled the environment while hampering reconstruction, and the āchronic energy shortage in the Gaza Strip and its detrimental impact on the operation of water and sanitation facilitiesā.
The Israeli settlements come in for special mention, given their ādetrimental impact on Palestinian and other Arab natural resources, especially as a result of the confiscation of land and the forced diversion of water resources, including the destruction of orchards and crops and the seizure of the water wells by Israeli settlers, and the dire socioeconomic consequences in this regardā.
There are also remarks about needing to respect and preserve āthe territory unity, contiguity and integrity of all Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalemā, a situation increasingly compromised by the unchecked zealotry of thuggish Israeli settlers, emboldened by lawmakers.
The vote on this occasion ā 158 in favour ā was unusual for featuring a number of countries that would normally be more guarded in adding their names, notably in the context of Palestinian sovereignty.
Their mantra is that in the absence of Israeli participation backing an initiative openly favouring Palestinian self-determination over any specific subject would do little to advance the broader goals of the peace process.
Australia, for instance, backed the resolution, despite opposition from the United States and Canada. It was the first time it had favoured a āpermanent sovereigntyā resolution.
This was done despite the Australian delegationās disappointment that the resolution made no reference to other participants in the conflict, such as Hezbollah.
A spokesperson for Australian Foreign Affairs Minister Penny Wong that the vote reflected international concerns about Israelās āongoing settlement activity, land dispossession, demolitions and settler violence against Palestiniansā. Such conduct undermined āstability and prospects for a two-state solutionā.
As for the United States, Israelās firmest sponsor in arms and inexplicable good will, the words āPalestinianā and āsovereigntyā grated.
The fiction of equality and parity between Israel and the Palestinians, a device used to snuff out the independent aspirations of the latter, had to be maintained.
Nicholas Koval, US Mission to the UN, Washington was ādisappointed that this body has again taken up this unbalanced resolution that is unfairly critical of Israel, demonstrating a clear and persistent institutional bias directed against one member stateā.
The resolution, in its āone-sidedā way, would not advance peace, he said. āNot when they ignore the facts on the ground.ā
While Koval is correct that the claimed facts in these resolutions are often matters of illusion or omission, Israelās war since October last year shows that Palestinians are no longer merely subjects of derision.
Palestinians are to be subjugated, preferably by some international authority that will guard against any future claims to autonomy. Their vetted leaders are to be treated as amenable collaborators, happy to yield territory that Israel has no right to.
Israelās National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir and Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich hope that eventually the Palestinian problem will vanish before forcible annexation, erasure and eviction.
At the very least, resolutions such as those passed on November 14 provide some record of resistance, however seemingly remote, against the historical amnesia that governs Israeli-Palestinian relations.
[Binoy Kampmark lectures at RMIT University.]