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JERUSALEM, July
9 (Xinhuanet) -- Israeli Justice Minister Yosef Lapid said Friday that Israel
will not follow the International Court of Justice (ICJ)'s ruling if it rules
against the security fence on the West Bank, the Ha'aretz daily
reported.
The Hague-based ICJ is expected to give it
advisory opinion on the wall later in the day.
Earlier
Israeli reports said the ICJ would rule that the fence contravenes international
law and must be dismantled.
"Now, of course, there is the
limitation the High Court of Justice imposed in Israel, and we will comply with
our High Court decisions, and not with the panel of European Union nations,
which are not exactly suspected of excessive sympathy for Israel," Lapid was
quoted as saying.
He explained that Israel would honor only
its own court rulings, such as the June 30 High Court of Justice ruling ordering
the defense establishment to reroute a 30-kilometer stretch of the separation
fence northwest of Jerusalem.
The High Court held earlier
that the fence was a security barrier rather than a political one, but that
Israel must balance security considerations against the needs of local
residents.
Meanwhile, the Israeli-Arab Hadash party
submitted a no-confidence motion to the government in the wake of reports of the
ruling against the fence.
Faction head MK Mohammed Barakeh
said Israel could not ignore the ICJ ruling, or else it will continue to be an
international pariah.
Israeli Foreign Minister Silvan Shalom
will hold a meeting with his ministry officials Friday afternoon to discuss an
Israel reaction to the possible ruling, and Prime Minister Ariel Sharon will
also hold meetings on the issue on Sunday, a local radio
reported.
Government spokesman Avi Pazner said Israel will be ready to discuss the fence
route after implementing the disengagement plan. Enditem
World court rules against Israeli
barrier in West Bank
BRUSSELS, July 9
(Xinhuanet) -- The International Court of Justice in The Hague has ruled that
Israel's West Bank barrier violates international law and should be dismantled,
Radio Netherlands reported Friday.
The ruling, which will be
made official later in the day, said that the barrier contravenes international
law and violates the rights of the Palestinians. Palestinians who have lost
property through the barrier's construction should receive financial
compensation, the report said.
Although the court's
ruling is not binding, it can serve as a basis for UN action. The court has
spent five months considering the issue at the request of the United Nations.
Israel and the United States want the court to stay out of
the issue, saying that any of its ruling could interfere with the Middle East
peace process.
Israel began construction of the barrier in
2002 which Israel says is aimed to block Palestinian suicide bombers. Much of
the 640-kilometer wall is being built on territory Israel occupied in
1967.
Palestinians say that the network of walls, fences and
ditches is confiscating their land and dividing their communities and separating
people from schools or workplaces. Enditem |