logo
Irish Government to draft bill to ban trade with illegal Israeli settlements

Irish Government to draft bill to ban trade with illegal Israeli settlements

Ireland's deputy premier and foreign affairs minister Simon Harris received Cabinet approval to draft the law on Tuesday.
It is understood the Government bill will ban the trade of goods but not services as the basis in EU law is much weaker for services than it is for goods.
Ireland's deputy premier and foreign affairs minister Simon Harris received Cabinet approval to draft the legilsation (David Young/PA)
The Government has opted for fresh legislation instead of progressing the Occupied Territories Bill, first tabled in 2018.
The Government has said there is 'a narrow pathway', based on an advisory opinion from the UN's top court, to ban trade with illegal Israeli settlements.
The International Court of Justice (ICJ) said last July that countries should 'take steps to prevent trade or investment relations' that maintain Israeli settlements on Palestinian land, which it deemed illegal.
Mr Harris said that the Government had 'not yet been able to identify the narrow pathway on services' but that there is a legal 'pathway' to ban the trade of goods.
He said he believed Ireland would become the first country in the western world to consider such legislation and said he hoped it would encourage other countries to do likewise.
Irish premier Micheal Martin told the Dail parliament that there is 'very little' trade between Ireland and the occupied territories but said the ban was an important symbolic move.
He was responding to questions from Social Democrats TD Sinead Gibney who said that the Dail was 'running out of time' to pass the goods ban before the summer recess.
'Just for the record, there is no major trade between Ireland and the occupied territories, there is very little actually,' Taoiseach Micheal Martin said on Tuesday.
He added: 'But that's not the point, the point is it is a symbolic move and that is important in itself.'
In relation to Sinn Fein's bill that aims to give Ireland's Finance Minister the powers to impose restrictive measures on securities issued by or on behalf of Israel, the Government said the proposals were 'unworkable'.
Mr Martin said the legislation proposed by Sinn Fein was 'simply unworkable' and 'has been written in a manner that in no shape or form could ever be made workable'.
He said it does not focus on Israel 'at all' and said the review of the EU-Israel Association could have a 'far greater influence'.
A Government spokesperson said the proposed Sinn Fein bill was asking for an activity that does not take place in Ireland – Israeli bonds are not listed on the Irish Stock Exchange nor are they available to purchase through any regulated entity in the State – to end.
The spokesperson said that the bill does not prevent securities or bonds from the Israeli state being issued nor does it prevent Israel from raising money by selling bonds.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

New command will counter ‘continual and intensifying' cyber warfare, says Healey
New command will counter ‘continual and intensifying' cyber warfare, says Healey

North Wales Chronicle

time23 minutes ago

  • North Wales Chronicle

New command will counter ‘continual and intensifying' cyber warfare, says Healey

It will also invest more than £1 billion into a new 'digital targeting web' to be set up by 2027 to better connect weapons systems and allow battlefield decisions targeting enemy threats to be made and executed faster. It could identify a threat using a sensor on a ship or in space and then disable it using an F-35 aircraft, drone, or offensive cyber operation, the Ministry of Defence said. The cyber and electromagnetic command will be led by General Sir Jim Hockenhull to defend against cyber attacks and co-ordinate offensive moves with the national cyber force. Defence Secretary John Healey said that the Government is responding after some 90,000 cyber attacks from state-linked sources were directed at the UK's defence over the last two years. 'Certainly the intensity of the cyber attacks that we're seeing from Russia stepped up, and cyber is now the leading edge, not just of defence, but of contests and tension between countries,' he told reporters during a visit to MOD Corsham. He said there is a 'level of cyber warfare that is continual and intensifying' that requires the UK to step up its capacity to defend against it. The command will also work on electromagnetic warfare – for example, through degrading command and control, jamming signals to drones or missiles and intercepting an adversary's communications.

Four killed as Palestinians storm UN warehouse in search for food
Four killed as Palestinians storm UN warehouse in search for food

North Wales Chronicle

time23 minutes ago

  • North Wales Chronicle

Four killed as Palestinians storm UN warehouse in search for food

Four people died in the chaos, hospital officials said. The deaths came a day after a crowd was fired upon while overrunning a new aid distribution site in the Gaza Strip set up by an Israeli and US-backed foundation, killing at least one Palestinian and wounding 48 others, Gaza's Health Ministry said on Wednesday. The Red Cross Field Hospital said the wounded from that scene included women and children with gunshot wounds. Meanwhile, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Israel has killed senior Hamas leader Mohammed Sinwar, apparently confirming his death in a recent air strike in Gaza. Speaking before parliament, Mr Netanyahu included Mr Sinwar in a list of Hamas leaders killed in Israeli strikes. Mohammed Sinwar is the brother of Yahya Sinwar, one of the masterminds of Hamas' October 7 attack, who was killed by Israeli forces last year. People broke through the fences around the distribution site in Gaza on Tuesday, and an Associated Press journalist heard Israeli tank and gunfire, and saw a military helicopter firing flares. Earlier, UN official Ajith Sunghay had said 47 Palestinians were injured, mostly by gunfire, at the hub set up by an Israeli and US-backed foundation outside Gaza's southernmost city of Rafah. It was not yet known whether the death and injuries were caused by Israeli forces, private contractors or others. The foundation said its military contractors had not fired on the crowd but 'fell back' before resuming aid operations. Israel said its troops nearby had fired warning shots. Ghassan, 5, a boy that UNRWA met, was born with quadriplegia after oxygen deprivation at birth. His real suffering began when the war started in #Gaza. Medicine and specialised care kept him stable at he weighs just 5kg. He is in pain and starving. The people of Gaza… — UNRWA (@UNRWA) May 28, 2025 The distribution hub outside Rafah was opened the day before by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, which has been slated by Israel to take over aid operations. The UN and other humanitarian organisations have rejected the new system, saying it will not be able to meet the needs of Gaza's 2.3 million people and allows Israel to use food as a weapon to control the population. They have also warned of the risk of friction between Israeli troops and people seeking supplies. Mr Netanyahu said on Tuesday that 'there was some loss of control momentarily' at the distribution point, adding that 'happily, we brought it under control'. He repeated that Israel plans to move Gaza's entire population to a 'sterile zone' at the southern end of the territory while troops fight Hamas elsewhere. Palestinians have become desperate for food after nearly three months of Israeli blockade pushed Gaza to the brink of famine. In a separate development, Israel said it had carried out air strikes on the international airport in Yemen's capital, Sanaa, after Iran-backed Houthi rebels fired several missiles at the country in recent days, without causing casualties. The Israeli military said it destroyed aircraft used by the rebels. Israel last struck the airport in Sanaa on May 6, destroying the airport's terminal and leaving its runway riddled with craters. Some flights resumed to Sanaa on May 17.

Trump-backed Gaza aid plan marred by stampede
Trump-backed Gaza aid plan marred by stampede

The Herald Scotland

time36 minutes ago

  • The Herald Scotland

Trump-backed Gaza aid plan marred by stampede

At least 47 people were injured in the melee, most from gunshots, the U.N. said. "This is not humanitarianism," Jonathan Whittall, head of office at the United Nations' Palestinian affairs agency, said at a May 28 briefing. He said the new aid system continues "collective punishment of Palestinians" and is an "assault on their human dignity." More: Pope Leo calls for ceasefire in Gaza, laments 'cries' of parents of dead children Mistrust of the UN The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation - the murky, fledgling organization distributing food aid - said its staff, anticipating disorder, had "intentionally relaxed its security protocols to safeguard against crowd reactions to finally receiving food." Supported by the Trump administration and Israel, the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation has pitched its "secure distribution sites," staffed with paramilitary contractors, as the solution to Gaza's humanitarian crisis and Israel's distrust of the U.N. Between two operating sites, 14,550 food boxes - each with enough food for 5.5 people over 3.5 days - had been distributed, as of May 28. But the aid organizations the new foundation wants to replace say its model of militarized aid distribution and its ties to Israel violate basic humanitarian principles. Those fears come down to "complaints about style," State Department spokesperson Tammy Bruce said at a May 27 briefing. "Unfortunately, there are many parties who wish to see GHF fail," the foundation said. Foundation director resigns over neutrality The foundation is off to a rocky start. The day before it began distributing food aid, Jake Wood, a former Marine who founded the humanitarian response group Team Rubicon, resigned as head of the foundation, citing concerns it not operate with impartiality. "It is clear that it is not possible to implement this plan while also strictly adhering to the humanitarian principles of humanity, neutrality, impartiality, and independence," Wood wrote in a statement. A member of the group told USA TODAY that Wood felt the aid plan could not run independently of Israel's military operations. Humanitarian groups in Gaza had long aired similar critiques. "This is a plan that has not demonstrated that it would be fully impartial, or that it would provide enough aid to all those in need in Gaza to prevent looting and diversion for profit," said Sean Carroll, president and CEO of U.S. aid group Anera. The New York Times reported on May 24 that the foundation originated from a group of Israeli and American military and business leaders as a plan to wrest control of Gaza from Hamas and replace the U.N. as the primary distributor of aid in Gaza. Members of the foundation and U.S. officials, including U.S. ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee, have insisted it operates independent of Israel. "The Israelis are going to be involved in providing necessary military security because it is a war zone, but they will not be involved in the distribution of the food or even bringing the food into Gaza," Huckabee told reporters in Jerusalem on May 9. Israel has been increasingly vocal in its support of the plan. "We are taking control of the food distribution in the Gaza Strip," Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on May 28. In a statement released after Wood's resignation, the foundation said it was "disappointed" by his departure. "Unfortunately, from the moment GHF was announced, those who benefit from the status quo have been more focused on tearing this apart than on getting aid in," the statement said. Wood and GHF did not return requests for comment. Suspicion from humanitarian groups Israel lifted its blockade on all humanitarian aid into Gaza early last week, allowing the first trucks in more than two months on May 19 to trickle into the war-ravaged enclave. Around 100 trucks have entered daily since then, but humanitarians say it's a fraction of what is needed to prevent famine. "It's a drop in the bucket," Cindy McCain, director of the World Food Program, said May 25 on CBS' "Face the Nation." Israel cut off humanitarian aid in early March, after a ceasefire with Hamas broke down. As of mid-May, 470,000 people there face catastrophic hunger, and the entire population is experiencing acute food insecurity, according to WFP. As aid groups clamored for access, the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation stepped onto the scene. In addition to Wood, the foundation's board included Nate Mook, a former CEO of World Central Kitchen and Bill Miller, a former U.N. director, and corporate executives. Former military and intelligence personnel were also involved, chief among them Phil Reilly, a veteran CIA paramilitary officer turned security contractor. In calls aid workers said were led by Aryeh Lightstone, an aide to President Donald Trump's envoy Steve Witkoff, the foundation sought to win over humanitarian organizations already on the ground. They did not succeed. As aid workers learned more about the plan, they concluded it was at best ineffective and at worst risked militarizing aid distribution to serve Israel's wartime goals. Suspicion grew that the organization was an Israeli government front. Reports that the foundation would use biometric technology to identify and track Palestinians sparked alarm. "I don't see it happening. How do you serve 2 million people overnight?" Bushra Khalidi, Oxfam's policy lead for Palestine, said, citing the foundation's limited distribution sites and lack of experience. The plan is "a process of militarizing and controlling aid to a much higher degree," said Joseph Belliveau, executive director of Illinois-based MedGlobal. People will fear coming to a distribution site that is "under the gun," he said. According to a publicly available planning document and a member of the foundation, the group's model of securitized aid "hubs" was meant to address Israel's accusations that Hamas loots aid, while getting more assistance into Gaza. In her Face the Nation interview, McCain said there was no evidence of Hamas stealing food aid in the most current round of distribution. She did not address previous rounds. "This doesn't have anything to do with Hamas or any kind of organized crime," McCain, the widow of Republican Sen. John McCain, said in the interview. "It has simply to do with the fact these people are starving to death." The foundation also ignited fears among some humanitarians that it would work in tandem with Israel's military operations to forcibly displace Palestinians from north Gaza into the southern part of the enclave. "The biggest fear is that, with a concentration of food provision in the south, it will be complicit in forced displacement, which is a war crime," said Carroll. Israel launched a new military operation - dubbed "Gideon's chariots" - in Gaza earlier in May that left more than 500 people dead in the span of eight days. It was unclear how many were civilians and how many were combatants. On May 26, the day the foundation launched its aid operation, at least 45 people were killed throughout the Gaza strip. More than 53,000 Palestinians have been killed in Gaza since Hamas launched an Oct. 7, 2023, raid on southern Israel that took 1,200 lives. Netanyahu said May 19 that Israel would achieve "complete victory" and control the entire enclave; Israeli officials have outlined a goal to push Palestinians to Gaza's south. Palestinians in northern Gaza have received evacuation orders in recent days. Khalidi said her colleagues were told by the Israeli military to evacuate from northern Gaza and Deir al-Balah in central Gaza. Military contractors to guard aid distribution The new foundation would first establish four "secure distribution sites" - each one to serve 300,000 people with "pre-packaged rations" of 1750-calorie meals, "hygiene kits and medical supplies," according to the initial plan. Armored vehicles would transport the supplies to the hubs, which would be guarded by armed security contractors. The aid would "move through tightly controlled corridors, monitored in real time to prevent diversion," according to a planning document. The firms providing security include Safe Reach Solutions, founded by Reilly, and UG Solutions, which was tasked earlier this year with guarding the Netzarim Corridor, a road that runs across the middle of Gaza, according to reports. Safe Reach Solutions has posted a job listing for a "humanitarian liaison officer" and UG Solutions for an "international humanitarian security specialist" on LinkedIn in recent weeks. A member of the foundation said the group may seek assistance from Egypt or other countries in the region, since almost none of the contractors speaks Arabic. It is also unclear how the plan is funded. The foundation registered in Switzerland in February - according to its planning document, its Swiss branch would "address donors who would prefer to participate outside of the U.S. structure." TRIAL International, a Switzerland-based legal nonprofit, filed legal submissions on May 23 asking for the foundation's funding to be investigated to determine if it is operating "in line with Swiss law and international humanitarian law," according to a press release. 'Too weak to cry' Khalidi and other aid workers say the situation in Gaza is unthinkably dire. Although aid trucks had entered, food distribution has been minimal. Only four bakeries were able to operate in Gaza due to lack of fuel as of May 24, according to Khalidi. Meanwhile, health workers in the enclave reported to her that they saw "children with symptoms of malnutrition and severe acute malnutrition" and "numerous cases of severe diarrhea." Children are "so hungry that they're too weak to cry," she said. Belliveau said that, as of May 23, no MedGlobal trucks had gotten into Gaza, and overall, far less than the promised 100 trucks had reached Gazans. The organization's doctors and nurses are already on the ground, but they need MedGlobal's medicine and therapeutic food to be allowed in, he said. "The real solution here is to lift the blockade and just let us do our do our jobs," he said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store