CAIRO INTERNATIONAL MEETING ON FOURTH GENEVA CONVENTION ADOPTS FINAL DOCUMENT
Press Release
GA/PAL/809
CAIRO INTERNATIONAL MEETING ON FOURTH GENEVA CONVENTION ADOPTS FINAL DOCUMENT
19990616 (Received from a UN Information Officer.)CAIRO, 15 June -- The United Nations International Meeting on the Convening of the Conference on Measures to Enforce the Fourth Geneva Convention in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including Jerusalem, was held at Cairo, Egypt, on 14 and 15 June 1999, and was attended by 100 Governments, Palestine, 5 intergovernmental organizations, 11 United Nations bodies and agencies, as well as representatives of non-governmental organizations and the media.
In the Final Document, the participants strongly supported the convening, at Geneva on 15 July 1999, of the conference of the High Contracting Parties to the Fourth Geneva Convention. Concerned about the flagrant violations, by Israel, of the basic human rights of the Palestinian people and the continuing settlement activities in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including Jerusalem, the participants called upon the High Contracting Parties to strive for concrete results by the envisioned conference. Following is the text of the Final Document of the Meeting:
Final Document
1. The United Nations International Meeting on the Convening of the Conference on Measures to Enforce the Fourth Geneva Convention in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including Jerusalem was held at Cairo, Egypt, on 14 and 15 June 1999, under the auspices of the Committee on the Exercise of the Inalienable Rights of the Palestinian People. Participants in the Meeting included international legal experts as well as representatives of Governments, intergovernmental organizations, United Nations system organizations and agencies, the Representative of the ICRC, the Palestinian Authority, non-governmental organizations and representatives of the media. The Secretary-General of the United Nations sent an official message to the Meeting.
2. The participants emphasized the importance to uphold and enforce the purposes and principles of the Charter of the United Nations,
international humanitarian law and human rights law. Participants stressed the universal character of the Geneva Conventions and the fact that their provisions have been accepted as norms of international customary law. They recalled that 1999 marked the 50th anniversary of the signing of the four Geneva Conventions and the centenary of the First Hague Peace Conference. It was, therefore, opportune for the international community to renew its determination to promote international humanitarian law further and to ensure the respect for the Geneva Conventions. The participants also referred to the adoption in Rome, last year, of the Statute of the International Criminal Court.
3. The participants in the Meeting were unanimous in their view that the Palestinian people had been subjected to flagrant violations of its basic human rights as well as their rights as protected persons under Israeli occupation. They expressed serious concern with regard to grave breaches, breaches and violations, by Israel, the occupying Power, of the Geneva Convention, including arbitrary detention, ill-treatment of and violence against civilian population, torture, summary execution, confiscation and destruction of property, forcible transfers and deportations, and the various forms of collective punishment, as well as the destruction of economic and social structures of the Occupied Territory. The participants noted that the above violations correspond to all the categories of problems that are contained in the Chairman's report of the Experts' Meeting of October 1998.
4. The participants expressed their utmost concern at the continuing settlement activities, which include illegal land confiscations, transfer of Israeli civilians to the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including Jerusalem, in clear violation of Article 49 of the Fourth Geneva Convention. Article 49 states that the occupying Power shall not deport or transfer parts of its own civilian population into the territory it occupies. This policy, aimed at expansion and annexation apart from being illegal, was deemed to be detrimental to the peace process.
5. The participants reaffirmed the existing international consensus on the de jure applicability of the Fourth Geneva Convention to the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including Jerusalem, in accordance with relevant General Assembly and Security Council resolutions. They also called upon Israel, the occupying Power, to fully comply with the provisions of the Convention. Furthermore, the participants recalled that the Fourth Geneva Convention, as an instrument of international humanitarian law, was applicable, regardless of national legislation of Israel, which is a High Contracting Party to the Convention.
6. The participants appealed to all the High Contracting Parties to the Fourth Geneva Convention to fulfill their obligations in accordance with common article 1 which requires the High Contracting Parties to respect and to ensure respect for the Convention in all circumstances.
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7. The participants strongly supported the convening of the conference on measures to enforce the Convention in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including Jerusalem, as recommended in General Assembly resolutions ES-10/3, 4 and 5. They also strongly supported that the High Contracting Parties convene the said conference on 15 July 1999 at the United Nations Office at Geneva in accordance with General Assembly resolution ES-10/6, overwhelmingly adopted on 9 February 1999. The report of the Secretary-General dated 14 October 1997 demonstrated clearly that the majority of the High Contracting Parties were in favour of the convening of a conference and recent consultations conducted by the depositary also showed that the broad majority supports the convening of the conference on 15 July 1999. The participants called upon all High Contracting Parties to actively participate in the conference.
8. The participants welcomed the consultations taking place on the preparations for the conference, including those conducted by Switzerland in its capacity as the depositary, and emphasized the need for the widest possible participation in those consultations.
9. The participants called upon the High Contracting Parties to strive for concrete results by the conference to be incorporated in a declaration or a resolution or both. In view of the significance of the matter, they urged the High Contracting Parties to make every effort to reach consensus in the conference, and in the absence of that, they expressed the hope that the decisions would be adopted by a vast majority.
10. The conference should emphasize the responsibility of the High Contracting Parties to ensure respect for the convention. It should reaffirm, among others, the de jure applicability of the Fourth Geneva Convention in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including Jerusalem, and, in view of the various Israeli violations of the provisions of the Convention, in particular its illegal settlement policy, call upon the High Contracting Parties to live up to their obligations under the Convention.
11. The participants expressed their hope that the High Contracting Parties would be in a position to take individually or collectively the measures they deem appropriate to ensure respect of the Convention.
12. The participants called upon the High Contracting Parties participating in the conference to establish a follow-up mechanism. This could take the form of a committee, possibly under the leadership of the depositary of the Fourth Geneva Convention, with the participation of the ICRC, to ensure the full application of the Convention. The parties directly concerned should be part of that committee and the High Contracting Parties may demand their full cooperation.
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