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Israeli occupation 'illegal': UN top court

Oman welcomes ICJ’s opinion
The UN's top court handed down its view declaring "illegal" Israel's occupation of Palestinian territories since 1967, amid growing international pressure over the war in Gaza. — AFP
The UN's top court handed down its view declaring "illegal" Israel's occupation of Palestinian territories since 1967, amid growing international pressure over the war in Gaza. — AFP
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MUSCAT: The Sultanate of Oman followed the opinion delivered by the International Court of Justice (ICJ) regarding the request of the United Nations General Assembly to the ICJ on the Israeli practices that undermine the rights of the Palestinian people in the occupied Palestinian territory (OPT) including East Jerusalem.


The Sultanate of Oman has welcomed the ICJ’s confirmation of the illegality of the Israeli practices in the occupied territories as well as its affirmation of the right of the Palestinian people to self-determination.


In a statement issued by the Foreign Ministry on Saturday, the Sultanate of Oman welcomed the opinion of the International Court of Justice (ICJ) on the legal consequences of the practices of the occupying state, calling at the same time on the international community to enforce the international resolutions and charters and urging for an immediate end to the illegal occupation and an end to settlements and the cycle of violence in the Palestinian territories.


Meanwhile, the UN's top court, in a sweeping opinion, said that Israel's decades-long occupation of Palestinian territory was "illegal" and needed to end as soon as possible.


The ICJ's statement, called an "advisory opinion", is not binding, but it comes amid mounting concern over the death toll and destruction in Israel's war against Hamas sparked by the group's brutal October 7 attacks.


It is also likely to increase diplomatic pressure on Israel, whose lawmakers on Thursday voted to oppose a Palestinian state, calling it an "existential threat".


In The Hague, ICJ presiding judge Nawaf Salam said: "The court has found... that Israel's continued presence in the Palestinian Territories is illegal." Israel is "under the obligation to bring to an end its unlawful presence as rapidly as possible," the judge said in its finding, read at the Peace Palace, seat of the ICJ.


The ICJ added that Israel was "under an obligation to cease immediately all new settlement activities and to evacuate all settlers" from occupied land.


Israel's policies and practices, including the maintenance of a wall between the territories, "amount to annexation of large parts" of the occupied territory, the court said.


Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu slammed the ICJ's opinion as a "decision of lies".


"The Jewish people are not occupiers in their own land — not in our eternal capital Jerusalem, nor in our ancestral heritage of Judea and Samaria" (the occupied West Bank), Netanyahu said in a statement.


Palestinian foreign minister Riyad Al Maliki called it a "watershed moment".


A separate, high-profile case that South Africa has brought before the court alleges that Israel has committed genocidal acts during its Gaza offensive.


South Africa, in a statement, called upon the international community "to bring an immediate end to the occupation and the gross violations of international humanitarian and human rights law being perpetrated by Israel against the Palestinian people". — Agencies


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