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UK is breaching international law by continuing to arm Israel, Sunak warned |

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The UK is breaching international law by continuing to arm Israel, Rishi Sunak has been warned.

Three former Supreme Court justices are among over 600 lawyers and academics who have signed a 17-page letter to warn the present situation in Gaza is “catastrophic”.

The government has been facing growing calls to suspend arms exports to Israel after three British aid workers were killed in an airstrike.

Image:
John Chapman, Jim Henderson and James Kirby all died in the airstrike

John Chapman, Jim Henderson and James Kirby were among seven World Central Kitchen aid workers who died when a convoy they were travelling in was hit on Monday – in what the Israel Defence Forces has called a “grave mistake”.

The letter warns that – given the International Court of Justice’s opinion that there is a plausible risk of genocide – the UK government is legally obliged to act in preventing it.

The signatories said: “While we welcome the increasingly robust calls by your government for a cessation of fighting and the unobstructed entry to Gaza of humanitarian assistance, simultaneously to continue… the sale of weapons and weapons systems to Israel… falls significantly short of your government’s obligations under international law.”

Ministers are also urged to work towards a ceasefire and sanction “indiuals and entities who have made statements inciting genocide against Palestinians”.

Politics Live: ‘Threat greater now than at end of Cold War’

Image:
The vehicle where World Central Kitchen were killed in an Israeli airstrike

Their letter calls for funding to be restored to the aid agency UNRWA, which was withdrawn amid allegations staff had participated in the 7 October attack orchestrated by Hamas.

And it said that “serious action” is needed to “avoid UK complicity in grave breaches of international law, including potential violations of the Genocide Convention”.

The signatories include the Supreme Court’s former president Lady Hale as well as former justices Lord Sumption and Lord Wilson.

There has been pressure within the Conservative Party to end exports – with MPs Flick Drummond, Da Jones and Paul Bristow urging the government to reconsider.

Lord Hugo Swire, a former MP turned Tory Peer, also wants to see the exports stop in the current context. He served as a minister in the Foreign Office under Da Cameron’s premiership.

Labour’s shadow foreign secretary Da Lammy said the government should publish any legal advice it has regarding whether Israel had breached international law – and suspend arms sales if there was a risk weapons could be used in “a serious breach of international humanitarian law”.

Read more:Who were the aid workers killed in airstrike?Gaza aid agencies suspend work

Calls for government action will continue as bloody war grinds on

Rob Powell

Political correspondent

@robpowellnews

When it comes to suspension of arm export licences, there are legal and political considerations.

The law is clear that export licences cannot be issued for weapons that may be used to breach international humanitarian law.

Reaching a point where ministers can definitively say that line has been crossed is difficult though, given the ample unknowns and uncertainties.

That is why the politics – both international and domestic – matters too.

UK arms licences to Israel made up just 0.02% of the country’s imports for 2022 and pales in comparison to what the US sends.

So while a suspension would send a powerful message, it would make little tangible difference.

Among Tory MPs, there are splits in opinion.

Foreign Affairs Select Committee chair Alicia Kearns has suggested export licences should be stopped and has called for the government’s legal advice on the conflict to be published.

However, one fellow Tory MP who also sits on her committee disagrees on both points.

Other backbenchers say restricting exports would be tantamount to abandoning Israel in its time of need.

But the respected former Middle East minister Alistair Burt says exports should be stopped to “sharpen up the debate” about where the conflict is going and pave the way for a lasting peace.

From Downing Street and the Foreign Office, there’s been a deafening silence.

Lord Cameron pulled out of planned media engagements in Brussels today, while the prime minister remained non-committal when speaking to a newspaper last night.

Some have been surprised by the increasingly muscular and critical tone adopted by the government towards Israel in recent months.

But as this bloody conflict grinds on, so will calls for ministers to go further in their language and actions.

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Killed aid workers transported to Egypt

The Liberal Democrats and the SNP have gone further by calling for arms exports to be blocked.

The government does not directly supply Israel with weapons, but does grant export licences for British companies to sell arms to the country.

The US remains by far the largest supplier of weapons to Israel, with Foreign Office minister Andrew Mitchell recently telling MPs that UK exports accounted for just 0.02% of Israel’s military imports.

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IDF statement on killed aid workers

The UK has twice suspended licences to sell arms to Israel in past decades – but the prime minister has so far resisted calls to do this again.

Speaking to The Sun, Mr Sunak said the UK has a “very careful export licensing regime that we adhere to”.

He said: “There are a set of rules, regulations and procedures that we’ll always follow, and I have been consistently clear with Prime Minister Netanyahu since the start of this conflict that while, of course, we defend Israel’s right to defend itself and its people against attacks from Hamas, they have to do that in accordance with international humanitarian law, protect civilian lives and, sadly, too many civilians have already lost their lives.”

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