The Business behind Israeli Settlements in the Occupied Palestinian Territory (OPT): a Case Study of the Surveillance Industry
What the worldwide practice has revealed is a deeper and deeper involvement of businesses, in particular corporations, in conflicts. Globalisation has offered companies new opportunities to exploit, including the unstable environment typical of conflict-affected areas, but at the same time has resulted in governance gaps that allow them to commit abuses without being punished. The Israeli/Palestinian conflict is not an exception. Thus, Israeli occupation and its most concrete manifestation, the settlements, have become profitable for Israeli and foreign corporations at the expense of Palestinians’ deprivation of basic rights. By operating in those territories, companies have been increasingly commodifying Palestinians’ sufferings and have become complicit in Israel’s breaches of international law. Thus, the contribution of businesses to the maintenance and growth of Israel’s unlawful settlement enterprise is well recognised and documented up to now and is so widespread to become a matter of international concern.
Throughout the years, Israeli settlements have increasingly become synonyms of Palestinian human rights violations. These neighbourhoods - designed to be purely Jewish and located in the most strategic areas of historical Palestine - are one of the main reasons behind the long-standing nature of the occupation. Thus, they create facts on the grounds, obstacles difficult to reverse. These areas delineate the physical boundaries of the biggest ‘mega prison’, where Palestinians are its inmates and where their conditions are marked by houses demolished and lands stolen, unequal access to justice and legal protection, restrictions of movement, and daily deaths and injuries. As stated by the UN High Commissioner of Human Rights in its 2019 Report on Israeli settlements in the Occupied Palestinian Territory (OPT), all these abuses amount to human rights violations and create a coercive environment, so unbearable to force Palestinians to leave their land. As a result, the Israeli neighbourhoods are acquiring more and more space, and an increasing number of Israelis are settling in an occupied territory – considered as a war crime under the Rome Statute. In turn, the expansion of Israel has developed in such a way to encrypt Palestinians in Bantustan, an archipelago of small, disconnected and overcrowded islands.
Video: The evolution of land grabbing in Palestine (by Conquer and Divide, a Joint Project of B’Tselem and Forensic Architecture).
Israeli settlements in the OPT have been not only a way to prevent the consolidation of a Palestinian state, but they have turned out to be an attractive recipient of foreign investments. The proliferation of companies in these territories is not accidental, but it is related to the nexus between the occupation and economy, well explained by the pioneering neo-settler colonialism paradigm. According to this lens, the framing of the Israeli occupation as a settler-colonial project – well adopted in academia – interconnects with the logic of Israel’s neoliberalism, by strengthening in this way the already existing dominance over Palestinians with the settlement enterprise. If the premises of decolonisation and of a slowdown in the settlements’ expansion – undertaken during the Oslo Accords – were crucial for Israel to be integrated in the global economy, now the settlements are needed to compensate the Jewish ‘losers’ of neoliberalism and to obtain more international investments. As explained by Clarno – who explored the political-economic aspects of the Israeli settler-colonial regime, ‘settlement construction creates tremendous opportunities for capital accumulation due to free land, low-wage construction workers from nearby villages, inexpensive stones and cement from West Bank quarries, and export-oriented agricultural and industrial zones that exploit Palestinian and migrant workers.’ In short, this market-based strategy of colonisation has enabled Palestinians to become disposable and Israeli settlements to attract a strong business presence.
According to the figures published by Human Rights Watch, Israel has 20 industrial zones that amount to 1,365 hectares in the West Bank under its administration. Israeli settlers have at their disposal agricultural land covering 9,300 hectares, and settlement businesses own 187 shopping centres inside the settlements as well as 11 quarries. Within this context, the incentives provided by Israeli administrations and the exploitation of cheap Palestinian labour are all factors that induce businesses to invest there and to benefit from the discriminatory policies in place in the OPT. Nevertheless, the resulting competitive advantage implies non-trivial human rights costs. In short, their physical presence on the territory has implied the unlawful confiscations and demolitions of Palestinian properties; the consequent disproportionate diversion of economic opportunities has led to a deterioration of the Palestinian economy; the job opportunities they have provided to settlers and the taxes they have paid to settlements’ councils have helped maintaining the settlement enterprise; their use of Palestinian cheap labour force has worsened the social protection of workers; by taking advantage of less rigorous environmental standards, businesses are contributing in making the West Bank a sacrifice zone, irrevocably impaired by environmental damage or economic neglect.
Video: Businesses Help Fuel Abuses in Israeli Settlements (by Human Rights Watch).
The companies’ capability to harm has never been under discussion, contrary to the extent of their international legal obligations. The illegality of Israel’s settlements under international law is on its way to reaching an international consensus, and so is the responsibility of businesses for their unlawful involvement under international standards. Thus, international humanitarian law prohibits the commission of war crimes that include unlawful acts like transfer and pillage, and since this corpus of norms applies to all the actors whose activities are linked to the conflict, companies cannot be excluded as legal subjects. The human rights framework is clearer in considering businesses as human rights duty-bearers. Specifically, the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights advance the concept of human rights due diligence also in conflict-affected areas. Furthermore, the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises boost the obligations of the home states, and establish the National Contact Points (NCPs) as non-judicial tools for implementing the access to remedies.
Therefore, when considering the concerning scale of business abuses in the OPT, it becomes crucial to evaluate how this positive trend in developing a normative framework for companies has been translated into concrete accountability. Accountability is a broad concept, which entails not only legal liability but also all the actions aimed at making perpetrators answerable for their misconducts, such as loss of reputation, denial of access to foreign markets, and shareholders dissent. Business accountability for their illicit involvement in the OPT is still a journey that is not complete. Still, several solutions have been undertaken at the international, state and civil society levels. For example, the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights released in 2020 a Database listing all companies with activities linked to Israeli settlements. This tool has proven to be valid to break the UN impasse on all questions related to Israel/Palestine, and to enhance transparency and accountability as an authoritative source. Even if it does not provide a comprehensive list and does not include legal implications, more efforts are required to update the database annually, and if effective, to extend it to other illicit situations around the world. At the state level, ensuring extraterritoriality is the key when a country like Israel is unwilling to cooperate. In this regard, non-judicial mechanisms like the NCPs and judicial tools like criminal prosecution and civil lawsuits are included in their cases businesses involved in the Israeli occupation. Although they rarely result in verdicts, in light of their financial, commercial and reputational impacts, these tools need to be further strengthened.
Video: A brief explanation of the National Contact Points (by OECD Responsible Business Conduct).