Dutch court to rule on export of F-35 parts to Israel

On Friday, a Dutch court will decide whether to order the Dutch government to cease providing spare parts for F-35 fighter jets that Israel is using over the Gaza Strip.

The complaint was initiated by a number of human rights organizations, who claim that Israel’s campaign against Hamas has resulted in breaches of international law, for which the parts supplier is partly responsible.

The dispute involves US-owned F-35 parts that are kept in a Dutch storage and subsequently exported to a number of countries, including Israel, in accordance with current export agreements.

One of the claimants, Michiel Servaes, head of Oxfam Novib, stated that these components “make it possible for real bombs to be dropped on real houses and on real families.”

Dutch authorities have said it is not clear whether they even have the power to intervene in the deliveries, part of a US-run operation that supplies parts to all F-35 partners.

“On the basis of current information on the deployment of Israeli F-35s, it cannot be established that the F-35s are involved in serious violations of humanitarian law of war,” the government said in a letter to parliament.

But Liesbeth Zegveld, human rights lawyer for the plaintiffs, dismissed this as “nonsense.”

She charged that the Dutch government was clearly familiar with what she termed “the enormous destruction of infrastructure and civilian centres in Gaza”.

Zegveld pointed to the government’s own export rules, which state that a licence should be refused if there is a “clear risk” the goods “will be used in the commission of serious violations of international humanitarian law”.

Government lawyers also argued that if the Dutch did not supply these parts from the warehouse based in the Netherlands, Israel could easily procure them elsewhere.

Now in its third month, the war was launched in response to the unprecedented attacks on Israel by Palestinian militant group Hamas on October 7.

It has since left Gaza in ruins, killing 18,878 people, mostly women and children, according to the Hamas-run health ministry.

International law experts have told AFP that human rights violations are likely being carried out by both parties to the conflict.

This article has been posted by a News Hour Correspondent. For queries, please contact through [email protected]
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