The Advocate General of the Dutch Supreme Court on Friday issued an opinion in favor of maintaining the ban imposed on the State from exporting parts of F-35 fighter planes used by Israel in the Gaza Strip.
In February, the Court of Appeal in The Hague ruled in favor of human rights organizations by ordering the Netherlands to stop the export of these documents, considering that there was an “obvious risk » that the devices are involved in violations of international humanitarian law.
Following this ruling, state lawyers appealed to the Supreme Court, which must now make a final decision.
Receive our daily edition for free by email so you don’t miss the best news. Free registration!
“The decision of the Court of Appeal in The Hague that the Dutch state must stop the export of F-35 parts to Israel can remain in force,” said Paul Vlas, general counsel of the Supreme Court , the highest judicial body in the Netherlands.
In his assessment, Vlas “based on various international regulations to which the Netherlands is a party, (and) the export of military goods should be prohibited if there is a clear risk” of violating them, said in a statement. communicated the Supreme Court, which sits in The Hague.
The case was brought to court by human rights organizations who argue that the exhibits “contribute to violations of the law” by Israel in its war against the Palestinian terrorist group Hamas.
The war against the group was sparked by the pogrom carried out by the group’s terrorists in southern Israel on October 7, 2023, during which they murdered more than 1,200 people and took 251 hostages to take them to the gang. from Gaza.
The Hague District Court ruled in December 2023 that the provision of the documents was above all a political decision in which judges should not interfere.
But this decision was then overturned by the court of appeal in February.
The Dutch Supreme Court has several advocates general, billed as independent jurors with “extensive professional experience”, who advise the court’s judges before a final verdict.
Although the Supreme Court is not obligated to follow this opinion, it has often been given serious consideration and could serve as a barometer.
“The Supreme Court will issue a decision as soon as possible,” the court said.
You are one of our loyal readers
We are glad you read X articles from Times of Israël last month.
This is why we created the Times of Israeleleven years ago (nine years for the French version): offering informed readers like you unique information on Israel and the Jewish world.
Today we have a favor to ask you. Unlike other media outlets, our website is accessible to everyone. But the journalism work we do comes at a price, so we ask readers who care about our work to support us by joining the ToI community.
With the amount of your choice, you can help us provide quality journalism while benefiting from reading the Times of Israël without advertisements.
Thank you,
David Horovitz, editor-in-chief and founder of The Times of Israel
Join the Times of Israel community Join the Times of Israel community Already a member? Log in to no longer see this message
Related News :