THE UK Government’s response to Israel's genocidal attacks on Gaza has been branded “gravely inadequate” in a letter by 15 leading human rights organisations.
Global Justice Now, Amnesty International, Christian Aid and Muslim Aid are among the organisations that have written to Prime Minister Keir Starmer and Foreign Secretary David Lammy, criticising the UK Government’s response to Israel's attacks on Gaza and the blockade of humanitarian aid.
Last week, the Labour Government announced it had suspended talks over a new trade deal with Israel and placed sanctions on three individuals, two illegal settler outposts and two organisations supporting violence against the Palestinian community.
The UK Government also announced it would review its 2030 Road Map for bilateral relations with Israel.
However, it was revealed that the UK Government sent a spy plane to surveil Gaza just hours after Lammy announced that Labour had ended talks towards a free trade deal with the country.
The organisations behind the letter also argue that the UK Government’s “actions” do not “materially deter Israel’s atrocities in Gaza or address the state-sanctioned structural drivers of settlement activity”.
Those who have signed the letter have called for the UK to urgently enact the following “concrete actions to save lives and prevent further atrocities”, including:
- A suspension of all arms transfers to Israel. While the UK Government has suspended some arms licenses to Israel which it says could be used in Gaza, the vast majority remain in place.
- Suspension of the UK-Israel trade and partnership agreement (TPA). The text of the UK-Israel TPA, which provides privileged trade terms between the two countries, identifies “respect for human rights and democratic principles” as an “essential element” of the agreement. On May 21, the European Union, whose agreement with Israel contains an identical human rights clause, announced it would review its own trade agreement with Israel on this basis, and the signatories argue the UK must follow suit. Suspending the agreement would halt the privileged trade terms established by the TPA, with trade between the countries then conducted via WTO rules.
- A ban on trade and investment in Israel’s illegal settlements. While the UK Government’s position is not to encourage trade with or investment in Israel’s illegal settlements on the West Bank, it has so far refused to ban such economic relations.
The letter adds that “these measures should be conditional not only on an end to Israel’s blockade of Gaza, but on Israel’s full compliance with international law across the occupied Palestinian territory”.
It comes as the Israeli military continues its ground assault in northern and southern Gaza, and amid warnings from the UN human rights chief that Israel’s bombing and forced displacement of Palestinians amounts to ethnic cleansing.
Tim Bierley, campaigner at Global Justice Now, said actions speak louder than words and for as long as the UK Government keeps trading with Israel, it is complicit in the country’s actions.
He said: “For all its rhetoric, the UK’s response to Israel’s latest escalations and deliberate starvation of Palestinians in Gaza amounts to little more than a performative slap on the wrist.
“Actions speak louder than words, and as long as the UK continues to arm Israel and trade with it as normal, our government is deeply complicit in Israel’s actions. The UK must enact a full arms embargo and apply real economic pressure until Israel complies fully with international law.”
Kristyan Benedict, Amnesty International UK's crisis response manager, has called on the UK Government to use “all” the diplomatic tools at its disposal to ensure that international law is central to all agreements made with Israel.
He said: “The UK Government is still failing to challenge the root causes of this decades-long crisis and ongoing genocide, namely Israel's system of apartheid, the illegal occupation and a toxic climate of impunity.
“Now is the time for the UK Government to use all economic, political and diplomatic tools at its disposal to ensure that international law is central to all bilateral and multilateral agreements with Israel so these do not contribute to genocide or other crimes under international law.”
Charles Lawley, director of communications and advocacy at Action For Humanity, added that the solution for Starmer’s government is clear: end all arms transfers and suspend all trade ties with Israel.
He said: “The UK’s latest measures do nothing to ease the suffering in Gaza and offer only the illusion of action while lives are lost. This pattern of half measures is not new, but it must end.
"In the face of famine and mass bombardment, symbolic gestures are not just inadequate; they are a betrayal of the UK’s legal and moral obligations.
“The solutions are clear: end arms transfers to Israel and suspend all trade tied to the occupation. The Government’s refusal to act decisively, despite knowing what’s required, is a wilful evasion of responsibility – one that signals an awareness of complicity in atrocity.”
A spokesperson for the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office said: “We stand firmly against Israel’s resumption of military action in Gaza, its inadequate plan for aid delivery, and we continue to demand that a full and unhindered resumption in the flow of aid into Gaza takes place immediately.
“If Israel does not cease the renewed military offensive and lift its restrictions on humanitarian aid, we will take further concrete actions in response.”