Description
Why has Israel been abandoned by the United Nations?
What is the International Court of Justice’s objective towards Israel?What does the word “Occupied”, as seen by the International Court of Justice, technically mean according to their legal definition and does the court’s actions support the definition?
The author, Déborah Wolkowicz-Breillat, examines, first, what really happened during Israel’s Six Day War in 1967, after which the captured territories were called “occupied” and second, the judgment of the International Court of Justice, which set out to prove that it was justifiable to employ the word “occupied.” She clarifies the legal jargon of the International Court of Justice to verify if the principle of objectivity has been respected.In closing, Déborah Wolkowicz-Breillat writes: “When an Institution created to ensure that the law is always stronger than brute force, whose very essence is to respect the law, can lose itself so, it is an entire civilization which has lost its bearings.”
Maps are included. Also included in this book is the text of the United Nations Security Council’s Resolution 242 (1967), the declaration of the United Nations on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, and the ratings of 210 countries by Freedom House on people’s access to political rights and civil liberties, categorized by “Not Free”, “Partly Free”, and “Free”.
Déborah Wolkowicz-Breillat, with higher education in Law and History, is an activist for the defense of Israel. Self-taught on the functioning of the United Nations, she has been the Permanent Representative of an NGO to the United Nations in Geneva and New York.
- Publisher : Mazo Publishers (January 2, 2022)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 114 pages
- Author: Déborah Wolkowicz-Breillat
- ISBN-13 : 978-1956381009
Also Available at Amazon https://amzn.to/3Jkjw4h in Kindle Format
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