At that time UNGA resolution 37/43 removed any doubt or debate over the lawful entitlement of occupied people to resist occupying forces by any and all lawful means. This imprecision was to change on December 3, 1982. The term “armed struggle” was implied without precise definition in that resolution and many other early ones that upheld the right of indigenous persons to evict an occupier. ![]() ![]() In relevant part, the resolution not only went on to affirm the right “to self-determination, freedom and independence of peoples forcibly deprived of that right, particularly peoples under colonial and racist regimes or other forms of alien domination” but noted the right of the occupied to “struggle … and to seek and receive support” in that effort. Indeed, as early as 1974, resolution 3314 of the UNGA prohibited states from “any military occupation, however temporary”. WATCH: Israeli occupation ‘intensifying’ 50 years after war with Arab nations (2:59)įinding evolving vitality in humanitarian law, for decades the General Assembly of the United Nations (UNGA) – once described as the collective conscience of the world – has noted the right of peoples to self-determination, independence and human rights.
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