BRUSSELS, August 19, 2025 (WAFA) - General Secretary of the European Trade Union Confederation (ETUC), Esther Lynch, along with other European trade union leaders, sent a letter to Kaja Kallas, the High Representative of the European Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, calling on the EU to take decisive and immediate action against Israeli violations in the Gaza Strip.
“As European trade unionists committed to justice, human rights, and international law, we write to you with deep concern regarding the catastrophic humanitarian situation in Gaza and the ongoing actions of the Israeli Government,” read the letter.
The letter called on the European Commission to act on its own assessment and findings of violations, and advance immediate sanctions, including the suspension of the EU-Israel Association Agreement, considering Article 2 of the Agreement, which conditions cooperation on the respect for human rights and democratic principles.
The letter further called for ending all trade and economic relations with Israeli settlements in the occupied Palestinian territories. “These settlements are illegal under international law, as reaffirmed by numerous UN resolutions.”
The letter was signed by Esther Lynch, ETUC General Secretary; Judith Kirton-Darling, industriAll Europe General Secretary; Jan Willem Goudriaan, EPSU General Secretary; Jelmer Evers, ETUCE European Director; Oliver Roethig, UNI Europa Regional Secretary; Livia Spera, ETF General Secretary; Tom Deleu, EFBWW General Secretary; Enrico Somaglia, EFFAT General Secretary; Nigel Dennis, EUROCOP Head of Office; and Ricardo Gutiérrez, EFJ General Secretary.
The following is the full letter sent by European trade union leaders to Kaja Kallas, the High Representative of the European Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy:
Dear High Representative Ms Kallas,
As European trade unionists committed to justice, human rights, and international law, we write to you with deep concern regarding the catastrophic humanitarian situation in Gaza and the ongoing actions of the Israeli Government.
Trade unions across Europe have been raising our voices to ask for EU action about the unconscionable humanitarian situation in Gaza, the continued and deliberate obstruction of humanitarian aid, the large-scale destruction of civilian infrastructure, and the overwhelming civilian death toll in Gaza, including workers and trade unionists.
It is essential for the EU to use all tools available to bring about an immediate and lasting ceasefire, and to ensure full, unimpeded, and sustained access for humanitarian aid to the people of Gaza.
We are aware that the Commission has taken certain measures in relation to Israel’s participation in the Horizon Europe research programme that must be adopted as a matter of urgency. However, these steps fall far short of the comprehensive and decisive action required in the face of breaches of international humanitarian law and widespread civilian suffering.
Limited measures in the realm of research cooperation are not commensurate with the gravity of the situation on the ground in Gaza, nor do they reflect the scale of Israel’s government noncompliance with the human rights obligations enshrined in EU-Israel Association Agreement.
We recall that the International Criminal Court has stated that the starvation of civilians as a method of warfare is a war crime. In this context, the European Union’s legal and moral responsibility to act has never been more urgent.
The time for warnings and statements is long gone, the EU must take decisive and immediate action. We therefore call on the European Commission to:
• Act on its own assessment and findings of violations, and advance immediate sanctions, including the suspension of the EU-Israel Association Agreement, considering Article 2 of the Agreement, which conditions cooperation on the respect for human rights and democratic principles;
• End all trade and economic relations with Israeli settlements in the occupied Palestinian territories. These settlements are illegal under international law, as reaffirmed by numerous UN resolutions.
The EU must enforce a ban on the import of goods and services originating from these settlements and on export to such territories, ensuring that European markets are not complicit in the violation of Palestinian rights and the ongoing annexation of land.
As representatives of working people we call on the EU to take these steps and to use all measures to push for a just and lasting resolution to the conflict, based on a two-state solution and grounded in international law and the principles of peace, justice, and equality.
We condemn forced displacement and we join the calls for the release of all hostages. Israeli civilians and Palestinian civilians have the right to safety, dignity, and freedom from violence.
We also express our strong condemnation of the recent announcement by the Israeli government of an additional large-scale military operation to take control of the Gaza Strip.
We call on the EU to take urgent initiatives to put pressure on the Israeli government against such operation. Any steps or attempts at annexation or of settlement extension violate international law.
We urge the Commission to take these immediate steps in accordance with EU law, international humanitarian law, and the shared values that underpin the European project.
T.R.