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Fischer-Chauvel Agreement

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Fischer-Chauvel Agreement was an agreement made in 1948 between the French and Israeli governments involving the status of a number of French institutions in the newly founded State of Israel and claimed by France as "Domaine national français". The agreement was signed for Israel by Maurice Fischer (1903–1965), an Israeli diplomat in France at the time.

Israel holds the view that its 1948 Declaration of Independence created a new international personality which is not a successor state of the Ottoman Empire or the British Mandate, and consequently it is only bound by those former international obligations affecting the territory as Israel might accept.[1] Under Israeli law, the Knesset must ratify international agreements before they become part of domestic law, which it has never done in the case of the Fischer-Chauvel Agreement.[2][3] Nevertheless, Israel has maintained the previous tax exemptions and privileges of the sites claimed as Domaine national.[2]

The French claims are based on claimed acquisitions predating the formation of the State of Israel, specifically in the Accords of Mytilene of November 1901, the Agreement of Constantinople of 18 December 1913,[4] and the Fischer-Chauvel Agreement of 6 September 1948 – 31 January 1949.[2]

French Domaine national

There are four sites in Jerusalem claimed by France as Domaine national:

Incidents

The agreement was invoked by France in late 1963 in a so-called "Of Pigs and Men" affair, involving some 40 pigs being raised in the convent of Les Filles de la Charitė in Ein Kerem, despite a ban by Israel on such activity.[3]

French presidents have claimed that the Church of Saint Anne in Jerusalem remains under French protection, is owned by the French Republic, and is therefore a dependency of the French territory. In 1996, during Jacques Chirac’s visit to Jerusalem, the French president refused to enter the church until Israeli soldiers who accompanied him left. On 22 January 2020, French president Emmanuel Macron demanded that Israeli security services leave the church, also saying “the rules that have existed for several centuries”.[5][6] The Israeli government has not made any public statement relating to the French incidents.

See also

References

  1. ^ Commonwealth and Colonial Law by Kenneth Roberts-Wray, London, Stevens, 1966. P. 267.
  2. ^ a b c "Israel and the Holy See". 27 August 2021.
  3. ^ a b Cross on the Star of David: The Christian World in Israel's Foreign Policy, 1948-1967 (2005) by Uri Bialer, pp 117-119, ISBN 978-0253346476
  4. ^ https://themiddleeastandworldwar3.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/AGREMENT-ACCORD-DE-CONSTANTINOPLE-1913.pdf?189db0&189db0[bare URL PDF]
  5. ^ French President Macron orders Israeli police out of French church
  6. ^ "VIDEO. "Je n'aime pas ce que vous avez fait devant moi" : le coup de colère (en anglais) d'Emmanuel Macron contre les forces de sécurité israéliennes à Jérusalem". Franceinfo (in French). 2020-01-22. Retrieved 2020-01-22.
This page was last edited on 5 January 2024, at 07:31
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