An economy of genocide: Israel and Francesca Albanese鈥檚 report

July 9, 2025
Issue 
Israel鈥檚 genocidal bombing campaign has forcibly displaced millions of Gazans. Photo: Jaber Jehad Badwan/Wikimedia Commons. Inset: Francesca Albanese

Francesca Albanese鈥檚 report for the United Nations Human Rights Council, titled聽, makes for stark and dark reading.

Authored by the relentless Special Rapporteur on Human Rights in the Palestinian territories occupied since 1967, it proves an unflinching assessment and warning to companies doing business with Israel.

Albanese鈥檚 useful investigation examines the corporate world and its links to the settler-colonial program of removing and displacing a pre-existing population.

State conquest involves not only civilian bureaucracies and high-ranking military commanders, but the corporate sector, eager to make a profit.

鈥淐olonial endeavours and associated genocides,鈥 writes Albanese, 鈥渉ave historically been driven and enabled by the corporate sector. Commercial interests have contributed to the dispossession of Indigenous peoples of their lands 鈥 a mode of domination known as 鈥榗olonial racial capitalism鈥.鈥

She scrutinises eight private sectors: arms manufacturers; tech firms; building and construction entities; those industries concerned with extraction and services; banks; pension funds; insurers; universities; and charities.

鈥淭hese entities enable the denial of self-determination and other structural violations in the occupied Palestinian territory, including occupation, annexation and crimes of apartheid and genocide, as well as a long list of ancillary crimes and human rights violations, from discrimination, wanton destruction, forced displacement and pillage to extrajudicial killing and starvation,鈥 Albanese writes.

Central to the multifaceted economy of genocide, the report charges, is the military-industrial complex that forms 鈥渢he economic backbone of the State鈥. Albanese cites the F-35 fighter jet, developed by US-based Lockheed Martin, in collaboration with hundreds of other companies, 鈥渋ncluding Italian manufacturer Leonardo S.p.A, and eight States鈥.

Israel鈥檚 colonisation and displacement, aided by the private sector, since October 2023, has a new urgency. Last year, US$200 million was advanced for 鈥渃olony construction鈥. Between November 2023 and October last year, 57 new colonies and outposts were established 鈥渨ith Israeli and international companies supplying machinery, raw materials and logistical support鈥.

Examples include the maintenance and expansion of the Jerusalem Light Rail Red Line, the construction of the new Green Line, encompassing 27 kilometres of new tracks and 50 stations in the West Bank. This infrastructure has proven to be invaluable in linking the colonial project to West Jerusalem.

Despite some companies withdrawing from the project 鈥渙wing to international pressure鈥, an entity such as the Spanish/Basque Construcciones y Auxiliar de Ferrocarriles has been a keen participant, along with suppliers of excavating machinery (South Korea鈥檚 Doosan and Sweden鈥檚 Volvo Group) and providers of materials for the light-rail bridge (Germany鈥檚 Heidelberg Materials AG).

Beyond the structural and physical program of construction and displacement, all designed to extinguish any semblance of self-determination on the part of the Palestinians, come other features of the colonial project.

A prominent feature of this, Albanese notes, is that of 鈥渟urveillance and carcerality鈥. Repressing Palestinians has become a 鈥減rogressively automated鈥 affair, with tech companies feeding Israel鈥檚 voracious security appetite with 鈥渦nparalleled developments in carceral and surveillance devices鈥, some of which include closed-circuit television networks, biometric surveillance, advanced tech checkpoint networks, drone surveillance and cloud computing.

Palantir Technologies, a specialist in software platforms, comes in for a special mention. 鈥淭here are reasonable grounds to believe Palantir has provided automatic predictive policing technology, core defence infrastructure for rapid and scale-up construction and deployment of military software, and its Artificial Intelligence Platform, which allows real-time battlefield data integration for automated decision making.鈥

The dance of dissimulation began after the report was released.

迟辞濒诲听Middle East Eye聽that foreign military sales were not its preserve. Such sales took place between governments, it said, meaning that the United States government would be best placed to answer questions.

In a more direct fashion, Israel and the US have continued their 鈥淗ate Albanese鈥 campaign, reiterating old accusations while adopting novel interpretations of international law. Given Israeli officials and their US backers鈥 loathing of international human rights conventions, it is hypocritical in the extreme given the International Court of Justice鈥檚 (ICJ)聽聽of July last year, and the International Criminal Court arrest warrants for Israeli officials, including Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. These figure prominently in Albanese鈥檚 assessment.

According to the ICJ, all states are under an obligation to 鈥渃ooperate with the United Nations鈥 on ensuring 鈥渁n end to Israel鈥檚 illegal presence in the Occupied Territory and the full realization of the right of the Palestinian people to self-determination鈥.

Israel鈥檚 continued presence in the Occupied Palestinian Territories was illegal. 鈥淚t is a wrongful act of a continuing character, which has been brought about by Israel鈥檚 violations, through its policies and practices, of the prohibition on the acquisition of territory by force and the right to self-determination of the Palestinian people.鈥

The Israeli government聽聽the report as 鈥渓egally groundless, defamatory and a flagrant abuse of [Albanese鈥檚] office鈥.

础听聽from the Trump administration to UN Secretary-General Ant贸nio Guterres, obtained by the聽Washington Free Beacon, took issue with Albanese鈥檚 supposed 鈥渧irulent antisemitism and support for terrorism鈥, while taking a swipe at her legal qualifications.

US ambassador Dorothy Shea, acting representative to the UN, says little about international law in her missive, other than her dismissal of UN General Assembly resolutions and advisory opinions by the ICJ as lacking any binding force 鈥渙n either States or private actors鈥. Shea also claims Albanese 鈥渕isrepresented her qualifications for the role鈥.

She said accusations against more than 20 US corporate entities were 鈥渞iddled with inflammatory rhetoric and false accusations鈥, and the claims of 鈥済ross human rights violations鈥, 鈥渁partheid鈥 and 鈥済enocide鈥 constituted 鈥渁n unacceptable campaign of political and economic warfare against the American and worldwide economy鈥.

It comes as little surprise that the security rationale聽鈥 that says nothing of the Palestinian right to self-determination, let alone rights to life and necessaries聽鈥 marks the entire complaint against Albanese鈥檚 apparent lack of impartiality.

鈥淏usiness activities specifically targeted by Ms. Albanese contribute to and help strengthen national security, economic prosperity, and human welfare across the Middle East, North Africa, and Europe,鈥 Shea said.

Just don鈥檛 mention the Palestinians.

[Binoy Kampmark lectures at RMIT University.]

You need 一品探花, and we need you!

一品探花 is funded by contributions from readers and supporters. Help us reach our funding target.

Make a One-off Donation or choose from one of our Monthly Donation options.

Become a supporter to get the digital edition for $5 per month or the print edition for $10 per month. One-time payment options are available.

You can also call 1800 634 206 to make a donation or to become a supporter. Thank you.