The ‘Economy of Genocide’ Report: A Reckoning Beyond Rhetoric
by Ramzy
Baroud | Jul
15, 2025
Francesca Albanese, the United Nations Special
Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in occupied Palestine, stands as a
testament to the notion of speaking truth to power. This “power” is not solely
embodied by Israel or even the United States, but by an international community
whose collective relevance has tragically failed to stem the ongoing genocide
in Gaza.
Her latest
report, ‘From
Economy of Occupation to Economy of Genocide,’ submitted to the UN Human Rights
Council on July 3, marks a seismic intervention. It unflinchingly names and
implicates companies that have not only allowed Israel to sustain its war and
genocide against Palestinians, but also confronts those who have remained
silent in the face of this unfolding horror.
Albanese’s ‘Economy of Genocide’ is far more than an
academic exercise or a mere moral statement in a world whose collective
conscience is being brutally tested in Gaza. The report is significant for
multiple, interlocking reasons. Crucially, it offers practical pathways to
accountability that transcend mere diplomatic and legal rhetoric. It also
presents a novel approach to international law, positioning it not as a
delicate political balancing act, but as a potent tool to confront complicity
in war crimes and expose the profound failures of existing international
mechanisms in Gaza.
Two vital contexts are important to understanding the
significance of this report, considered a searing indictment of direct
corporate involvement, not
only in the ongoing Israeli genocide in Gaza, but Israel’s overall
settler-colonial project.
First, in February 2020, following years of delay, the
UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) released a database that listed 112 companies involved in business
activities within illegal Israeli settlements in occupied Palestine. The
database exposes several corporate giants – including Airbnb, Booking.com,
Motorola Solutions, JCB, and Expedia – for helping Israel maintain its military
occupation and apartheid.
This event was particularly earth-shattering,
considering the United Nations’ consistent failure at reining in Israel, or
holding accountable those who sustain its war crimes in Palestine. The database
was an important step that allowed civil societies to mobilize around a
specific set of priorities, thus pressuring corporations and individual
governments to take morally guided positions. The effectiveness of that
strategy was clearly detected through the exaggerated and angry reactions of
the US and Israel. The US said it was an attempt by “the discredited” Council
“to fuel economic retaliation,” while Israel called it a “shameful capitulation” to pressure.
The Israeli genocide in Gaza, starting on October 7,
2023, however, served as a stark reminder of the utter failure of all existing
UN mechanisms to achieve even the most modest expectations of feeding a
starving population during a time of genocide. Tellingly, this was the same
conclusion offered by UN Secretary-General António Guterres, who, in September
2024, stated that the world had “failed the people of Gaza.”
This failure continued for many more months and was
highlighted in the UN’s inability to even manage the aid
distribution in
the Strip, entrusting the job to the so-called Gaza
Humanitarian Foundation, a
mercenary-run violent apparatus that has killed and wounded thousands of
Palestinians. Albanese herself, of course, had already reached a similar
conclusion when, in November 2023, she confronted the international community for “epically
failing” to stop the war and to end the “senseless slaughtering of innocent
civilians.”
Albanese’s new report goes a step further, this time
appealing to the whole of humanity to take a moral stance and to confront those
who made the genocide possible. “Commercial endeavors enabling and profiting
from the obliteration of innocent people’s lives must cease,” the report
declares, pointedly demanding that “corporate entities must refuse to be
complicit in human rights violations and international crimes or be held to
account.”
According to the report, categories of complicity in
the genocide are divided into arms manufacturers, tech firms, building and
construction companies, extractive and service industries, banks, pension
funds, insurers, universities, and charities.
These include Lockheed Martin, Microsoft, Amazon,
Palantir, IBM, and even Danish shipping giant Maersk, among nearly 1,000 other
firms. It was their collective technological know-how, machinery, and data
collection that allowed Israel to kill, to date, over 57,000 and wound over
134,000 in Gaza, let alone maintain the apartheid
regime in the West
Bank.
What Albanese’s report tries to do is not merely name
and shame Israel’s genocide partners but to tell us, as civil society, that we
now have a comprehensive frame of reference that would allow us to make
responsible decisions, put pressure on, and hold accountable these corporate
giants.
“The ongoing genocide has been a profitable venture,”
Albanese writes, citing Israel’s massive surge in military spending, estimated
at 65 percent from 2023 to 2024 — reaching $46.5 billion.
Israel’s seemingly infinite military budget is a
strange loop of money, originally provided by the US government, then recycled back through
US corporations, thus spreading the wealth between governments, politicians,
corporations, and numerous contractors. As bank accounts swell, more
Palestinian bodies are piled up in morgues, mass graves, or are scattered in
the streets of Jabaliya and Khan Yunis.
This madness needs to stop, and, since the UN is
incapable of stopping it, then individual governments, civil society
organizations, and ordinary people must do the job, because the lives of
Palestinians should be of far greater value than corporate profits and greed.
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