Three rights groups file ICC lawsuit against Israel over Gaza ‘genocide’
The lawsuit urges the ICC to include ‘genocide’ in
Gaza war crimes inquiry and issue arrest warrants for Israel’s leaders.
9 Nov 2023
Three Palestinian rights groups have filed a lawsuit
with the International Criminal Court (ICC), urging the body to investigate
Israel for “apartheid” as well as “genocide” and issue arrest warrants for
Israeli leaders.
The lawsuit, filed on Wednesday by human rights
organisations Al-Haq, Al Mezan, and the Palestinian Centre for Human Rights,
called for “urgent attention to the continuous barrage of Israeli airstrikes on
densely populated civilian areas within the Gaza Strip”, which have killed more
than 10,500 Palestinians, almost half of them children, according to Gaza
health officials.
The document also asked the body to expand its ongoing
war crimes investigation by looking into “the suffocating siege imposed on
[Gaza], the forced displacement of its population, the use of toxic gas, and
the denial of necessities, such as food, water, fuel, and electricity”.
These acts amount to “war crimes” and “crimes against
humanity”, including “genocide”, the lawsuit said.
The three groups want arrest warrants to be issued
against Israel’s President Isaac Herzog, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and
Defence Minister Yoav Gallant.
The ICC’s Office of the Prosecutor (OTP) opened an official investigation into the situation in
Palestine in 2021 after determining that “war crimes have been or are being
committed by Palestinian and Israeli actors in the West Bank, including East
Jerusalem, and the Gaza Strip”.
However, the group has faced criticism from rights
groups and activists who say its response to ongoing Israeli attacks in Gaza
have been tepid.
In the latest ICC filing, the rights groups’ lawyer,
Emmanuel Daoud, referenced the ICC’s ruling against Russia’s President Vladimir Putin for war crimes
in Ukraine, and said there was “no room for double standards in international
justice”.
“Whether war crimes are committed in Ukraine or
Palestine, the culprits should be held to account,” said Daoud.
This is not the first time a file against Israel has
been brought to the ICC during its one-month war in Gaza.
On October 31, Reporters Without Borders (RSF)
submitted a complaint to the body alleging Israel had perpetrated war crimes
against journalists in Gaza.
As of Thursday, Israeli attacks have killed at least
39 journalists since October 7, according to figures from press freedom group
Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), 34 of whom were Palestinian, four were
Israeli, and one was Lebanese.
‘Criminal responsibility’
ICC Prosecutor Karim Khan pointed to additional possible crimes when he visited
Egypt’s Rafah border crossing on October 29, saying impeding humanitarian aid
from reaching civilians could be prosecuted under the Rome Statute.
“There should not be any impediment to humanitarian
relief supplies going to children, to women and men, civilians,” Khan said.
“They are innocent, they have rights under
international humanitarian law. These rights are part of the Geneva
Conventions, and they give rise to even criminal responsibility when these
rights are curtailed under the Rome Statute.”
Israel, which is not a member of the ICC, has
previously rejected the court’s jurisdiction and does not formally engage with
the court.
The ICC’s founding Rome Statute gives it legal
authority to investigate alleged crimes on the territory of its members or by
their nationals when domestic authorities are “unwilling or unable” to do so.
On October 10, the office of the prosecutor of
the ICC said its mandate applies to potential crimes
committed in the current conflict.
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