In Colombia, The Hague Group Charges Israel With Genocide
A multilateral coalition arrived to Bogotá to take
action to stop Israel’s genocide, despite U.S. condemnation and sanctions
against the UN and international courts.
Jul 15, 2025
BOGOTÁ, COLOMBIA—On Tuesday, ministers and officials
from over 30 countries gathered in Bogotá, Colombia to convene The Hague Group,
an international organization co-chaired by the governments of Colombia and
South Africa. The two-day conference will discuss steps forward for the
international community to stop Israel’s ongoing genocide of Palestinians.
The gathering comes amid heightened aggression from
the U.S. government against the “emergency conference” and one of its lead
speakers—Special UN Rapporteur for the West Bank and Gaza Francesca Albanese—as
Israel continues to sabotage negotiations between Israel and Hamas.
Dozens of government officials from around the globe
took to San Carlos Palace, the site of the Colombian Ministry of Foreign
Affairs, in downtown Bogotá on Tuesday morning. Cameras, mostly from Colombian
news organizations, pointed to the front of a large salon, with over two-dozen
flags making up the backdrop for a panel of speakers from across the world. The
countries represented at the emergency conference this week include Algeria,
Bolivia, China, Brazil, Iraq, Lebanon, Nicaragua, Oman, Pakistan, Spain,
Turkey, and Venezuela.
The Hague Group was created last year through the help
of Progressive International, an organization founded in May 2020 to unite,
organize, and mobilize progressive forces around the world. The Hague Group is
pushing for an end to Israel’s offensive, and has organized this week’s
emergency conference. Other organizations, including international human rights
groups and organizations advocating for Palestinian rights, are present such as
the Hind Rajab Foundation. Notably, Qatar and Egypt, which are overseeing
negotiations between Hamas and the Israeli government, are in attendance.
“There is nothing to negotiate about. Israel needs to
withdraw from Gaza totally and unconditionally,” Albanese told Drop Site News
during a press conference on Tuesday afternoon when asked about the
negotiations between Hamas and Israel. “This is the first thing. And then
Israel owes huge reparations to Palestinians for what it has done,” she added.
The conference marks an inflection point for how some
states will address the ongoing slaughter of Palestinians by Israeli military
forces. Some governments and officials are divided in their approach to
pressure Israel, with some officials more hesitant than others on whether to
call for the severance of diplomatic relations and whether to place sanctions
on Israel.
Some government officials will be meeting in private
during the week for high-level negotiations. Government officials from several
countries will all be meeting in closed-door sessions on Tuesday to discuss the
Hague Group’s proposed measures. It is unclear what those proposed measures
are, but they are likely to be announced on Wednesday morning during the
closing ceremony. In Tuesday’s closed-door meetings, Albanese presented her
expertise to international officials.
“The Bogotá conference will go down as the moment in
history that states finally stood up to do the right thing,” Albanese had said
in the lead-up to the conference. She called the formation of The Hague Group
the “most significant political development of the last 20 months.”
During Tuesday morning’s opening event, various
officials spoke, calling for an end to Israel’s attacks on Gaza. Colombia’s
foreign minister, Rosa Yolanda Villavicencio, said during her morning address
that Israel’s attacks constitute an unequivocal “genocide.”
The meeting comes amid heightened aggression by the
U.S. government toward the Hague Group, and the escalation of diplomatic
tension between the U.S. and Colombia.
In an official statement to Drop Site, the U.S. State
Department said it strongly opposed the Hague Group’s meeting in Colombia.
“The United States strongly opposes efforts by
so-called ‘multilateral blocs’ to weaponize international law as a tool to
advance radical anti-Western agendas,” a State Department official said. “The
so-called Hague Group—whose leading voices are South Africa and Cuba,
authoritarian and communist regimes, respectively, with deeply troubling human
rights records—seeks to undermine the sovereignty of democratic nations by
isolating and attempting to delegitimate Israel, transparently laying the
groundwork for targeting the United States, our military, and our allies.”
The U.S. will “aggressively defend our interests, our
military, and our allies, including Israel, from such coordinated legal and
diplomatic warfare. We urge our friends to stand with us in this critical
endeavor.” The Trump administration withdrew the U.S. from the UN Human Rights
Council earlier this year.
Annelle Sheline, a former foreign affairs officer at
the State Department who resigned in March 2024 over the slaughter in Gaza, is
attending the week’s proceedings. In response to the attempt by the US State
Department to bully participating countries at the emergency meeting of the
Hague Group, she told Drop Site, “These are sovereign states who have every
right to uphold their obligations as UN members, including under the UN
Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide.” She added,
“This is not the weaponization of international law. This is the application of
international law.”
Last week, Secretary of State Marco Rubio announced
sanctions on Francesca Albanese, who has strongly condemned Israel’s
U.S.-backed military assault. Rubio said that the sanctions on Albanese are due to her
“illegitimate and shameful efforts” to prompt International Criminal Court
action against U.S. and Israeli officials, companies, and executives.
“Albanese’s campaign of political and economic warfare against the United
States and Israel will no longer be tolerated,” he added.
During the press conference, Albanese stressed that
nations should sever ties with Israel and place sanctions on Israel. Regarding
the sanctions placed on her by Marco Rubio, she said, “it’s not about me. It’s
about the Palestinian people,” adding that it is symbolic. Although Albanese is
shaken by the actions taken by the U.S., she said, the sanctions are
representative of the ongoing war and U.S. complicity.
“There is hope that these two days will move all
present to work together to take concrete measures to end the genocide in Gaza
and, hopefully, end the erasure of the Palestinians,” Albanese said during her
morning address at the opening of the emergency conference, calling for states
to take significant steps forward to address the genocide.
Albanese called for each state to “immediately review
and suspend all ties with Israel,” and called on governments to review the
“military, strategic, political, diplomatic, economic relations—both imports
and exports” with Israel and to “make sure that their private sector, insurers,
banks, pension funds, universities, and other goods and services providers in
the supply chains do the same.” Albanese has recently issued a report naming
U.S. companies as complicit in Israel’s war.
“These ties must be terminated as a matter of
urgency,” Albanese added. “Let’s be clear: I mean cutting ties with Israel, as
a whole.”
Colombia: Host Against
Genocide
That the emergency conference is taking place in
Colombia is significant and symbolic. Last year, Colombian president Gustavo
Petro cut diplomatic ties with Israel, due to the genocide in Gaza. Petro, an
outspoken critic of Israel and the U.S., had faced mounting pressure by the
U.S. government as well.
During Trump’s first weeks in office, tensions
escalated between both governments when Colombia refused to accept a group of
deportees from the U.S., who were shackled and being transported in a military
plane. Trump and Petro engaged in a loud, public spat on social media, leading
to threats of tariffs leveled by both countries.
The brief flare-up was not a blip in U.S.-Colombian
relations. In recent weeks, tensions have radically escalated. In early July,
the U.S. and Colombian governments both recalled their respective ambassadors,
due to escalating tensions in both countries.
According to reporting from El Pais, former Colombian Foreign Minister Álvaro Leyva, who
had a public falling out with president Petro after he was investigated for
allegations of corruption, allegedly sought help from U.S. Republicans to oust
Petro. Levya was unsuccessful. In April, Leyva publicly accused Petro of being
addicted to drugs.
After the allegations of the attempted ouster
surfaced, Petro publicly criticized Leyva and the U.S. government. In turn, the
U.S. recalled its top diplomat for “urgent consultations,” accusing Petro of
promoting “baseless and reprehensible” statements. Petro then followed suit and
recalled the U.S. ambassador.
The Colombian foreign minister opened Tuesday’s event.
“Colombia has positioned itself without ambiguity: what is happening in Gaza is
a genocide,” Villavicencio said on Tuesday morning. “That is why this meeting
seeks to go beyond declarations. We seek to support investigations by the
International Criminal Court, demand commitment by the International Court of
Justice, propose specific sanctions, and mobilize every instrument that
International Law allows.”
International Representation
Other speakers on Tuesday morning included Riyad
Mansour, the Palestinian ambassador and permanent observer of Palestine to the
UN; Varsha Gandikota-Nellutla, the Executive Director of The Hague Group; Zane
Dangor, the Director-General of the Department of International Relations and
Cooperation of South Africa; and Dr Thaer Ahmad, a Palestinian-American doctor,
who has visited Gaza to treat victims.
Dr. Ahmad spoke openly about the devastation he
observed, while working at Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis and Al Aqsa hospital
in Deir El Balah last year. “First responders and paramedics are prevented from
doing their job or sometimes killed in the line of duty,” Dr. Ahmad said.
“Starvation and water is being used as a weapon of war.”
Mansour also addressed the conference’s opening. “The
core values we believed humanity agreed were universal are shattered—blown to
pieces, like the tens of thousands of starved, murdered, and injured civilians
in Palestine,” Mansour said. “Accountability alone is not enough for justice to
prevail in Palestine. We must deconstruct the regime of illegal colonial
occupation and apartheid to ensure that the current horrifying crimes do not
repeat. The best and most assured way to protect the Palestinian people from
more crimes is their freedom.”
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