The
International Court of Justice (ICJ) today began a landmark hearing to
determine whether Israel’s devastating war on the Gaza Strip amounts to the
crime of genocide. While the deliberations on that question could take years,
South Africa, which filed the lawsuit, is aiming for the ICJ to issue several
interim orders, including requiring Israel to immediately suspend its military
operation; a ruling on these provisional measures could be issued within weeks.
Whether or not Israel would obey is another matter.
In
an 84-page document submitted ahead of the
hearing, South Africa alleges that Israel has violated the 1948 Genocide
Convention — to which both states are signatories — because its current actions
“are intended to bring about the destruction of a substantial part” of the
Palestinian population in Gaza. At the time of the hearing’s opening, Israel
is reported to have killed over 23,350
Palestinians and forcibly displaced 85 percent of the Strip’s population over
the past three months of hostilities. The tightening of the siege since
the Hamas-led attacks of October 7 has also
resulted in conditions of severe starvation and the growing risk of mass death from disease.
In a move that bucks its longstanding proclivity for boycotting hearings at international courts, Israel has chosen to assemble a legal team to defend itself. Two decades ago, Israel refused to participate in an ICJ hearing concerning the legality of the separation barrier it had built in the occupied West Bank, and has likewise snubbed more recent proceedings regarding the legality of the occupation. Israel has also boycotted hearings into its conduct at the International Criminal Court (ICC), a separate entity from the ICJ which is located just across the street in The Hague…
https://portside.org/2024-01-12/will-icj-find-israel-guilty-genocide
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