The Jerusalem Post

Israel warns of ‘consequenc­es’ for Palestinia­ns if they pursue ICC suits

- • By LAHAV HARKOV

Ties between Jerusalem and Ramallah will not be “business as usual,” in light of the Palestinia­n Authority’s successful appeal to have the Internatio­nal Criminal Court investigat­e Israel for alleged war crimes, a senior Israeli official said on Monday.

“The Palestinia­n leadership has to understand there are consequenc­es for their actions,” the Israeli official said.

Asked if Israel rejected recent proposals by other countries to launch joint economic projects with the Palestinia­ns unless the PA says it will not cooperate with the ICC, as first reported by KAN, the official said: “For them to suppose that they can go to the ICC and it will be business as usual from Israel is a very questionab­le propositio­n.”

The remarks came a day after the Shin Bet (Israel Security Agency) confiscate­d PA Foreign

Minister Riad Malki’s VIP border crossing pass, upon his return from a meeting at the ICC in The Hague. Malki retains his rights as a resident of the PA, but will no longer have any special privileges that had been granted to him as a top official.

“No one has limited his freedom of movement,” the official said, “but he is using the extra privileges he received from Israel to seek to prevent the freedom of movement from Israelis as we travel abroad. Did he really expect us just to sit on our hands?”

Sources in the Foreign and Defense ministries said the move to confiscate Malki’s VIP status was not coordinate­d with them. The Shin Bet, which is under the auspices of the Prime Minister’s Office, declined to comment on the matter.

Meanwhile, the National Security Council has reportedly made recommenda­tions opposite

to sanctionin­g Palestinia­n officials and blocking projects to further cooperatio­n with the

PA.

One of the NSC’s three major recommenda­tions is to “send a message to the world that there is an opportunit­y to renew negotiatio­ns with the Palestinia­ns,” Channel 12 reported.

The others are to behave cautiously when it comes to constructi­on in Judea and Samaria, and the third is not to evacuate the illegal Bedouin encampment at Khan al-Ahmar, on West Bank land controlled by Israel.

Earlier this month, ICC Prosecutor Fatou Bensouda announced that she is opening a war crimes investigat­ion against

Israel and Hamas. The probe is expected to include 2014’s Operation Protective Edge, the riots at the Gaza border in 2018, the settlement enterprise and Hamas rocket attacks on Israeli civilians. Among the senior officials who could be vulnerable to war crimes suits are Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Defense Minister Benny Gantz, who was IDF chief of staff in 2014, and others.

The Palestinia­n Authority, which the ICC recognizes as a member state, initiated Bensouda’s preliminar­y inquiry that led to the official investigat­ion.

 ?? (Reuters) ?? PALESTINIA­N DEMONSTRAT­ORS demand the right to return to their homeland, at the Israel-Gaza border east of Gaza City in April 2018.
(Reuters) PALESTINIA­N DEMONSTRAT­ORS demand the right to return to their homeland, at the Israel-Gaza border east of Gaza City in April 2018.

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