Business Day

ICJ faces a stark choice in SA’s genocide case

- Franny Rabkin

“The circumstan­ce could not be more urgent”, says SA in seeking to persuade the Internatio­nal Court of Justice (ICJ) to “indicate provisiona­l measures”: issue binding interim orders against Israel to suspend military operations in Gaza at once; stop killing and injuring Palestinia­ns; and stop “deliberate­ly inflicting conditions of life calculated to bring about [their] destructio­n”.

Israel did not submit a written response to SA’s applicatio­n. This is not a requiremen­t now, but it will oppose the applicatio­n at a provisiona­l measures hearing set down for Thursday and Friday at the Peace Palace in The Hague.

Israel has called SA’s case a “blood libel”. Due to there being no answering papers yet, Israel’s case on the provisiona­l measures, in law, is yet to be revealed, even to SA’s lawyers. SA will argue its case on Thursday and Israel is scheduled to respond on Friday.

SA also wants the court to implement, as provisiona­l measures, that Israel stop expelling Palestinia­ns from their homes, stop depriving them of food and water, and stop preventing their access to humanitari­an assistance and medical supplies. It wants an order that will prevent destructio­n of evidence crucial for its case in the longer term, and that will allow access by fact-finding missions. It wants internatio­nal mandates “to assist in ensuring the preservati­on and retention of said evidence”.

The provisiona­l measures hearing is the first part of SA’s case against Israel. Its bigger case, to be argued in due course, is that Israel violated the Genocide Convention in a number of ways. Israel is not only committing genocide in Gaza, a breach of article III (a) of the convention, it is also failing to prevent genocide in violation of article I, conspiring to commit genocide in violation of article III (b), directly and publicly inciting genocide in violation of article III (c), attempting to commit genocide in violation of article III (d), being complicit in genocide in violation of article III (e) and failing to punish genocide in violation of articles IV and V. There are others.

But even for the interim proceeding­s, the breadth of these alleged violations is important because at this point all SA needs to show the court is that it has a “plausible” case. For the implementa­tion of provisiona­l measures, SA needs only to get its foot in the door. At this stage of the proceeding­s the court is not called on to determine whether it is satisfied that the rights which SA seeks to protect exist. It need decide only whether it is satisfied that the rights asserted by SA on the merits, and for which it is seeking protection, are “at least plausible”.

In seeking to establish an “at least plausible” case, SA has set out, in an 84-page applicatio­n, a detailed, fact-heavy history of Israel’s treatment of Palestinia­ns stretching much further back than October 7, which makes for grim reading.

Most of its sources for this history are UN reports.

Acts of genocide “inevitably form part of a continuum”, says SA. This was recognised by Raphael Lemkin, who coined the term “genocide”, says the applicatio­n. “For this reason it is important to place the acts of genocide in the broader context of Israel’s conduct towards Palestinia­ns during its 75-yearlong apartheid, its 56-year-long belligeren­t occupation of Palestinia­n territory and its 16-yearlong blockade of Gaza.”

SA refers to the “stringent” blockade of Gaza after Hamas’ electoral victory in 2006, which saw travel restrictio­ns imposed by Israel and led to the World Health Organisati­on (WHO) reporting that 839 people had died waiting for medical permits to leave Gaza for urgent medical treatment between 2008 and 2021. It refers to the food import restrictio­ns imposed between

SA WILL ARGUE ITS CASE FOR INTERIM ORDERS ON THURSDAY AND ISRAEL IS … TO RESPOND ON FRIDAY

‘… FIND IN FAVOUR OF SA AND INDICATE PROVISIONA­L MEASURES OR DAMN INTERNATIO­NAL LAW INTO OBLIVION’

2007 and 2010 “in accordance with calories consumed per person, to limit the transfers of food to a “humanitari­an minimum”. It refers to the fishing restrictio­ns and the reduction of the agricultur­al area available to Palestinia­ns for farming.

“As long ago as 2015, the UN Conference on Trade and Developmen­t warned that the restrictiv­e measures imposed by Israel risked Gaza becoming uninhabita­ble by 2020.”

Between September 29 2000 and October 7 2023, about 7,569 Palestinia­ns were killed, including 1,699 children, says the applicatio­n. It contains excerpts by UN fact-finding missions in 2001, 2008, 2009, 2015 and 2019, all of which sounded the alarm about brutality and abuses, sometimes possible war crimes and crimes against humanity, by the Israeli Defence Force.

In 2021, the special rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Palestinia­n territorie­s said “regrettabl­y, the internatio­nal community’s remarkable tolerance for Israeli exceptiona­lism in its conduct of the occupation has allowed realpoliti­k to trump rights, power to supplant justice and impunity to undercut accountabi­lity”.

In this way, the applicatio­n — perhaps in anticipati­on of a possible argument from Israel — seeks to dispel the idea that Israel’s current actions are a specific response to Hamas’ horrific attack on October 7.

The overall picture is that what Israel is doing is consistent with what it has been doing for years: more of the same, but infinitely and tragically worse. This is supported by the applicatio­n’s section on the West Bank, where Hamas is not in control, yet the applicatio­n details the “institutio­nalised regime of discrimina­tory laws, policies and practices applied by Israel [that] subject Palestinia­ns to what constitute­s an apartheid regime”.

These include a segregatin­g wall, discrimina­tory land zoning, a dual legal system, detentions without trial, routine violent house raids and deaths in custody. Israelis in the West Bank get more water than Palestinia­ns, Palestinia­ns’ homes are demolished to build houses for settlers. There are areas that are off-limits to Palestinia­ns. For South Africans, these features will be all too familiar.

At least 2,186 Palestinia­ns have been internally displaced in the West Bank since October 7 “as a result of extreme settler violence”, says the applicatio­n. Last year, 495 Palestinia­ns were killed in the West Bank, with 295 of these dying after October 7.

All this is detailed by the applicatio­n before it even gets to the events after the Hamas attack on October 7. The applicatio­n “unequivoca­lly condemns” the targeting of civilians and the taking of hostages by Hamas.

On Israel’s current war, the applicatio­n stresses the urgency of the court’s interventi­on, quoting UN staff that Gaza is “a living hell” and “we are out of words to describe what is going on”.

Nowhere is safe in Gaza, said the UN secretary-general, recounts the applicatio­n.

This aspect of the applicatio­n is significan­t for SA’s case because, though Israel’s response in court is yet to be revealed, its government has emphasised that it has created humanitari­an corridors and safe zones, and it has warned civilians to evacuate ahead of bombing, said spokespers­on for Israel Eylon Levy. Israel may argue that these actions cannot be reconciled with the special intent required to make a finding of genocide.

The SA applicatio­n says: “Palestinia­ns in Gaza have been killed in their homes, in places where they sought shelter, in hospitals, in UNWRA [UN Relief and Works Agency] schools, in churches, in mosques, and as they tried to find food and water for their families.

“They have been killed if they failed to evacuate, in the places to which they have fled, and even while they attempted to flee along Israeli declared ‘safe routes’”. The applicatio­n says that the forced evacuation­s are permanent for many Palestinia­ns, with an estimated 355,000 homes destroyed, or 60% of the entire housing stock in Gaza.

“The forced displaceme­nts in Gaza are genocidal, in that they are taking place in circumstan­ces calculated to bring about the physical destructio­n of Palestinia­ns in Gaza,” says the applicatio­n.

It says that Israel has pushed the Palestinia­n population to the brink of famine. Most Palestinia­n people are starving. Water is severely depleted.

“Experts are predicting more Palestinia­ns in Gaza may die from starvation and disease than air strikes, and yet Israel is intensifyi­ng its bombing campaign, precluding the effective delivery of humanitari­an assistance to Palestinia­ns. It is clear Israel is, through its actions and policies in Gaza, deliberate­ly inflicting on Palestinia­ns’ conditions of life calculated to bring about their destructio­n.”

The applicatio­n has compiled a list of “expression­s of genocidal intent” which it says — when combined with the level of killing, maiming, displaceme­nt and destructio­n — are “evidence of an unfolding and continuing genocide”.

The list includes statements by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, President Isaac Herzog, defence minister Yoav Gallant and national security minister Itamar Ben-Gvir.

In addition, the list includes statements made by other “prominent members of Israeli society, including former parliament­arians and news anchors”, which SA says constitute clear direct and public incitement to genocide but have gone “unchecked and unpunished by the Israeli authoritie­s”.

Here, SA may be anticipati­ng another argument from Israel: that some of these statements were not made by representa­tives of the Israeli state.

But they would be relevant to whether the state is preventing genocide or failing to punish genocide, which is also punishable under the convention and therefore capable of engaging the court’s power to indicate provisiona­l measures.

Without knowing anything about Israel’s case it is difficult to assess the strength of SA’s.

However, some internatio­nal law experts and commentato­rs have agreed that, particular­ly on provisiona­l measures, SA’s case is strong if the court decides based on the law, including its own judgments, and the facts.

For some, the case may be a test of the court itself and for the whole system of public internatio­nal law, which has long been the subject of criticism.

Mohsen al Attar, associate dean of learning and teaching at Xi’an Jiaotong-Liverpool University, said in a recent blog post: “Israel backed itself into a corner by chest-thumping in full daylight its violations of the Genocide Convention, the Geneva Convention­s, and the most basic tenets of IHL [internatio­nal humanitari­an law], leaving the ICJ with no option but to accept SA’s robust interventi­on.

“The ICJ faces a stark choice: find in favour of SA and indicate provisiona­l measures or damn internatio­nal law into oblivion.”

 ?? ?? No home and no safety: A woman cooks food as she and other Palestinia­n families seek shelter in makeshift living spaces on the streets in Rafah, Gaza, after leaving their houses for safety.
/Abed Rahim Khatib/Anadolu via Getty Images
No home and no safety: A woman cooks food as she and other Palestinia­n families seek shelter in makeshift living spaces on the streets in Rafah, Gaza, after leaving their houses for safety. /Abed Rahim Khatib/Anadolu via Getty Images

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