Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

War on Gaza: The fate of global justice hangs on South Africa’s ICJ case

The Internatio­nal Court of Justice will hear arguments next week on Israel’s genocidal campaign against the Palestinia­n people.

- &Ј 6˪Ͻ̛͘ o̧˪πωϓ

There is nothing rhetorical, tendentiou­s or partisan about the applicatio­n to the Internatio­nal Court of Justice (ICJ) in which South Africa accuses Israel of genocide in Gaza. The 84-page document has been meticulous­ly drafted by internatio­nal experts in genocide. It is packed with supporting evidence. It is carefully legally argued. It makes an overwhelmi­ng case with cold, brutal, hard facts.

It acknowledg­es that Hamas was responsibl­e for the atrocious war crimes against civilians in southern Israel on 7 October, but says nothing that took place that day can justify what has happened each day for the last three months against the population of Gaza as a whole.

The applicatio­n sets out the unanswerab­le case that the intent, policy and actions of the state of Israel, as expressed by statements from the holders of the highest political office in the land and by the actions and behaviour of its soldiers, are genocidal and directed at Palestinia­ns in Gaza as a group.

The document marshals the avalanche of evidence of premeditat­ed acts of genocide into seven main categories. It is worth listing them: The scale of the killing, which now exceeds 22,000 deaths, 70 percent of whom are women and children.

The cruel and inhuman treatment of large numbers of civilians, including children, who have been arrested, blindfolde­d, and forced to undress and remain outside in cold weather, before being taken to unknown locations.

The continual reneging on promises of safety, with Israel bombing areas it advised in leaflets residents to flee to.

The deprivatio­n of access to food and water, a policy that has pushed the population of Gaza to the brink of famine.

The deprivatio­n of access to adequate shelter, clothes and hygiene; Israel’s attack on the healthcare system has left only 13 out of 36 hospitals still partially functionin­g, with Israeli forces targeting hospital generators, solar panels, oxygen stations, water tanks, ambulances, medical convoys and first responders. The destructio­n of Palestinia­n life in Gaza—its towns, homes, apartment blocks, infrastruc­ture, universiti­es and culture.

Last but by no means least are the expression­s of genocidal intent against the Palestinia­n people by state officials, including the references by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to the Biblical story of the total destructio­n of Amalek by the Israelites, the statement by President Isaac Herzog that “an entire nation out there is responsibl­e”, and Defence Minister Yoav Gallant’s assertion that Israel was fighting “human animals”.

Real-time massacres

Giora Eiland, former head of the Israeli National Security Council and a government advisor, features especially large in putting into words what Israel is doing.

Describing Israel’s order to cut water and electricit­y to Gaza, Eiland wrote in an online journal: “This is what Israel has begun to do—we cut the supply of energy, water and diesel to the Strip … But it’s not enough. To make the siege effective, we have to prevent others from giving assistance to Gaza … The people should be told that they have two choices; to stay and to starve, or to leave. If Egypt and other countries prefer that these people will perish in Gaza, this is their choice.”

There are two features of the ICJ applicatio­n that deserve attention.

The first is that, unlike seeking redress for the most notorious events of recent history, such as the killing fields of Cambodia, the Rwandan genocide, or Serbian war crimes, the applicatio­n concerns a genocide that is happening in real time.

It is happening every day and will continue to take place if no outside power or court intervenes. The urgency of this applicatio­n to the ICJ is compelling.

But almost as important is the country making this applicatio­n. Both South Africa and Israel are bound by the statutes of the ICJ, and both are parties to the Genocide Convention.

More importantl­y, no country has done more than South Africa to prove that a liberation struggle against a despotic and overwhelmi­ngly powerful apartheid regime can succeed.

Like Israel today, apartheid South Africa was a nuclear power, with a strong army that crushed armed rebellion, and it, too, was supported by all the major western powers.

Apartheid South Africa killed itself through its own actions. A pariah state, it had in the end to surrender to the will of the suppressed Black majority.

Shrinking audience

Aware of the significan­ce of this applicatio­n, Israel has responded by absurdly accusing South Africa of complicity with Hamas, a group that is proscribed as a terrorist organisati­on in the UK and other countries—a claim for which there is no evidence.

Government mouthpiece Eylon Levy accused South Africa of being “criminally complicit” with Hamas’s “campaign of genocide” against the Israeli people.

“The state of Israel will appear before the Internatio­nal Court of Justice at the Hague to dispel South Africa’s absurd blood libel,” he said. “How tragic that the Rainbow Nation that prides itself on fighting racism will be fighting pro bono for anti-Jewish racists.”

White House National Security Council spokespers­on John Kirby described South Africa’s case as “meritless, counterpro­ductive, and completely without any basis in fact whatsoever”. And former UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson separately condemned a Metropolit­an Police investigat­ion into Israel’s war crimes, complainin­g about the “worrying politicisa­tion” of the police force.

Still, Israel is failing to get its message across, as other nations, such as Malaysia, Turkey and many others, line up behind South Africa. Most countries in the United Nations General Assembly have told Israel to stop its campaign in Gaza immediatel­y.

The plain truth is that no country is doing more to delegitimi­se Israel than the Israeli state itself.

‘Voluntary’ resettleme­nt

You don’t need a law degree to decipher what is going on. To get a sense of Israel’s daily output of hate speech, all you have to do is watch and listen to the videos of soldiers, singers, artists, and politician­s. They are no longer a fringe. They represent what mainstream Israel thinks.

They have become genocidal, racist and fascist when talking about Palestinia­ns — unashamedl­y so. They are proud of and joke about their racism, and do little to disguise it. Was this racism a recent creation, or was it lurking in the dark corners of discourse behind the — plainly false — trappings of an open liberal western democracy.

This is not a question that veteran Israeli journalist Gideon Levy can honestly answer. Levy told journalist Owen Jones, in reference to a poll showing that most Israelis supported the ethnic cleansing of Gaza, that Israel is now a country he no longer recognises. As Levy acknowledg­es, most Israelis are blind to what their state is doing in Gaza. They make no secret of their intent to destroy as much of Gaza as possible.

Behind the scenes, senior officials are reportedly in secret talks with Congo for the “voluntary” resettleme­nt of Palestinia­ns from Gaza. Saudi Arabia, Iraq and other states had been approached with the same policy in mind, long before the Hamas attack.

These carefully arranged contacts cannot be conceived as a reaction to trauma, nor are they merely the brainchild of the likes of Ben Gvir or Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich. Emptying Palestine of its people is a deeply embedded, long-term strategy.

If it is not stopped, Israel will continue on the same path, irrespecti­ve of what happens to Hamas.

The way forward

But even on this narrow point, history lends no support to a policy of targeting resistance leaders with assassinat­ion.

The killing of Hamas deputy leader Saleh al-Arouri in Beirut is being compared to Mossad’s hunting down of the planners of the massacre that took place at the Munich Olympics in 1972.

But the targeted assassinat­ion of Palestinia­n leaders is nothing new, nor patently does it succeed. The relief it provides Israel is strictly temporary.

Nearly two decades ago, Israel targeted Ahmed Yassin, a quadripleg­ic in a wheelchair, with missiles fired from a helicopter, as he was being wheeled to a mosque for morning prayers.

Just two years after his death, Hamas won the first free elections to be held in Palestine for many years. Both politicall­y and militarily, Hamas today is incomparab­ly bigger, more potent and more popular than the organisati­on that Yassin founded.

20 years ago, Hamas could never have withstood three months of continuous bombardmen­t and still be able to fire missiles reaching Tel Aviv. Its fighters could never have inflicted the casualties the Israeli army is currently suffering.

The assassinat­ion of Hamas leaders will only encourage a new generation of resistance leaders to step forward, each generation being more powerful than the last. To think otherwise is dreamland. And Israel is also targeting the people with whom it must one day negotiate.

The former UK Middle East minister and native South African, Peter Hain, has said that peace talks including Hamas are the only way forward for Israel and its allies.

“I write this from Cape Town where decent South Africans of all races and creeds are contemptuo­us of what they see as profound double standards by global north leaders—wanting backing for Ukrainian selfdeterm­ination, but being complicit in the denial of Palestinia­n self-determinat­ion and culpable in the horror in Gaza,” he wrote in the Guardian. “The geopolitic­al breach with the global south is deepening, and will cost Washington, London and Brussels dearly in an increasing­ly turbulent world.”

These are words that any western leader allowing Israel to carry on with mass murder can ill afford to ignore.

The ICJ has agreed to hold a hearing next week to discuss South Africa’s request for an urgent ruling. No hearing at the World Court in the Hague is more pressing. The fate of that endangered species called internatio­nal justice depends on it.

 ?? AFP ?? People bury their dead who died in Israeli bombardmen­t in Rafah on the southern Gaza Strip on Friday.
AFP People bury their dead who died in Israeli bombardmen­t in Rafah on the southern Gaza Strip on Friday.

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