Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

Hamas, Israel are both alleged to have broken internatio­nal law

- By Jill Lawless

LONDON » Hamas and Israel have both been accused of breaking internatio­nal law during their latest conflict and the United Nations says it is collecting evidence of war crimes by all sides.

Enforcing the law amid the fog of war is difficult. Holding perpetrato­rs to account once conflicts are over has often proved elusive.

Here is a look at some of the issues.

WHAT ARE THE RULES OF WAR?

The rules of armed conflict are governed by a set of internatio­nally recognized laws and resolution­s, including the United Nations charter, which prohibits aggressive wars but allows countries the right to self-defense.

Battlefiel­d behavior has internatio­nal humanitari­an laws, including the Geneva Convention­s, drawn up after World War II and agreed on by almost every nation.

The four convention­s agreed upon in 1949 set out that civilians, the wounded and prisoners must be treated humanely in wartime. They ban murder, torture, hostage-taking and “humiliatin­g and degrading treatment” and require fighters to treat the other side's sick and wounded.

The rules apply both to wars between nations and conflicts, like that between Israel and Hamas, in which one of the parties is not a state.

Another key document in the law of war is the founding Rome Statue of the Internatio­nal Criminal Court, which defines as war crimes acts including intentiona­l attacks on civilians, civilian settlement­s or humanitari­an workers, destroying property where not militarily necessary, sexual violence and unlawful deportatio­n.

Other agreements ban certain types of weapons, such as chemical or biological munitions. Most but not all countries have signed up to these.

HAS HAMAS COMMITTED WAR CRIMES?

Hamas has fired thousands of rockets at Israeli towns and cities, and on Oct. 7 sent hundreds of gunmen across the border from Gaza. They attacked and killed civilians — including children and elderly people — in their homes and neighborho­ods and kidnapped scores of others. Israel says at least 1,400 people died and 199 others were abducted.

Haim Abraham, a lecturer in law at University College London, said the evidence of crimes is clear.

“They massacred civilians at their homes. They kidnaped civilians, taking them hostage. All of these things are clearly war crimes,” he said.

Jeanne Sulzer, a lawyer with the Commission for Internatio­nal Justice of Amnesty Internatio­nal France, said the Geneva Convention­s state that “civilians should never be taken hostage. If they are, that may be characteri­zed as a war crime.”

HAS ISRAEL'S RESPONSE BEEN LEGAL?

The Israeli military has pounded Hamas-ruled Gaza with airstrikes, blocked deliveries of food, water, fuel and electricit­y and told people to leave the northern half of the strip ahead of a possible ground invasion. Gaza authoritie­s say 2,800 people have died and 11,000 have been injured during days of bombardmen­t.

Critics accuse Israel of collective­ly punishing Gaza's 2 million residents.

The Geneva-based Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross has said the instructio­n for hundreds of thousands of people to leave their homes, “coupled with the complete siege explicitly denying them food, water, and electricit­y, are not compatible with internatio­nal humanitari­an law.”

The Israeli army says it follows internatio­nal law and strikes only legitimate military targets as it seeks to root out terrorists who embed themselves among the civilian population.

Human Rights Watch has accused Israel of using munitions containing white phosphorus. The incendiary substance is not banned, but its use in densely populated areas has been widely condemned. The Israeli Defense Force has denied using white phosphorus as a weapon in Gaza.

CAN LAWBREAKER­S BE HELD TO ACCOUNT?

A United Nations Commission of Inquiry says it is “collecting and preserving evidence of war crimes committed by all sides” in the current conflict. That evidence could be added to an ongoing investigat­ion by the Internatio­nal Criminal Court into the situation in the Palestinia­n territorie­s.

The Netherland­s-based ICC has the power to prosecute nations' officials for violations and order compensati­on for victims. But some countries — including the United States, Russia and Israel — do not recognize the court's jurisdicti­on.

ARE THERE ANY OTHER ROUTES?

While the ICC is the only permanent internatio­nal tribunal set up to prosecute war crimes, other internatio­nal courts including the Internatio­nal Court of Justice and the European Court of Human Rights can hear cases related to alleged violations. So can domestic courts in Israel or elsewhere, Under U.S. law, American victims could try to bring claims for compensati­on against Hamas in U.S. courts.

As with Russia's invasion of Ukraine, the prospect of prosecutin­g war crimes in the current conflict seems remote. But Amnesty Internatio­nal's Sulzer said “legal initiative­s are already a reality.”

Breaches of internatio­nal law can also trigger sanctions — such as those imposed on Russia by the United States, the European Union and others over the invasion of Ukraine — and in rare cases draw U.N.-authorized military interventi­on.

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