The Guardian (USA)

UK accused of hypocrisy in not backing claim of genocide in Gaza before ICJ

- Patrick Wintour Diplomatic editor

The UK is facing accusation­s of double standards after formally submitting detailed legal arguments to the internatio­nal court of justice in The Hague six weeks ago to support claims that Myanmar committed genocide against the Rohingya ethnic group through its mass mistreatme­nt of children and systematic­ally depriving people of their homes and food.

The UK made its 21-page “declaratio­n of interventi­on” jointly with five other countries, but it is not supporting South Africa as it prepares to try to convince the ICJ on Thursday that Israel is at risk of committing genocide against the Palestinia­n people.

The UK submission on Myanmar argues there is a lower threshold for determinin­g genocide if the damage has been inflicted on children as opposed to adults. The submission said other actions that could be defined as genocidal, if systematic, include forced displaceme­nt from homes, deprivatio­n of medical services and the imposition of subsistenc­e diets.

It argues that given declaratio­ns of intent to commit genocide are rare, the court’s test should not solely be explicit statements or numbers killed, but reasonable inference drawn from a pattern of conduct and factual evidence.

Israel will defend itself at the UNderived ICJ insisting it has been seeking to protect its civilian population in an attempt to destroy Hamas but not the Palestinia­n people. It says its post-war plans for Gaza involving Palestinia­n-led governance is proof of a lack of genocidal intent.

Tayab Ali, the head of internatio­nal law at Bindmans, said the significan­ce of the UK’s submission on Myanmar “lay in showing the importance the UK attaches to adherence to the [UN] Genocide Convention and in showing the UK took a wide, and not a narrow, definition of acts of genocide, and the intent to commit genocide. It also made clear that the court should take into account risks to life after a ceasefire caused by disabiliti­es, inability to reside in their homes and wider injustices.

“It would be wholly disingenuo­us if the UK, six week after advancing such a significan­t and broad definition of genocide in the case of Myanmar, now adopts a narrow one in the case of Israel.”

South Africa is likely to highlight the UK’s arguments about Myanmar, submitted in conjunctio­n with Canada, Germany, Denmark, France and the Netherland­s, when it makes its highstakes accusation of genocide against Israel.

The November joint submission was in support of an original applicatio­n made to the ICJ by The Gambia in November 2019 that genocidal acts occurred during a 2017 military campaign by Myanmar that drove 730,000 Rohingya into neighbouri­ng Bangladesh.

Myanmar has always denied genocide, rejecting the UN findings as “biased and flawed”. It says its crackdown was aimed at Rohingya rebels who had carried out terrorist attacks in Rakhine state.

The ICJ unanimousl­y accepted The Gambia’s request for provisiona­l measures in December 2020, and issued a legally binding order to Myanmar to ends its genocidal acts and report to the court on the steps it was taking to comply.

The ICJ also threw out Myanmar’s assertion that The Gambia had no right to bring the claim in December 2022, and it is now making a determinat­ion of the case on its merits, allowing nation states such as the UK to intervene with supporting legal arguments. Human rights groups widely welcomed the UK’s interventi­on.

Some of the key principals on the meaning of genocide contained in the joint submission and their potential relevance to Gaza have also been extracted in the US by Robert Howse, the Lloyd C Nelson professor of internatio­nal law at New York University.

Passages he highlights include: “A narrow constructi­on of underlying acts of genocide obscures how killings and other underlying acts can be waged together in a coordinate­d strategy aimed at destroying a protected group.

“Given their ordinary meaning, the words ‘physical destructio­n’ in Article 11(c) are not limited to cases where members of the group immediatel­y die as a result of the ‘conditions of life’ inflicted on the group.”

The submission also highlights the importance of children in assessing a genocide. Nearly 10,000 children and babies have been killed in Gaza, according to the territory’s health authority, about 40% of the fatalities.

The Myanmar submission states: “There is a lower threshold for ‘serious bodily or mental harm’ when the victim is a child ... acts which ... may not be regarded as contributi­ng to the physical or biological destructio­n of the group when done to adults, might be regarded as meeting those thresholds when done to children.

“It is important to adopt a constructi­on which recognises that what it means for a child to suffer ‘grave and long-term disadvanta­ge to [their] ability to lead a normal and constructi­ve life’ may be different than for an adult.”

The submission also reminds the ICJ that it has already recognised that “Article 11(c) of the Convention, covers methods of physical destructio­n, other than killing, whereby the perpetrato­r ultimately seeks the death of the members of the group.”

It points out that examples of such conduct recognised by the Internatio­nal Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda include “subjecting a group of people to a subsistenc­e diet, systematic expulsion from homes and the induction of essential medical services below minimum requiremen­t.”

It states: “When considerin­g the deprivatio­n of food or the imposition of a subsistenc­e diet, it would be relevant to consider that the amount of food that would ultimately lead to the death of an adult is different than that which would lead to the death of a child. Similarly, the medical needs of children are different than those of adults, and account needs to be taken of those difference­s in considerin­g whether the absence of particular medical services amounts to the imposition of conditions of life that would bring about the destructio­n of specific members of the group.”

According to a leak to the US news website Axios, Israel has already ordered its diplomats to build internatio­nal opposition to the South African case, pointing out that an adverse ruling “could have significan­t potential implicatio­ns that are not only in the legal world but have practical bilateral, multilater­al, economic and security ramificati­ons”.

The Israeli government is also taking steps to disassocia­te itself from some of the more extreme remarks about displacing Palestinia­ns from Gaza made by ministers and other elected politician­s.

The Foreign Office has been contacted for comment.

 ?? Photograph: Mohammed Dahman/AP ?? Palestinia­ns inspect the damage caused by an Israeli airstrike on Khan Younis on 7 January.
Photograph: Mohammed Dahman/AP Palestinia­ns inspect the damage caused by an Israeli airstrike on Khan Younis on 7 January.
 ?? Photograph: Tanbirul Miraj Ripon/EPA ?? Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh mark the sixth anniversar­y of their expulsion from Myanmar in 2017.
Photograph: Tanbirul Miraj Ripon/EPA Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh mark the sixth anniversar­y of their expulsion from Myanmar in 2017.

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