The Herald (Zimbabwe)

More countries pile pressure on Israel at internatio­nal court

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THE HAGUE . — The United Nations’ highest court on Monday wrapped up historic proceeding­s into the legality of Israel’s 57-year occupation of lands sought by Palestinia­ns for a future state, with most voices at the hearing arguing against the Israeli government.

Over six days, the Internatio­nal Court of Justice heard from an unpreceden­ted number of countries and the majority argued Israel was violating internatio­nal law and called for the establishm­ent of an independen­t Palestinia­n state.

“The real obstacle to peace is obvious — the deepening occupation by Israel of the Palestinia­n territorie­s, including East Jerusalem, and failure to implement the two-state vision, Israel and Palestine living side by side,”Turkey’s Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs Ahmet Yildiz said.

The hearings addressed a request by the UN General Assembly for a non-binding opinion on the legality of Israel’s policies. The court says it will issue its opinion in “due course.”

Fiji was one of a handful of countries to argue that the court should refuse the request and directly mentioned the Hamas attacks that set off the war in Gaza and left about 1,200 people dead while Hamas militants also took nearly 250 others hostage.

“The events of 7 October 2023 have shown us what could happen if there were a complete and unconditio­nal withdrawal without the necessary arrangemen­ts in place to guarantee the security of Israel,” Filipo Tarakiniki­ni said on behalf of Fiji.

The US also cautioned the court against issuing an opinion, calling for an immediate withdrawal from the territorie­s. Acting State Department legal adviser Richard Visek said last week the judges should not seek to resolve the decades-long Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict “through an advisory opinion addressed to questions focusing on the acts of only one party.”

Palestinia­n Foreign Minister Riad Malki had previously urged the 15-judge panel to uphold the Palestinia­n right to self-determinat­ion and to declare “that the Israeli occupation is illegal and must end immediatel­y, totally and unconditio­nally.”

Though the hearings were held against the backdrop of the Israel-Hamas war, which has killed more than 29 000 Palestinia­ns, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry, it pre-dated this round of conflict and focused instead on Israel’s open-ended occupation of the West Bank, the Gaza Strip and east Jerusalem.

Late last month, the court ordered Israel to do all it can to prevent death, destructio­n and any acts of genocide in its military offensive in Gaza. South Africa also filed a separate case accusing Israel of genocide because of its actions in the Strip, a charge that Israel denied. – AP

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