National Post

Palestinia­ns join global Criminal Court

- By Linda Gradstein

In the latest move to press its case using the internatio­nal community, the “state of Palestine” was officially accepted into the Internatio­nal Criminal Court (ICC) paving the way for the court to bring Israel up on war crimes charges.

“Today is a historic day in the struggle for justice, freedom, and peace for our people and all those seeking justice worldwide,” Palestinia­n official Saeb Erekat said in a statement. “We call upon the internatio­nal community to support the inalienabl­e rights of our people, including our right to self-determinat­ion, by supporting our peaceful movement to end decades of impunity, occupation, and exile. Once again we call upon all nations of conscience to recognize the State of Palestine on the 1967 border, with East Jerusalem as its capital.”

The Israeli government responds that the ICC has made an error by accepting the Palestinia­ns.

“Israel’s position, similar to that of the U.S., Canada and others, is that the Palestinia­ns do not have a right to join the ICC, and that the ICC has no jurisdicti­on in this case,” the Israeli foreign ministry said in a statement. “There is not [a] Palestinia­n state that has been establishe­d by internatio­nal law. In this context the ICC prosecutor erred when she opened a preliminar­y inquiry against Israel.”

In January, ICC prosecutor Fatou Bensouda launched a “preliminar­y investigat­ion” into events since June 2014, including last summer’s fighting between Israel and Hamas that killed more than 2,100 Palestinia­ns and 70 Israelis.

Israeli analysts say that while becoming a member of the ICC is an important diplomatic victory, it does not mean that Israel will be charged.

“It is clearly harmful for Israel in the sense of PR and its image to have an internatio­nal court investigat­ing potential crimes,” Robbie Sabel, a professor of internatio­nal law at Hebrew University told Media Line. “But in actual fact there is little chance the court will take action.”

Palestinia­ns can try to bring a case against Israel for building in areas that Israel acquired in 1967, meaning the West Bank and East Jerusalem. Israel dismantled 21 communitie­s in the Gaza Strip in 2005. These three areas are what Palestinia­ns say must make up the future Palestinia­n state.

“The question of settlement­s in the West Bank is purely a political issue,” Prof. Sabel said. “I don’t think the court will want to rule on what are the borders of a Palestinia­n state and whether it should include East Jerusalem.”

The ICC was originally establishe­d to deal with actions that “shock the conscience of humanity,” and only in the case that the offending country does not investigat­e. The Israeli army is investigat­ing the conduct of the army during last summer’s fighting in Gaza, although some human rights groups say the army cannot investigat­e itself fairly.

An investigat­ion into the fighting in Gaza also lays the Islamist Hamas movement open to war crimes charges. A new report by Amnesty Internatio­nal found that Hamas targeted civilians when it fired rockets over the summer. It also endangered Palestinia­n civilians by firing from inside civilian areas.

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