The Jerusalem Post

Israel, Gaza, and internatio­nal law

Did Israel violate internatio­nal law during the recent Gaza demonstrat­ions

- • By ARI INGEL

Pro-Palestinia­n commentato­rs have been lambasting Israel over the course of the recent Gaza demonstrat­ions for violating internatio­nal law with proclamati­ons of war crimes and human rights violations. While a law degree apparently comes free with every twitter account, much of this talk is mere bluster with no foundation in the actual law itself, but rather, espoused with an intention to falsely vilify Israel and its leaders in the court of public opinion. As Pierre Beaumarcha­is once said: “Vilify! Vilify! Some of it will always stick!”

The two main bodies of the law that could govern the recent Gaza border unrest are Internatio­nal Human Rights Law and Internatio­nal Humanitari­an Law, often referred to as the law of armed conflict.

Human Rights Law would be applicable if Gaza was considered “occupied territory” under internatio­nal law.

According to internatio­nal law, a territory is considered occupied only when it is actually under the control and administra­tion of an occupant and extends only to those areas that the occupant is able to exercise such control. Additional­ly, if an occupying power evacuates from a territory, as Israel did in 2005, it ceases to be an occupying force once it retreats and the local population reasserts its authority.

In the case of Gaza, the people living in the territory live under Hamas administra­tion and control. It is Hamas law that governs the people’s lives and it is the Hamas soldiers that enforce their laws.

As a side, while Israel and Egypt do maintain a blockade of Gaza, that doesn’t equate to occupation. The United Nations’ Palmer Commission Report concluded the blockade was legal since Hamas controls Gaza and Israel is engaged in an armed struggle with Hamas. On the other hand, a United Nations panel found the blockade to be illegal since they argue that it is a form of collective punishment.

While there is always some level of legal collective punishment in all armed conflicts, these latter claimants are stretching the legal analysis of the term. For instance, there was near unanimity that the sanctions that were in place against Iran, and that are currently in place against North Korea, are legal despite the citizens of those countries suffering under sanctions aimed at their leaders. These forms of “collective punishment” against rogue regimes, which threaten to destroy their neighbors, as Hamas does with Israel, are seen as legal.

Nonetheles­s, under Human Right Law, lethal force against demonstrat­ors is prohibited unless unavoidabl­e in the case of an imminent threat to life or a threat of serious injury.

However, quelling a riot, such as those that happened at the Gaza border, is specified as a legitimate basis for the use of deadly force. This exception is explicitly stated in Article 2(2) of the European Convention on Human Rights and also outlined by the Internatio­nal Committee for the Red Cross.

Various rioters burnt tires, hurled rocks, threw Molotov cocktails, dispatched incendiary kites and balloons, planted IED’s, fired weapons, carried knives, charged the border fence, cut through portions of the border fence and even destroyed the Kerem Shalom border crossing.

Additional­ly, Hamas leaders made their intentions perfectly clear during the border riots. On April 6, Yehya Sinwar proclaimed that: “We will tear down the border and will tear out their hearts from their bodies.” On April 9, Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh stated: “Palestine and Jerusalem belong to us, we will break the wall of the blockade, remove the occupation and return to all of Palestine.” Then on May 13, Hamas co-founder, Mahmoud al-Zahhar, stated that calling the border protests peaceful resistance is “deceiving the public.”

Since Israel is most likely not considered an occupying force under internatio­nal law, the border riots are best examined under Internatio­nal Humanitari­an Law.

Under this body of law, deadly force is permitted during hostilitie­s, including against civilians who are engaged in hostilitie­s, while also allowing for the possibilit­y of civilian casualties.

The right to self-defense is enshrined in Article 51 of the United Nations Charter and in customary internatio­nal law. A country is allowed to take military action when 1) the threatened attack is imminent threat to safety 2) there are no other means to repel the attack and 3) the action is proportion­ate.

Taking each point in turn, as outlined above, there is no doubt there was an imminent threat to safety when taking into account the violent actions of the rioters, the threatenin­g rhetoric of the Hamas leaders and Hamas’ violent history.

For instance, when Hamas, and the other terrorist groups, had easier access to Israeli territory from 2000 to 2005, they perpetrate­d 144 suicide attacks, killing 605 people. This prior history, coupled with the actions of the rioters and the rhetoric of the Hamas leaders, posed a clear threat of imminent death.

Secondly, lethal force was only used after various non-lethal measures were not sufficient to eliminate the threat of imminent harm.

Unfortunat­ely, rubber bullets and water cannons have limited capabiliti­es due to proximity and weather-related issues. Nonetheles­s, Israel dropped pamphlets in Gaza warning the populous not to try and breach the border fence and to stay a few hundred yards away, they issued similar warnings via radio, social media and television, they fired tear gas to first try and disperse the crowds and then fired non-lethal lower body shots, all before using lethal force. Even then, Israeli soldiers shot using single fire rifles and not machine guns, grenades, bombs or helicopter gunships.

Thirdly, proportion­ality is not a question of equivalent body counts and the number of those injured. Instead, it is based upon the Israeli military’s assessment of whether the expected civilian casualties would be excessive in relation to the anticipate­d gain of preventing the breach of the border fence to protect its own citizens. The rule of “proportion­ality” relies upon intent, particular­ly in regards to collateral damage.

According to the Hamas run Palestinia­n Health Ministry in Gaza, of the tens of thousands of protesters bearing down on the border fence over a period of two plus months, around 112 people were killed and 332 people were critically injured. While even one death is tragic, the number of those killed and critically injured is a fraction of the number of people who actually took part in the riots.

Finally, the Israel-based The Meir Amit Intelligen­ce and Terrorism Informatio­n Center found that 83% of the Palestinia­ns killed during the violent demonstrat­ions were operatives of militant organizati­ons. They determined that at least 63 were from Hamas, which lines up with the reporting from Hamas itself, which stated that 50 of the 62 Palestinia­ns reportedly killed in riots on May 14, were members of the Islamist terrorist group. The fact is, the vast majority of those killed were members of militant groups dedicated to the destructio­n of Israel and were actively participat­ing in a violent attack on the State.

While anti-Israel activists will continue to spread their malicious claims of war crimes and human rights violations, those claims don’t hold up under internatio­nal law.

The author is an internatio­nal attorney, President of the Altalena Foundation and a member of the Creative Community for Peace. Follow him on twitter @ OGAride

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