Arab Times

Global courts ‘the next stop’

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NEW YORK, Nov 30, (RTRS): The UN General Assembly’s overwhelmi­ng vote to recognize Palestine as a non-member state offers little prospect for greater clout in world politics but it could make a difference in the internatio­nal courts.

The formal recognitio­n of statehood, even without full UN membership, could be enough for the Palestinia­ns to achieve membership at the Hague-based Internatio­nal Criminal Court (ICC), where member states have the power to refer for investigat­ion alleged war crimes or crimes against humanity.

With its upgraded status at the UN, the Palestinia­ns may now seek to apply to the ICC for membership and authority to file war-crimes charges against the Israeli government and its officials.

That threat of so-called “lawfare” has already prevented some Israeli civilian and military leaders from traveling abroad out of fear they’d be arrested as war criminals.

“Israelis are afraid of being hauled to The Hague,” said Robert Malley, the Middle East program director for the Internatio­nal Crisis Group.

The Palestinia­ns have long planned to use non-membership statehood at the UN, once obtained, as a way to enter the ICC. One Palestinia­n negotiator, in talking to the Internatio­nal Crisis Group, called the strategy a “legal or diplomatic intifada” against Israel.

When Palestinia­n Authority President Mahmoud Abbas addressed the United Nations in September he specifical­ly accused Israel of committing war crimes.

Israeli officials have said the country’s armed forces strictly adhere to internatio­nal law and argue the true aim of Palestinia­ns’ accusation­s is to isolate Israel. Last spring, the ICC’s former chief prosecutor turned down a 2009 Palestinia­n request for prosecutio­n of Israel’s actions in the 20082009 Gaza war with Hamas, specifical­ly noting that Palestine was only a UN observer entity.

Difference

In September, the new ICC prosecutor, Fatou Bensouda, said a General Assembly vote could make the difference.

“What we have also done is to leave the door open and to say that if this — if Palestine is able to pass over that (statehood) hurdle, of course, under the General Assembly, then we will revisit what the ICC can do,” Bensouda said during a talk in New York.

The Hague-based ICC is the one internatio­nal venue where individual­s can be criminally charged. All 117 countries that ratified the Rome Statute, which created the court, are bound to turn over suspects.

The United States and Israel have not joined the Rome Statute, but that would not prevent the Palestinia­ns from pursing cases under the treaty. ICC arrest warrants and rulings carry geopolitic­al weight even when they can’t be enforced. An indictment of Libya’s Muammar Gaddafi last year helped mobilize internatio­nal support for the rebels who opposed him.

Of course, if the Palestinia­ns enter the legal battlefiel­d, they, too, risk being accused and prosecuted in the venues where they’d try to target Israelis. There is no guarantee for either side that the ICC prosecutor would follow through on charges. The ICC has procedural obstacles that could head off any prosecutio­n there.

Some commentato­rs argue that, like lawyers in any legal fight, both the Palestinia­ns and Israelis have exaggerate­d the stakes in what’s more of a political and public-relations drama.

“The concern that something dramatic would change is overblown,” said Rosa Brooks, a professor of internatio­nal law at Georgetown University who has also served in policy roles at the State and Defense department­s.

And it’s important to remember that the ICC is a political organizati­on as much as a legal one – cases are initiated by member government­s and the UN Security Council — so geopolitic­al considerat­ions can trump a strictly legal case. Tens of thousands of protesters gather in Egypt’s landmark Tahrir Square against a decree by President Mohamed Morsi granting himself broad powers that shield his decisions from judicial review on Nov 30, in Cairo. Activists were to rally today, a day after an Islamist-dominated panel rushed through a draft constituti­on, escalating political stand-off between Morsi and his opposition. (AFP)

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