Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

S. African president accuses Israel of war crimes

- GERALD IMRAY

CAPE TOWN, South Africa — South African President Cyril Ramaphosa accused Israel of war crimes and acts “tantamount to genocide” in Gaza during a virtual meeting Tuesday of leaders of developing countries, including Russia’s Vladimir Putin and China’s Xi Jinping.

Ramaphosa also condemned Hamas for its attack on Israeli civilians that sparked the war in Gaza and said both sides were guilty of violating internatio­nal law.

“The collective punishment of Palestinia­n civilians through the unlawful use of force by Israel is a war crime,” Ramaphosa said at the start of the meeting of leaders and top diplomats from the BRICS bloc of countries. “The deliberate denial of medicine, fuel, food and water to the residents of Gaza is tantamount to genocide.”

“In its attacks on civilians and by taking hostages, Hamas has also violated internatio­nal law and must be held accountabl­e for these actions,” Ramaphosa said.

Putin and Xi struck more cautious notes, calling for a cease-fire and the release of civilian hostages but not launching the same level of criticism of either side as Ramaphosa.

Also joining the meeting were leaders and officials from fellow BRICS members Brazil and India, and from Saudi Arabia, Argentina, Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran and the United Arab Emirates, which are set to join the bloc in January.

Ramaphosa chaired the “extraordin­ary meeting” and made the opening remarks because of South Africa’s position as current chair of BRICS.

Putin said there was a “humanitari­an catastroph­e” unfolding in Gaza, and it was “shocking to watch how surgeries are performed on children without anesthesia.” He again blamed the crisis on what he called failed diplomacy by the United States.

“All these events, in fact, are a direct consequenc­e of the [U.S.’s] desire to monopolize mediation functions in the Palestinia­n-Israeli settlement,” Putin said while appearing on teleconfer­ence from the Kremlin. He called for a cease-fire in Gaza, the freeing of hostages and the evacuation of civilians from the Gaza Strip.

Putin’s comments were in line with Russia’s careful approach to the Israel-Hamas war, which may present an opportunit­y for it to advance its role as a global power broker. Putin proposed last month that Moscow could mediate in the conflict due to its relationsh­ips with both Israel and the Palestinia­ns. He said Tuesday that the BRICS bloc could play “a key role” in finding a political settlement.

Putin has condemned the Oct. 7 attack by Hamas militants on towns in southern Israel that led to Israel’s offensive in Gaza, now in its seventh week, while warning Israel over its response and against blockading the Gaza Strip.

Russia and China are leading voices in BRICS, which has largely cast itself in recent years as standing against the perceived dominance of the West in global affairs. But it has struggled to adopt united policies or positions on many issues because of the differing priorities of the five current members.

The meeting came a day after China’s top diplomat hosted the foreign ministers of Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Jordan, the Palestinia­n Authority and Indonesia in Beijing, their first stop on a tour of U.N. Security Council permanent members. That underlined China’s long-standing support for the Palestinia­ns and its growing geopolitic­al influence.

India, which also wants to be seen as a leader of the developing world, has long walked a tightrope between Israel and the Palestinia­ns and historical­ly has close ties to both.

South Africa has been fiercely critical of Israel over the war in Gaza and had already filed a request with the Internatio­nal Criminal Court to investigat­e it over purported war crimes. South Africa has for years compared Israel’s policies in Gaza and the West Bank with its own past apartheid regime of racial segregatio­n.

Ramaphosa called for the Internatio­nal Criminal Court to “urgently” initiate prosecutio­ns against those responsibl­e for what he termed war crimes on both sides and said South Africa also wants to see a cease-fire and the deployment of a U.N. force to monitor the cease-fire.

Later Tuesday, a large majority of South African lawmakers voted in favor of a motion to shut down the Israeli Embassy and to cut diplomatic ties with Israel until it agrees to a cease-fire in Gaza. Israel had recalled its ambassador for consultati­ons before the vote took place.

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