The Guardian (USA)

The Guardian view on Gazan genocide charges: Israel finds itself with a plausible case to answer

- Editorial

It is a bitter twist of history that 75 years after the horrors of the Holocaust saw the UN adopt the genocide convention, Israel is likely to find itself in the dock of the internatio­nal court of justice accused of being intent on destroying the Palestinia­ns “in whole or in part”. Hundreds of people – mainly women and children – are dying every day under Israeli bombardmen­t in the Gaza Strip, a death rate reckoned to be the worst of any major conflict this century.

South Africa filed an applicatio­n institutin­g genocide proceeding­s against Israel at The Hague a month ago. On Friday, the world court said it had establishe­d that at least some of the acts alleged by South Africa fell within the provisions of the convention. While a final judgment is years away, this was a historic decision by the court. It was not made lightly by jurists in the middle of a war that was sparked by a horrific Hamas attack last October that left 1,200 Israelis dead.

Some may be disappoint­ed that the court did not issue a provisiona­l measure ordering a ceasefire in Gaza. That would be to miss the significan­ce of The Hague’s judgment. The measures it did call for – including directing Israel not to commit or incite genocide – reveal that not only is protection for ordinary Palestinia­ns urgent, but that there is a plausible claim of the Gazan population being decimated. Given the desperate humanitari­an situation in the coastal strip, it is a very good thing that the court has reached its decision so quickly.

Israel is a signatory to the Geneva convention­s, over which the ICJ has jurisdicti­on. It should comply with the court’s ruling immediatel­y, and preserve evidence related to the case. The ICJ rightly did not spare Hamas, demanding that the hostages it holds must be freed. The militant group’s role in death and destructio­n should not be forgotten. While South Africa welcomed the measures describing the ruling as a “decisive victory for the internatio­nal rule of law”, Israel’s national security minister, Itamar BenGvir, posted on X saying “Hague schmague”, and the defence minister, Yoav Gallant, said his country did “not need to be lectured on morality”. Such words will see Israel isolated in the world.

Domestic rather than internatio­nal concerns shape the response of Benjamin Netanyahu’s extreme rightwing government. There is a depressing circularit­y to its refutation of the court. Since the judges at The Hague only ordered the cessation of genocidal acts, and as Israel denies any genocidal acts are being committed, Mr Netanyahu will probably try to use this rejectioni­st logic to take no meaningful action. But Israel’s friends and allies, especially those who see themselves as upholding the internatio­nal legal order, do not have that option.

The court has few powers of enforcemen­t. States that respect internatio­nal law must ensure the ICJ’s measures are implemente­d – and report back with Israel’s compliance efforts within a month. Western nations – including the UK and the US – that belittled South Africa’s case ought to swallow their words. There have been efforts to broker a deal between Hamas and Israel to expedite aid deliveries into Gaza, halt the fighting and get hostages out. Government­s need to urgently use their leverage to ensure that the ICJ’s order is enforced. The scale and severity of suffering in Gaza demands nothing less.

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 ?? ?? ‘Domestic rather than internatio­nal concerns shape the response of Benjamin Netanyahu’s extreme rightwing government.’ Photograph: Reuters
‘Domestic rather than internatio­nal concerns shape the response of Benjamin Netanyahu’s extreme rightwing government.’ Photograph: Reuters

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