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Jan
4
2023

Tuesday (technically Wednesday) News Bulletin 01/04/2023

Welcome to the Tuesday News Bulletin! Jewish Currents is constantly getting quotes and scooplets from our network of sources, and every Tuesday, we release small stories exclusive to our newsletter subscribers in emails like this one. In addition to original reporting, the Tuesday News Bulletin serves as a forum for aggregating stories Jewish Currents staffers are tracking, with plenty of links to other publications so you can keep up with everything happening on our beats.

If you have more stories or tips, you can reach Alex Kane at alex@jewishcurrents.org.

Demonstrators carry banners outside the International Criminal Court in 2019, urging the court to prosecute Israel’s army for war crimes.

Peter Dejong/AP Photo

January 4th, 2023

Last Tuesday, ten of the most prominent Israeli human rights organizations—including B’Tselem, Adalah, and Yesh Din—sent a letter to International Criminal Court (ICC) prosecutor Karim Khan. The groups praised him for saying in December that he planned to “visit Palestine” sometime this year, but urged him to speed up the ICC’s ongoing war crimes probe in Israel/Palestine, which aims to determine whether war crimes were committed in the region by Israeli forces and Palestinian militant groups, and to hold perpetrators accountable. “We are now more than seven years since the beginning point of this process,” the letter stated. “Justice delayed is justice diminished . . . A nimbler court is, indeed, key.”

The letter was only the most recent attempt to put pressure on the ICC. In recent years, various civil society groups—including the Public Committee Against Torture, a signatory to the letter from Israeli rights groups—have sent the ICC a voluminous record of alleged war crimes committed by Israeli forces in Israel/Palestine. One of the latest submissions was sent in December by the media network Al Jazeera, calling on the international court to investigate and prosecute those responsible for the killing of Palestinian American journalist Shireen Abu Akleh. Palestinian human rights group Al Haq has sent the ICC seven separate submissions on alleged Israeli war crimes over the past seven years, including on Israel’s killing of civilians and destruction of civilian property in Gaza; in June 2022, the Public Committee Against Torture became the first ever Israeli human rights group to submit evidence to the ICC, documenting the complaints of 17 Palestinians allegedly tortured by Israeli security forces.

These groups are hoping to provide a roadmap that will steer ICC investigators toward the prosecution of specific culprits for specific crimes. “We’re basically just trying to show them where to look, and where we think their investigation should lead them,” said Michael Schaeffer Omer-Man, director of Israel/Palestine research for Democracy for the Arab World Now, another group that has sent evidence to the ICC. Considering the volume of global war crimes and the ICC’s limited resources for investigations, the burden often falls to human rights groups to build the case against perpetrators. “They’re completely dependent on civil society [groups],” said Brad Parker, senior advisor on policy and advocacy for Defense for Children International-Palestine (DCI-P), which has submitted evidence to the ICC focusing on the torture and killing of Palestinian children by Israeli forces.

In publicizing the fact of these submissions—if not the details of their contents, which include private information about victims—civil society groups are also attempting to provide a counterweight to the intense pressure the ICC faces from countries like the United States, and Israel itself, to drop its probe. Israel has lobbied European states to cut funding to the ICC in response to its investigation, while Biden administration officials reportedly urged Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas to stop asking for the ICC’s intervention. In response, human rights groups are “trying to ensure that the ICC has all the information and tools it needs to give it a fighting chance of withstanding the political pressure that has paralyzed every other institution,” said Schaeffer Omer-Man.

The ICC was established in 2002 by the Rome Statute, a treaty signed by 123 states that now fund much of the court’s activity. It is the only international court tasked with prosecuting genocide, crimes against humanity, and war crimes, aiming to take action only when the state under investigation is either unwilling or unable to investigate itself. Israel’s Supreme Court has repeatedly given judicial approval to Israeli practices in the occupied Palestinian territories that human rights groups say are illegal under international law, ranging from forcible displacement of Palestinians to opening fire at protesters. Meanwhile, human rights groups say that Israel’s military law enforcement system serves to shield its soldiers from consequences for unlawful killings of Palestinians. In their search for accountability, Palestinian rights groups have not turned solely to the ICC: Some have brought cases of alleged war crimes to European courts in countries where victims had citizenship or in states with “universal jurisdiction” laws that allow for the prosecution of anyone allegedly responsible for grave international crimes. But those efforts have universally failed. “Palestinians have exhausted all other options,” said Tahseen Elayyan, a legal researcher with Al Haq. “The ICC is the last resort.”

In 2015, the “state of Palestine”—the term the Palestinian Authority has used to refer to the West Bank, East Jerusalem, and Gaza since the passage of a 2012 UN resolution granting Palestine non-member observer state status in the international body—joined the Rome Statute, thus accepting the ICC’s jurisdiction over war crimes committed in the territory. But questions around whether Palestine is a state under international law, and thus subject to the Rome Statute, have lingered. In 2019, Fatou Bensouda, the ICC prosecutor at the time, concluded that war crimes were occurring in Palestine, but asked a panel of ICC judges to examine whether the court had jurisdiction there. ICC member states Australia, Austria, Brazil, Canada, Czech Republic, Germany, Hungary, and Uganda—all staunch allies of Israel at the time—submitted briefs to the court arguing that it did not have jurisdiction.

The US, while not party to the Rome Statute, has also repeatedly inveighed against any ICC investigation into Israel; in 2020, Israeli officials urged Secretary of State Mike Pompeo to follow through on a Trump plan to impose asset freezes on ICC officials, which the administration carried out in September 2020. Trump’s executive order imposing the sanctions attributed the decision to the ICC investigation into potential war crimes committed by US officials in Afghanistan, but a White House statement referenced “politically-motivated investigations against us and our allies, including Israel.” “That was unprecedented, in terms of the willingness of the US government to use one of the most coercive tools it has: restricting access to the US financial system,” said Liz Evenson, international justice director for Human Rights Watch. (The Biden administration reversed the ICC sanctions, but US opposition to the court remains in the form of US statements that the ICC should not have jurisdiction over countries that are not a party to the Rome Statute.)

In 2021, however, a panel of judges bucked Western pressure, ruling that the court does, in fact, have jurisdiction over Palestine. The judges noted that the state of Palestine followed the correct procedure to become a member of the Rome Statute, and “shall thus . . . be treated as any other State Party would.” Subsequently, in March 2021, the ICC prosecutor announced the opening of an inquiry into war crimes committed in Palestine, including crimes committed by Palestinian armed groups. But over one year later, no arrest warrants for Israeli officials have been issued, and the status of the investigation remains unclear.

Parker of DCI-P contrasted the slow pace of the investigation into Israeli war crimes with the prosecutor’s handling of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine: The ICC opened an investigation four days after the Russian invasion, and in May announced the deployment of a forensic and prosecutorial team in the country. “He got boots on the ground in Ukraine as fast as possible. But it’s been a real slog for him to even mention Palestine since he came into the position,” Parker said. For some human rights advocates, the moves on Ukraine, in addition to the December 2021 decision to focus the ICC investigation in Afghanistan solely on crimes committed by the Taliban and ISIS, and to “deprioritize” crimes committed by Western states, have added to the perception of the ICC as a neo-colonial tool. All of the officials who have been put on trial by the ICC are African; the court’s targeting of officials from a breakaway region in Georgia in June of last year marked its first-ever arrest warrants for non-Africans. “Everybody’s very aware that the ICC has never prosecuted a non-African. Palestine will likely be the test case to see whether international criminal law applies to Western and quasi-Western countries,” said Schaeffer Omer-Man.

Even as the ICC probe remains in the investigation phase, Palestinian human rights groups say that Israel is retaliating against groups who have provided evidence. Three of the six Palestinian human rights groups that Israel outlawed as “terrorist organizations” in October 2021 and raided in August 2022 have submitted evidence to the ICC prosecutor: Addameer, Al Haq, and DCI-P. Elayyan of Al Haq said the perception of Israel as a democracy would be damaged if the ICC issues arrest warrants against Israeli officials, and that he suspects that fear motivated Israel’s targeting of his organization. “If Israel’s officials are accused of committing international crimes, then the idea that it is an ‘oasis of democracy’ is a big lie,” he said.

Israeli human rights groups, meanwhile, have not faced similar punishment for their work in support of the ICC—but some advocates are worried that will change with the ascent of the new far-right governing coalition that entered power this week. “For the time being we aren’t facing any consequences for cooperating with the investigation,” said Roy Yellin, director of public outreach for B’Tselem. “We expect that to change drastically and quickly.”

Israel continues its demolition of Palestinian homes and confiscation of property in the Masafer Yatta area of the West Bank on January 3rd. Last year, the Israeli high court approved the government’s plan to displace the residents of the area’s villages. Photo: Basil Al-Adraa/Activestills.

Basil Al-Adraa/Activestills

As part of the Tuesday News Bulletin, Jewish Currents is publishing a photograph taken by members of Activestills every week, archiving ongoing dispossession and resistance from the river to the sea. You can find more information on this collaboration here.

Here’s what else we’re tracking:
  • Israel’s new government was sworn in on Thursday, with Benjamin Netanyahu returning to the prime minister’s office for a sixth time, and a slew of hard-right legislators taking over cabinet posts. The governing coalition’s agreement declared that Jews have an “exclusive and inalienable right to all parts of the Land of Israel” and said it would promote Jewish settlement in the occupied West Bank. Bezalel Smotrich, who said in 2015 that Jews shouldn’t be married or sell homes to Arabs and called in 2021 for the expulsion of Arabs from Israel, is now finance minister, and he will also serve in the defense ministry, taking responsibility for the expansion of Jewish settlements and the oversight of new Palestinian construction. Itamar Ben-Gvir—who was convicted in 2007 for inciting anti-Palestinian racism and has called for Palestinians who throw stones at Israeli security forces to be shot—is now national security minister, in control of Israel’s police force. In Ben-Gvir’s first major move in the position, he visited the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound—or, as Jews call it, the Temple Mount—under police protection to mark a Jewish fast day. Palestinians denounced the visit as a provocation, and Jordan, which helps run the site, condemned it. Palestinians, who currently have some informal control over Al-Aqsa, typically view Israeli ministerial visits to Al-Aqsa as attempts to seize power over the site.

  • Over 330 American rabbis pledged in a letter not to invite members of the new Israeli government’s Religious Zionism coalition to speak at their synagogues. Those affiliated with Religious Zionism include Ben-Gvir, Smotrich, and Avi Maoz, the virulently anti-LGBTQ incoming deputy minister for Jewish identity. “When those who tout racism and bigotry claim to speak in the name of Israel, but deny our rights, our heritage, and the rights of the most vulnerable among us, we must take action,” the letter said. The rabbis expressed concerns that the new government would formally annex the occupied West Bank, expel Palestinian citizens of Israel, enable the Knesset to override Supreme Court decisions, and change the law governing Jewish immigration to Israel so that converts to the Reform, Conservative, and Reconstructionist traditions won’t be recognized as Jewish by the state.

  • Israeli police arrested journalist Israel Frey last week on suspicion of inciting terrorism and violence after Frey tweeted that attacks on Israeli security forces are not “terrorism,” and that a Palestinian who allegedly planned an armed attack was a “hero” because he “looked for legitimate targets and avoided harming innocent people.” Frey’s lawyer told Haaretz that his detention was a “political arrest aimed at terrorizing and intimidating” those “in opposition to the new government. Today it’s Frey, tomorrow it’s all of us.”

  • The United Nations General Assembly voted on Friday to ask the International Court of Justice, the UN’s top judicial body, to examine the legal status of Israel’s military occupation of the West Bank, Gaza, and East Jerusalem. The court will ask whether Israel’s occupation is permanent, and thus tantamount to illegal annexation—though it has no power to enforce its decision.

  • Israeli troops accused of abusing Palestinians have been indicted in only 1% of the 1,260 cases lodged with the army between 2017–2021, according to a new report from Israeli human rights group Yesh Din. In the 11 cases where indictments did occur, the punishments were lenient, with even soldiers convicted of killing Palestinians sentenced to community service. “This conduct demonstrates the military law enforcement system’s complete disregard for Palestinians’ lives, precludes any possibility of deterrence and encourages the continued use of the deadly trigger-happy policy that has claimed so many Palestinian lives,” the report said.