Volume 12 | shaban/ Ramadan 1445 |
Issue 46 | March 2024 |
ISSN 24102237 |
Editorial
An International Judicial Ruling Condemns the Genocide Crimes in Gaza… in the “South Africa” Lawsuit
By: Prof. Badria A. Al-Awadi
Editor-in-Chief
In a remarkable and important international judicial ruling, relating to war crimes and genocide committed by the Israeli occupation forces in the Gaza Strip several months ago, on January 26, 2024, the International Court of Justice (affiliated to the United Nations) issued a preliminary ruling in the case brought by the State of South Africa, according to which it ordered Israel to take all measures, within the limits of its authority, to prevent acts that could fall under the Genocide Convention. It also ordered it to prevent and punish genocide, ensure the flow of humanitarian aid to the Gaza Strip, and preserve evidence of crimes committed in the Strip. This ruling – despite its preliminary nature – amounts to a conviction of the charges raised by the claimant, and it is a qualitative and major international judicial development, due to the immunity enjoyed by the occupying state in light of the support of major Western countries for it and its policies in the region.
An International Judicial Ruling Condemns the Genocide Crimes in Gaza... in the “South Africa” Lawsuit
Chief-in-Editor Prof. Badria A. Al-Awadi
In a remarkable and important international judicial ruling, relating to war crimes and genocide committed by the Israeli occupation forces in the Gaza Strip several months ago, on January 26, 2024, the International Court of Justice (affiliated to the United Nations) issued a preliminary ruling in the case brought by the State of South Africa, according to which it ordered Israel to take all measures, within the limits of its authority, to prevent acts that could fall under the Genocide Convention. It also ordered it to prevent and punish genocide, ensure the flow of humanitarian aid to the Gaza Strip, and preserve evidence of crimes committed in the Strip. This ruling – despite its preliminary nature – amounts to a conviction of the charges raised by the claimant, and it is a qualitative and major international judicial development, due to the immunity enjoyed by the occupying state in light of the support of major Western countries for it and its policies in the region.
This ruling came in response to the claimant’s demands for the necessity of taking urgent temporary procedures and measures, pending a decision on the substance of the case, after it proved in the sessions held by the court, on January 11 and 12, 2024, that the crimes committed by the Israeli occupation forces in the Gaza Strip fit the description. The legal framework for crimes of genocide included in the texts of the United Nations Convention, based on documented reports from United Nations agencies. In this, the claimant asserted that these crimes constitute a violation of Article 2 of the Convention on the Prevention of the Crime of Genocide, especially paragraphs: A, B, C, D; as “Israel committed acts represented in: the mass murder of Palestinians, with the death toll reaching 23,000 (an official figure announced as of the date of preparing the plea), seventy percent of whom – at least – were women and children. And causing serious physical and psychological harm to the Palestinians, and imposing conditions that do not allow them to continue living; by resorting to forced displacement methods, preventing the arrival of food and medical aid, in addition to depriving them of safe and livable shelter, and targeting hospitals and medical centers.”
At a time when the Palestinians and their supporters around the world received this ruling with a glimmer of hope and optimism, the government of the occupying state dealt with it with all contempt and recklessness and announced – in official statements and declarations – its rejection of it, and its challenge to the court’s jurisdiction in the first place. Based on the positions of Western countries that support them in the war of genocide against the Palestinians in the Gaza Strip, financially, militarily and politically. This reaction was considered expected in light of the numerous and repeated crimes and massacres of this entity, its long history of indifference and disregard for the decisions of international organizations and laws, and its behavior on the basis that it is a state above international law, with immunity for all its crimes.
Although these practices and the policies supporting them have succeeded – to some extent – in covering up the crimes and massacres of this entity, preventing it from being held accountable, and discouraging some parties and entities from working diligently and effectively to stand up to these violations and crimes committed against the Palestinians, this did not prevent the Palestinian people themselves from adhering to their legitimate right to resist the occupation. It is a right guaranteed by international laws and regulations. It also did not prevent the parties and entities supporting Palestinian rights from taking action and taking the initiative.
In this context, the initiative of the State of South Africa came, which is considered a bold and courageous international legal step. On December 29, 2023, South Africa filed a lawsuit before the International Court of Justice, accusing the Israeli occupying state of committing genocide crimes in the Gaza Strip, in clear and open violation of the United Nations Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crimes of Genocide, which was unanimously approved by the United Nations General Assembly on December 9, 1948, and to which Israel is one of 152 signatories. After a preliminary examination of the elements of the case, the court declared its jurisdiction and accepted to hear the case, then it issued its initial ruling on interim measures at the end of January 2024 in favor of the State of South Africa.
International law experts following the case attribute the court’s response to the claimant’s requests to the strength of the legal team, the integrity of the case procedures, and the fairness of the case. They also noted the presence of a strong and free political will on the part of the South African government to file the lawsuit and continue with it, despite pressures related to interests in international relations, which really made it a bold and brave step.
This lawsuit, and the trial that followed, gain their importance from the fact that they broke through the wall of helplessness, paralysis, silence, and even international complicity, and increased pressure on the various parties related to the crimes of the occupation and the Palestinian issue, and constituted legal and political support and solidarity with the persecuted and victims in Gaza. In activating the role of regional organizations, such as: the African Union, the Arab League, the Organization of Islamic Cooperation, and the Organization of South American States, some of whose member states decided to sever, or reduce, diplomatic relations with the occupying state. Others announced their intention to join the lawsuit.
The filing of this lawsuit and its acceptance by the International Court of Justice, and the launch of its sessions amid international legal and popular momentum sympathetic to the just cause of the Palestinian people, in light of the brutal genocide crimes committed by the occupation forces in the Gaza Strip, places great and multiple responsibilities on Arab legal experts and organizations, and on the necessity of joint action, and on organized, serious and effective work to hold the perpetrators of war crimes and genocide against the defenseless Palestinian people accountable.
Content
Arabic Studies and Research
Judicial Supervision of Administrative Decisions in GCC Countries and its Modern Developments
Dr Saad Al Enezi & Dr Abdul Rahman Al Hajiri
Assistants Professors of Public Law
Kuwait International Law School
Ruling on Concluding and Documenting Electronic Marriage Contract at the Ministry of Justice in the State of Kuwait and the Controls Related to it: A Legal Jurisprudential Study
Dr Abrar Ahmed Abdullah Hadi
Associate Professor, Department of Comparative
Jurisprudence and Sharia Policy, College of Sharia
and Islamic Studies, University of Kuwait
The Kuwaiti Constitutional Court’s Supervision of the Ambiguity of Legislative Texts: An Original Analytical Study
Dr Turki Sattam Al Mutairi
Associate Professor of Public Law
Department of Law, College of Business Studies, PAAET, State of Kuwait
Dr Abdulkarim Rabie Al Enezi
Associate Professor of Civil Law
Department of Law, College of Business Studies, PAAET, State of Kuwait
The Legal Concept of Arresting the Accused and the Limits of the Use of Force During its Implementation: A Comparative Study between the Kuwaiti and American Criminal Procedures Laws
Dr Yousef Haji Al Mutairi
Associate Professor of Criminal Law
Department of Law, College of Business Studies,
PAAET, State of Kuwait
Attorney – Client Privilege as a Fundamental Rule of Criminal Defense in American Law and the Importance of its Application in the Saudi Legal System
Dr Jalal Hashim Sahlool
Associate Professor of Public Law
Faculty of Law, King Abdulaziz University
Jeddah, KSA
Commenting on the Qatari Shura Council Election Law No. 6 of 2021 in the Criminal Dimension: A Comparative Study with French Legislation
Prof Dr Rana Atour
Professor of Public Law
College of Law, University of Qatar
Doha, State of Qatar
Real Estate Developer’s Obligations towards Owners’ Association and Its Legal Issues in the Bahraini Low
Dr Wafa Yaqoob Janahi
Associate Professor of Civil Law
Department of Private Law
College of Law, University of Bahrain
Kingdom of Bahrain
Sara Mubarak AlDosseri
Researcher and a Senior Lawyer
Legal Affairs Section, The Real Estate Regulatory Authority
Kingdom of Bahrain
E-stores Processing of Customers’ Personal Data according to UAE Legislation: A Comparative Study
Dr Issa Ghassan Rabadi
Associate Professor of Civil Law
Faculty of Law, University of Science and Technology
Fujairah, UAE
The Dilemma between the Concepts of «Terrorism” and «Legitimate Resistance” in International Law
Dr Ameed Asem Khasawneh
Assistant Professor of Public International Law
College of Law, Lusail University
State of Qatar