What would Happen if the
Int’l Criminal Court Indicted Israel’s
Netanyahu?
By Juan Cole
January 02, 2015 "ICH"
- "Informed
Comment" -
If the International
Criminal Court takes up Israeli government
actions in the occupied Palestinian
territories, it could well find specific
officials guilty of breaches of the
Rome Statute of 2002. Article 7 forbids
“Crimes against Humanity,” which are
systematically repeated war crimes. Among
these offenses is murder, forcible
deportation or transfer of members of a
group, torture, persecution of Palestinians
(an “identifiable group”) and “the crime of
Apartheid.”
The Israeli government
murdered Palestinian political leaders (not
just guerrillas) and have routinely
illegally expelled Palestinians from the
West Bank or from parts of the West Bank
illegally incorporated into Israel. They
deploy torture against imprisoned
Palestinians. Their policies on the West
Bank, of building squatter settlements on
Palestinian land from which Palestinians are
excluded, is only one example of Apartheid
policies. Getting a conviction on Article
VII should be child’s play for the
prosecutor. And there are other articles
which Israel is guilty of contravening.
If Israeli government
officials or leaders of the squatters in the
Palestinian West Bank were convicted by the
ICC, would there be any hope of enforcement?
Israeli firms doing business in the West
Bank would be exposed to billions of dollars
of legal actions in European courts and
would be unable to sell their goods in
Europe, if they were declared fruits of
crimes against humanity and apartheid. If
the legal actions were brought by Palestine,
Israel would be ordered to pay it massive
reparations.
The ICC can only work
through member states. But it could
authorize those states to capture and
imprison Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu,
for instance. While it is unlikely that this
could happen, Israel’s leadership might not
be able to visit most of Europe, which would
isolate them and much reduce their
influence. The European institutions in
Brussels would take an ICC conviction
seriously.
The African Union and the
Arab world decided to protect Sudanese
President Omar al-Bashir from the ICC
verdict against him. According to the
African Union, he can freely visit African
countries. But he cannot visit Europe or
large numbers of other countries without
risking arrest. And even in Africa, al-Bashir
in 2013 had to
abruptly leave the Nigerian capital of Abuja
after only 24 hours because a Nigerian
international law association filed a court
case to have him arrested.
Over a third of Israeli
trade is with Europe, and technology
transfers from Europe are crucial to Israel.
It could be kicked out of European
scientific and technological organizations,
where it presently has courtesy memberships.
And Israeli leaders could end up being
afraid to visit European capitals lest they
be arrested, Pinochet style (even if
governments ran interference for them, they
could not be sure to escape lawsuits by
citizen groups and could not be insulated
from activist judges).
The world wouldn’t end for
Israeli leaders if they were convicted, as
it hasn’t ended for al-Bashir. But the
consequences would be real and unpleasant,
and over time could have a substantial
impact.
(C) Juan Cole - 2015 All
Rights Reserved