ICC Chief Warned Not to Issue Arrest Warrant Against Netanyahu

Karim Khan, chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Court (ICC), revealed he faced significant pressure from world leaders not to issue arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. In an interview with the BBC, Khan stated “several leaders and others told me, advised me, and cautioned me” against pursuing the warrants, underscoring the political tensions surrounding the court’s actions.

Despite the external pressure, Khan defended the ICC’s decision to seek warrants against Netanyahu, emphasizing that justice must be applied equally to all nations. He noted the importance of demonstrating that the court upholds common legal standards in addressing war crimes according to the Quds News Network.

Khan had previously announced that the ICC was seeking arrest warrants for both Netanyahu and Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant over war crimes, including the use of starvation as a method of warfare, murder, targeting civilians, and extermination.

The prosecutor also welcomed the UK government’s recent decision to drop its opposition to the arrest warrants. In July, the British government reversed its stance, allowing the ICC to move forward with its pursuit of charges against the Israeli leaders.

Khan acknowledged that the arrest warrants remain confidential and that world leaders were speculating on the evidence presented. However, he stressed that the ICC would remain focused on ensuring that justice is seen to be done, despite the challenges and pressures from the international community.

Meanwhile and in an interview with Japan’s Yomiuri Shimbun last week, Karim Khan revealed that ICC officials were receiving personal “threats” from supporters of both Russia and Israel. Khan cautioned, “If we allow these types of attacks … threats … to dismantle or erode the legal institutions that have been built since the Second World War, does anybody believe it will end with the International Criminal Court?”

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Legal Expert Casts Doubt on ICC Prosecutor Karim Khan  

International law expert Anis Al-Qassem confirmed that the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court Karim Khan is one of the reasons and obstacles facing the ICC. The lawyer said this due to Karim’s direct connection with the United States, which originally appointed him.

 Dr Al-Qaasem described the Prosecutor as a “mercenary” who carries out the orders of the USA which seeks to obstruct any decision condemning Israel, according to J024.

“As long as Prosecutor Karim Khan is at the head of the International Criminal Court, there is no hope for the court to move to achieve justice.” He noted the judges of the court are immune from any accountability or pressure, and the defect lies with the Public Prosecution as it is the one that decides to open an investigation into the cases referred to the court.

In addition, Al-Qassem explained the International Court of Justice granted South Africa 10 months to submit its final argument in the genocide lawsuit it filed against the Zionist entity to be submitted next October.

Al-Qassem pointed out that all the massacres and crimes of genocide committed by the occupation in the Gaza Strip can be included in the course of the lawsuit.

Al-Qassem stressed that the judges of the International Court of Justice are completely immune and independent and no party, entity or state can exert pressure on them, noting that the course of international justice requires time to issue decisions and rulings.

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Netanyahu, Gallant Cry Foul of ICC Arrest Warrants

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Yoav Gallant continue to feel the heat as arrest warrants by the International Criminal Court (ICC) are on the verge of being issued against them.

Netanyahu and Gallant held consultations, Thursday, with Israeli Attorney-General Gali Baharav Miara to see what can be done before such warrants are issued against them.

The ICC Prosecutor Karim Khan applied for the arrest warrants to be issued against Netanyahu and Gallant back in 21 May, having accused them of “crimes against humanity and war crimes,” in Gaza.

Since May the applications have been under review by an ICC panel of judges who must look at the evidence presented to them by Mr Khan and then sanction the issuance of the arrest warrants.

To circumvent this, the Israeli government wants to establish its own a commission of inquiry over its conduct of the war on Gaza. However, the Israeli Attorney-General is not certain whether such a commission would lead to the withdrawal of the arrest warrants.

On May 20, ICC Prosecutor Karim Khan announced that the court is seeking arrest warrants for Netanyahu and Gallant on charges of committing war crimes.

Khan said at the time that “there are reasonable grounds to believe that Netanyahu and Gallant bear criminal responsibility for war crimes and crimes against humanity” committed in Palestinian territories in Gaza starting from at least Oct. 8 according to Anadolu.

If the arrest warrants are issues, which it seems certain they would, Netanyahu and Gallant would not be able to travel to any of the 124 countries which are members of the ICC without being taken into custody and face criminal prosecution.

While Israel doesn’t recognize the ICC that was established in 2002, nevertheless, the Israeli meeting on Thursday, shows that it is duly concerned because of the international ramifications of the arrest warrants and the criminal stain it would have on Israel and its politicians.

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Targeting Journalists, Israeli War Crimes  

Journalists covering Israel’s 10-month-old war on Gaza are dying at a far higher rate than that of any other profession. It suggests they are being deliberately targeted by the Israeli military, according to the International Federation of Journalists (IFJ).

“The mortality rate among journalists is much, much higher than in other civilian professions. Indeed with more than 12% of Gazan journalists dead, it’s a mortality rate that would be unusually high for infantry soldiers,” Tim Dawson, deputy general secretary of the IFJ, told Anadolu.

On 10 August, two journalists – Tamim Ahmed Abu Muammer from Palestine Television and Abdullah Mahir al-Susi from Al-Aqsa Channel – were killed in Israeli attacks, adding to the rising toll of press casualties in Gaza’s bloody conflict.

Dawson said Israel’s actions violate both international humanitarian law and the laws of war.

“Since the conflict started, over 100 journalists have lost their lives. My figures put it at about 120 but there are different ways of measuring, and some people put it significantly higher.”

He also highlighted Israel’s advanced surveillance and targeting systems, such as Lavender, Gospell, and Pegasus, which raise concerns about intentional targeting.

“We know that the Israeli (army) has very sophisticated software that can track people down, that can program drones to deliver death to a very particular address,” Dawson said.

Beyond the killings, Dawson criticized Israel’s media censorship in Gaza, calling it “an attempt to control the narrative.”

“They excluded foreign reporters from Gaza. Foreign reporters have petitioned again and again to be allowed in and have been refused. We know that the Israeli government has made life difficult for newspapers that take a slightly different view to their own about the ongoing conflict.”

He also said foreign journalists have been repeatedly denied entry, and platforms like Al Jazeera have been expelled from Israel.

Further, Dawson emphasized the need for unrestricted media access to Gaza and support for journalists working under dangerous conditions.

He noted the IFJ has filed complaints with the International Criminal Court (ICC), alleging that Israel’s targeting of journalists may constitute war crimes.

Dawson stressed the importance of a thorough international investigation to hold those responsible accountable.

Since 7 October, 2023, Israel’s attacks on Gaza have claimed the lives of 168 journalists, including professionals from various nationalities.

Notable casualties include Anadolu Agency photojournalist Ali Jadallah, whose family was killed in an attack on his home, and freelance cameraman Muntasir al-Sawaf, who was killed in an airstrike.

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‘War Criminal’, ‘Guilty in Genocide’

Congresswoman Rashida Tlaib representing Detroit had this to say for Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu when he was addressing the US Congress, Tuesday.

Her image continues to trend, setting with all the other Congressmen and Congresswomen as if this was the most natural thing in the world with signs of “War Criminal” and “Guilty in Genocide” staring Netanyahu in the face.

In protest of Netanyahu’s visit to Congress, activists in Washington dyed multiple fountains around Capitol Hill with red and projections cast demanding the arrest of war criminal Netanyahu.

Tlaib had wrote: “Netanyahu is a war criminal committing genocide against the Palestinian people. It is utterly disgraceful that leaders from both parties have invited him to address Congress. He should be arrested and sent to the International Criminal Court.”

In a statement on her website she clarified: “Since 1948, the US has provided more than $141 billion in weapons to the Israeli government to fund the ethnic cleansing of Palestinians, including $17.9 billion since October.

Netanyahu’s apartheid regime has already slaughtered over 39,000 Palestinians in Gaza, including 15,000 children. Yet my colleagues and the Biden administration continue to approve more funding and send more weapons – even as innocent children like Hind Rajab are targeted with 355 bullets, shot in the heart by Israeli sniper, burned to death in their tents with US-made weapon, bombed while playing at school, deliberately starved to death, and Palestinians are bombed in refugee camps and discovered in mass graves, naked and with their hands tied, all live-streamed for the world to see.

These are undeniably wore crimes under international law.

 Make no mistake: This event is a celebration of the ethnic cleansing of Palestinians. It is a sad day for our democracy when my colleagues will smile for a photo op with a man who is actively committing genocide.

It is hypocritical to claim to be concerned about the massive death toll of innocent civilians, and then turn around and welcome the person responsible for these war crimes to our Capitol. Their silence is betrayal, and history will remember them accordingly.

Our government must stop supporting and funding this genocide now,” Tlaib ends by saying.

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