UN confirms
Palestinians will become ICC member
United
Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has confirmed the Palestinians will
become a member of the International Criminal Court (ICC) on April 1 and the
court’s registrar said on Wednesday that jurisdiction would date back to June
13, 2014.
This means the court’s prosecutor could
investigate the 50-day war between Israel and Hamas militants in the Gaza Strip
in July and August 2014, during which more than 2,100 Palestinians, 67 Israeli
soldiers and six civilians in Israel were killed.
The Hague-based court handles war crimes,
crimes against humanity and genocide. It could exercise jurisdiction over such
crimes committed by anyone on Palestinian territory. Israel, like the United
States, is not a an ICC member, but its citizens could be tried on accusations
of crimes on Palestinian land.
On Friday the Palestinians delivered to
U.N. headquarters documents to join the Rome Statute of the ICC and other
international treaties, in a move that has heightened tensions with Israel and
could lead to cuts in U.S. aid.
Ban announced in a letter posted to a U.N.
website late on Tuesday that the Palestinians would formally become an ICC
member on April 1. The United Nations is the official depositary of the Rome
Statute and many other treaties.
The United States said on Wednesday it does
not believe Palestine is a sovereign state and therefore does not qualify to be
part of the International Criminal Court. Experts said the only apparent way to
challenge the Palestinians’ eligibility to be an ICC member would be in court.
“The most likely challenge would be if an Israeli national ever came before the
court,” said Dov Jacobs, a law professor at Leiden University in the
Netherlands.
“A defense lawyer could try to challenge
the case’s legality by arguing to judges that Palestine was not a state,” he
said. Few scholars say that such an argument would be successful.
The Palestinian government signed the Rome
Statute on Dec. 31, a day after a bid for independence by 2017 failed at the
U.N. Security Council.
The Palestinians, who have been locked in a
bloody conflict with Israel for decades, seek a state that covers Gaza, the
West Bank and East Jerusalem – lands Israel captured in a 1967 war.
Momentum to recognize a Palestinian state
has built since President Mahmoud Abbas succeeded in a bid for de facto
recognition of statehood at the U.N. General Assembly in 2012, making
Palestinians eligible to join the ICC.
(REUTERS)
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