Palestinians hail South Africa for bringing Gaza ‘genocide’ case

Palestinians gather around a statue of the late South African president Nelson Mandela in the occupied West Bank city of Ramallah on January 10, 2024, to celebrate a landmark "genocide" case filed by South Africa against Israel at the International Court of Justice. (AFP)
Short Url
Updated 11 January 2024
Follow

Palestinians hail South Africa for bringing Gaza ‘genocide’ case

  • Hearings at the UN’s top court will begin on Thursday with South Africa hoping the judges will compel Israel to halt its bombardment
  • While the ICJ makes binding decisions, it has little ability to enforce them, and Israel and the US

RAMALLAH, Palestinian Territories: Dozens of Palestinians gathered Wednesday in front of the statue of Nelson Mandela in the occupied West Bank to thank South Africa for bringing a “genocide” case against Israel over its bombardment of Gaza.

The crowd waved Palestinian flags, listened to speeches and held signs saying “Stop the genocide” and “Thank you South Africa.”
Hearings at the UN’s top court will begin on Thursday with South Africa hoping the judges will compel Israel to halt its bombardment.
“It’s very important to show appreciation to the people who understand our pain,” Ramallah mayor Issa Kassis told AFP after addressing the crowd.
“We feel that South Africa listens to our heart.”
South Africa’s ruling African National Congress has long supported the Palestinian cause, often linking it to its own struggle against the apartheid government, which had cooperative relations with Israel.
Mandela famously said South Africa’s freedom would be “incomplete without the freedom of the Palestinians.”

BACKGROUND

• Based in the Hague, in the Netherlands, the ICJ was established in 1945 as a way of settling disputes between countries.

• Also known as the ‘World Court’, the ICJ is one of the six “principal organs” of the United Nations. It is composed of 15 judges, all of whom are elected to nine-year terms of office by the UN General Assembly and Security Council.

• It is different from the International Criminal Court, or ICC, which is independent from the UN and whose purpose is to investigate and try individuals for “genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity.”

• The case brought by South Africa against Israel on December 29, 2023, is the first time a contentious case has been brought against Israel at the ICJ.

SOURCES: UN.org, usatoday.com

Mvuyo Mhangwane, South Africa’s representative to the Palestinians, said his countrymen had not forgotten Mandela’s words.

“The message is to remind them (Palestinians) that we are friends of Palestine forever, for better or for worse, and to say that Palestine is not alone,” he said.

While the UN’s International Court of Justice (ICJ) makes binding decisions, it has little ability to enforce them.

Nonetheless, Israel and the United States have reacted furiously to the case.

On Tuesday, top US diplomat Antony Blinken dismissed the case as “meritless” and said it was “particularly galling” because Hamas, Iran and others had the stated aim of wiping Israel from the map.
Last week Israeli government spokesman Eylon Levy said South Africa was giving “political and legal cover” for the attack launched by Hamas on October 7.
The attack resulted in about 1,140 deaths in Israel, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official figures.
Israel has since bombarded Gaza by land, sea and air, killing at least 23,357 people, mostly women and children, according to the Gaza health ministry.
“South Africa has made itself criminally complicit with Hamas’s campaign of genocide against our people,” said Levy, accusing the country of “abetting the modern heirs of the Nazis.”


’One war too many’: Lebanese angry with Hezbollah for attacking Israel

Updated 4 sec ago
Follow

’One war too many’: Lebanese angry with Hezbollah for attacking Israel

  • “Hezbollah must surrender its weapons to the state, period,” Randa Harb told AFP
  • “Hezbollah makes decisions without concerning itself with the country or even its support base, it is waging pointless battles,” a store owner said

BEIRUT: When an air strike hit their Beirut neighborhood, people were angry with Israel, but they reserved their deepest rage for Hezbollah, for dragging Lebanon into the Middle East war.
Israel and the United States launched huge strikes on Iran on February 28, killing its supreme leader and sparking a massive retaliatory campaign.
Iran-backed Hezbollah, already weakened by war, attacked Israel in support of its sponsors, pulling Lebanon into a new cycle of strikes, death and mass displacement.
“Hezbollah must surrender its weapons to the state, period,” Randa Harb, an elderly woman who runs a fruit and vegetable stall in the neighborhood of Aisha Bakkar, told AFP.
The densely populated area was struck on Wednesday morning, wounding four people according to the health ministry, and sparking shock across the capital.
Another woman, who refused to give her name, told AFP a relative was wounded, and she accused Hezbollah of forcing “one war too many” on the Lebanese.

- ‘Killing each other’ -

Lebanon was torn apart by a civil war that ended in 1990, with only Hezbollah refusing to hand over its weapons to the state when peace returned.
For decades, it was believed to have an arsenal more powerful than the military’s, and it fought multiple wars with Israel that each took a devastating toll.
The most recent hostilities should have ended in a ceasefire in 2024, but that too proved fragile, with Israel keeping up its strikes even as the Lebanese military sought to disarm Hezbollah under the terms of the truce.
Inspecting the damage in her cousin’s apartment, 46-year-old Amal Hisham screamed: “I do not care about Hezbollah!“
The windows were shattered, and the gold-colored sofas left in tatters.
Hisham was also enraged with Israel, saying she couldn’t just blame one side. “They are all just killing each other,” she said.
“Do you think they are happy about their areas being destroyed? They’re not happy. Their families have been displaced,” she said, referring to Hezbollah members and their wider support base.
“Who will compensate these people?“

- ‘Pointless battles’ -

As soon as the injured had been evacuated, residents began to wonder who the target had been.
A shop owner, also requesting anonymity, believed Hezbollah operatives were hiding there, while others imagined it was Hamas, the group’s Palestinian ally.
“No matter,” said Mohammed Ahmed, 42. “The presence of Hezbollah or Hamas poses a great danger to us.”
“If one wants to be martyred, let him stay where he is... let him be martyred alone, why come to people who are already tired?“
Lebanon is deeply divided along sectarian lines, with Hezbollah rooted in the Shia Muslim community, that was long sidelined by authorities.
Aisha Bakkar is one of several Beirut neighborhoods that are majority Sunni Muslim, while Lebanon is also home to Christians, Druze and others.

- ‘They shot my son’ -

Aziza, who sheltered families fleeing the 2024 war, worries about the massive influx of displaced people from Beirut’s southern suburbs, where Hezbollah holds sway, and which have come under Israeli bombardment.
“We came to welcome them... they shot my son in the leg” after he complained that they had raised Hezbollah’s flag, she said.
In majority-Christian Mar Mikhael on the other side of Beirut, a 68-year-old grocery store owner also deplored the group’s decision to enter the war.
“Hezbollah makes decisions without concerning itself with the country or even its support base, it is waging pointless battles... what good will it do? You fire a missile, they fire a hundred back at you,” he said.
Hezbollah was at the height of its popularity following the 2006 war with Israel, which it claimed to have won.
That changed.
“We never hated the Sayyed,” said Ghada, a municipal worker, referring to late Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah who was killed by Israel in 2024.
“He is the one who stopped Israel,” she said.
Bolstering the belief that Hezbollah was operating solely as an Iranian proxy, the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps announced that Hezbollah had “officially entered the war” around three hours before the Lebanese group had issued its own statement.
Some Lebanese Shia have also grown impatient.
“No one wanted this war,” Lina Hamdan, a Shia lawyer, told AFP, adding that her community “are the first victims.”
A longtime critic, she believes this war may be a “turning point” for Hezbollah, whose military activities were outlawed by the government last week.
While many displaced stranded in the capital refrained from criticizing Hezbollah, some voiced frustration.
“What was the point of this war? Nothing about this makes sense,” said Hiam, a 53-year-old mother sheltering in a school.
Hezbollah runs schools and hospitals, and long provided Shia Lebanese with assistance.
“This time, we are left to fend for ourselves,” Hiam added.