Israeli rights group claim country failed to comply with ICJ ruling on Gaza aid

Demonstrators gather with signs during a protest by Israeli left-wing activists against the war in the Gaza Strip and calling for the immediate ceasefire and for the release of the kidnapped hostages, in Tel Aviv. (File/AFP)
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Updated 11 March 2024
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Israeli rights group claim country failed to comply with ICJ ruling on Gaza aid

  • “The ICJ order is a legal obligation to end the humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza," 12 rights groups said in an open letter

LONDON: Israel’s main human rights groups have joined forces to condemn the country for failing to comply with an International Court of Justice provisional ruling which mandated it to ensure the provision of humanitarian aid to Gaza, the Guardian reported on Monday.

The court imposed several legal requirements on Israel following its decision in late January.

It came in response to South Africa’s complaint accusing Israel of committing genocide in its military assault on the besieged Strip, which has left 31,045 Palestinians dead, most of them women and children.

The ICJ’s requirements included preventing deliberate harm to civilians, facilitating immediate humanitarian aid to Gaza, prohibiting and punishing direct or public incitement to genocide, and documenting evidence of any wrongful acts committed during the war.

In an open letter, the 12 rights groups pointed out that Israel was legally bound to implement the measures ordered but had failed to do so.

The letter’s signatories included Breaking the Silence, a group of Israeli military veterans opposed to the occupation, and the Association for Civil Rights in Israel.

The letter said: “The ICJ order is a legal obligation to end the humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza. It must be abided by, not only to ease the urgent suffering of civilians but for the sake of humanity as a whole.

“As members of Israel-based civil society committed to human rights and the rule of law, we condemn the fact that Israel has so far failed to change its behavior based on the measures imposed by the ICJ, as well as the fact that humanitarian aid to Gaza dropped by 50 percent in the month following the ruling.”

Amnesty International warned that Gaza’s 2.4 million population was on the “brink of famine.”

On Sunday, aid packages were parachuted into northern Gaza from Jordanian, American, French, Belgian, and Egyptian planes but the UN’s aid coordinator for the area said boosting supply by land was the best way to get assistance to the territory’s people.

A Spanish charity ship carrying food aid on Monday prepared to sail from Cyprus to the Gaza Strip. Officials from the non-governmental organization Open Arms revealed that the boat would be carrying 200 tonnes of food, which US charity World Central Kitchen would then offload on Gaza’s shores.

Meanwhile, the open letter called for an immediate ceasefire that included “the return of the hostages.”

It added: “We urge the Israeli government to comply with the ICJ order and implement the court’s provisional measures, which are essential to mitigating and overcoming the humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza.

“Moreover, we call on the international community to use its collective influence to promote and support an immediate ceasefire and the implementation of the provisional measures, and to increase its efforts to ensure that the Israeli hostages are returned from Gaza.”
 


Arab League chief ‘deeply concerned’ over Yemen tensions

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Arab League chief ‘deeply concerned’ over Yemen tensions

  • Secretary-General Ahmed Aboul Gheit calls for solidarity among Yemen’s supporters, condemns southern separatist’s military operations

LONDON: The head of the Arab League on Tuesday said he is deeply concerned over escalating tensions in Yemen and called for solidarity among countries supporting Yemen’s internationally recognized government.

His comments came after the military coalition that backs Yemen’s Presidential Leadership Council carried out a “limited airstrike” targeting weapons and military vehicles it said were destined for southern separatist forces.

The shipments arrived in the Yemeni port of Mukalla on board two vessels from Fujairah in the UAE.

Saudi Arabia, a key member of the military coalition, criticized the UAE over its support for the separatists, known as the Southern Transitional Council.

The Kingdom said that any threat to its national security was a red line and that the UAE should follow the Yemeni government’s request to remove its forces from the country within 24 hours.

The UAE later announced it would withdraw its remaining counter-terrorism units from Yemen.

Arab League Secretary-General Ahmed Aboul Gheit expressed deep concern over the “serious and rapidly unfolding developments in Yemen.”

He called for solidarity among all countries supporting the Yemeni government and to exercise restraint.

He also condemned any military action aimed at “forcibly entrenching a secessionist reality on the ground, in a manner that threatens Yemen’s territorial unity.”

The STC, which wants a separate state in southern Yemen, seized large areas of territory in Hadramout and Al-Mahara provinces in recent weeks.

The STC is meant to be part of a coalition with the Yemeni government opposed to Houthi militants that control the north of the country.

Aboul Gheit said the southern Yemen issue must be addressed through dialogue.

The measures taken by Saudi Arabia and the military coalition were “vital to ensuring peace, security, and the unity of the Yemeni people under their internationally recognized leadership,” said Muslim World League Secretary-General Dr. Mohammed bin Abdulkarim Al-Issa.

“Supporting illegitimate practices only deepens internal divisions and serves those who do not have Yemen’s best interests at heart,” he said.