Türkiye's genocide case participation will encourage other nations — lawyer
More third countries should intervene in the genocide case against Israel, even just to seek clarification on how to respond to threats of genocide, says Italian lawyer Luigi Daniele.
Türkiye’s recent announcement that it will become a party to South Africa’s genocide case against Israel at the International Court of Justice (ICJ) will encourage other countries to do the same, according to an Italian lawyer.
“More third states should intervene in the South Africa versus Israel proceedings, even just to ask for clarifications about what they should do when a danger of genocide is detected. So, I think that from this point of view, the intervention by Türkiye catalyses more third state interventions in support of South Africa,” Luigi Daniele, a senior lecturer at Nottingham Law School in the UK, said.
Daniele added that Türkiye is an important NATO member which enables its joining in the case to have significant consequences.
Saying that the ICJ’s injunctions in the genocide case led to significant changes in the approaches of third states, he added that this stems from the states facing the risk of being brought before the ICJ due to complicity.
'EU, US, the most complicit in human rights violations'
Arguing that Western countries attach importance to protecting their allies rather than international law, he said: “International crimes are not something that can be forgiven when the allies commit them and condemned when rivals commit them.”
“Civilian populations will pay the consequences, as it happened already for the Palestinian civilian population, partly also for the Israelis’ even young population,” he added.
He said the political leaderships of the EU and US have been the “most complicit” in serious human rights violations of Israel.
“As a European citizen, I was shocked to hear the unilateralism of the declarations of leaders like (European Commission President) Ursula von der Leyen on their land. It seemed for months and months, while children and women were being exterminated, that nothing was happening, or that this was somehow an unfortunate but forgivable necessity of war,” he added.
“Türkiye has decided to seek to join in South Africa's genocide case against Israel at the ICJ.”
— TRT World (@trtworld) May 1, 2024
Türkiye will seek to be part of South Africa’s case at the International Court of Justice accusing Israel of committing genocide in Palestine’s Gaza.
Submitted in late 2023, the ICJ… pic.twitter.com/mEX4A9KkZJ
Tribalism of Western states
This is in “striking contrast” to all the solemn declarations of values including accountability for crimes against civilians in the Ukraine war, he said, adding that the EU, alongside the US, is really at “the top of its double standards.”
He said Russia's actions in Ukraine and Israel's actions in Palestine are similar in legal terms, but that the US attitude towards Russia’s acts is completely different.
He described the US reaction to the International Criminal Court (ICC) investigation of Israel as “beyond hypercritical, a preposterous position that undermines the international legal system.”
“Actually (it) seems like a sort of tribalism of the Western states, perceiving themselves as a tribe, above the law, and perceiving the law itself as something that is only for their enemies,” he added.
Türkiye expects ICJ to declare Israeli actions in Palestine's Gaza as genocide, says Turkish President Erdogan, as Ankara for months has been pressing the international community to do more to end Israel's brutal attacks on besieged enclave https://t.co/g14UAkULmT
— TRT World (@trtworld) January 26, 2024
European people demands justice
Underlining that this attitude threatens international security and increases the risk of world war, he said: “If you keep asserting that the law is only for your enemies, you are basically pushing escalation by escalation, the worldwide political arena to the thresholds of a world war in which the new rules will be written by war.”
Mentioning next month’s European Parliament elections, he said the European people have seen what was done against the Palestinian civilian population and demand justice.
“So, if our leaders don't take steps in this direction now, they will pay the prices in the ballots,” he said.