Gaza war crimes may be prosecuted: ICC prosecutor

Gaza war crimes may be prosecuted: ICC prosecutor
Palestinians run for cover from tears gas fired by Israeli security forces during clashes following a protest on the Israel-Gaza border east of the Jabalia refugee camp in the northern Gaza Strip. The Gaza border with Israel has been enflamed by violence since Israeli forces opened fire on a protest march on March 30, killing 19 Palestinians. (AFP)
Updated 08 April 2018
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Gaza war crimes may be prosecuted: ICC prosecutor

Gaza war crimes may be prosecuted: ICC prosecutor
  • ICC calls for an end to the ongoing bloodshed in the Gaza Strip
  • ICC says anyone who incites or engages in acts of violence is liable to prosecution before the Court

The Hague: The world war crimes court’s chief prosecutor Sunday called for an end to ongoing bloodshed in the Gaza Strip, warning that the court could try those who commit gross atrocities.
“The resort to violence must stop,” Fatou Bensouda said in a statement issued by the International Criminal Court, based in The Hague.
“Any person who incites or engages in acts of violence including by ordering, requesting, encouraging or contributing in any other manner to the commission of crimes within ICC’s jurisdiction is liable to prosecution before the Court,” Bensouda said.
Israel is facing mounting questions over the use of live fire that left some 30 Palestinians dead in 10 days of protests and clashes along the Gaza Strip border.
Violence spiked again on Friday, when clashes erupted as thousands protested along the border, and nine Palestinians, including a journalist, were killed.
Palestinian authorities signed up to the ICC’s founding Rome Statute document in early January 2015 in which they accepted the court’s jurisdiction.
Shortly afterwards, Bensouda announced she was opening a preliminary probe to determine whether there was enough evidence to launch a full-blown investigation into any alleged crimes committed in the Palestinian territories since June 2014.
Reacting to the latest escalation, Bensouda said “violence against civilians... could constitute crimes under the Rome Statute, as could the use of civilian presence for the purpose of shielding military activities.”
Any new alleged crimes “committed in the context of the situation in Palestine may be subjected to my office’s scrutiny,” Bensouda said.
The ICC is the world’s only independent permanent tribunal, set up in 2002 to probe the worst crimes including genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity.