Read full article by Alan Baker here
It is both tragic and ironic that the State of
Israel, one of the founding fathers of the vision of creating an independent International Criminal Court after
the unimaginable atrocities committed against the Jewish People during the
Holocaust, has now become the target of that very International Criminal Court.
It is all the more ironic that Israel now finds itself being accused by the
Court based on Palestinian
political manipulation.
The irony is all the more evident given the
legal acrobatics by the politically oriented and politically influenced
prosecutor of the Court and the majority of judges of the Pre-Trial Chamber in
their obstinate and flawed insistence on attributing elements of statehood and
sovereignty to a Palestinian entity that is distinctly, and by all
international standards, not a state.
Nor does such entity have any sovereign
territory, and thus, even according to the Statute of the ICC, cannot be the
subject of the Court’s jurisdiction. This ironic situation is not surprising,
given the prevailing international atmosphere of incitement and hostility
toward Israel throughout the UN system.
However, what is shocking is the fact that the
one international juridical institution that was hoped and intended by its
founders, and stated in its founding document, to be “an independent, permanent
International Criminal Court with jurisdiction over the most serious crimes of
concern to the international community as a whole”, has allowed itself to be
politically manipulated and abused.
The Court has irreparably prejudiced any
juridical integrity, credibility and bona fides that it might have had. This
decision by the Court’s Pre-Trial Chamber to accept the contention of the
prosecutor, based purely on non-binding and non-authoritative political
resolutions of the UN General Assembly, that the Court can exercise
jurisdiction over disputed territory that is in the midst of an internationally
recognized dispute-settlement process, defies all legal logic.
Since the ICC Statute is open to sovereign
states only, and since no sovereign Palestinian state exists, and since there
exists no Palestinian territory over which the Court could exercise its
jurisdiction, the Pretrial Chamber, by any legal logic, should have rejected
the contentions of the prosecutor, rather than attempt to prejudge and
undermine the outcome of the negotiating process by determining that there
exists sovereign Palestinian territory.
Sadly and regrettably, this decision not only
irreparably harms the integrity and credibility of the ICC, and can undermine the
Middle East peace negotiating process, since the Court, at the behest of its
prosecutor, is attempting to prejudge the outcome of that process, contrary to
all historic and legal logic.
If the ICC claims to be in the new state-recognising business, then it should immediately recognise Chechnya, Catalonia, Tibet, Western Sahara, Northern Cyprus etc. etc.
ReplyDeleteIf it cannot give valid reasons why it does not do so, then it must admit to being uniquely focussed on, and targeting only, Israelis and no one else, for which there is a name.