Official: International criminal court welcomes Palestinians as 123rd member
by FalastinNews Staff
The Palestinian Authority
became a member of the International Criminal Court Wednesday, with a
low-key ceremony at the court's headquarters marking the high-stakes
move.
Joining the International criminal court is part of a broader effort by the Palestinians to put international pressure on Israel
and comes at a time when the chances of resuming negotiations on
Palestinian statehood are seen as slim following Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu's recent election victory and tough campaign
rhetoric.
Palestinians
signed the court's founding treaty in January and Palestinian
membership came into force Wednesday. International justice activists
hailed the occasion as an opportunity to bring accountability to years
of conflict between Palestinians and Israel.
Israel
is not a member of the International criminal court, but the country's
military and civilian leaders could now face charges if they are
believed to have committed crimes on Palestinian territory. Israel had no immediate comment Wednesday.
The
court's chief prosecutor, Fatou Bensouda, opened a preliminary
investigation in mid-January after the Palestinians formally accepted
the court's jurisdiction dating back to just before last year's Gaza conflict.
Bensouda was not at the behind-closed-doors welcoming ceremony attended by Palestinian Foreign Minister Riad Malki as she was out of the country.
Human Rights Watch welcomed the Palestinian Authority
as the court's 123rd member and stressed it is now up to Bensouda to
weigh whether there is strong enough evidence to merit a full-scale
investigation. It is not clear how long her preliminary analysis could
take.
"The ICC
prosecutor examines allegations of serious crimes no matter the
perpetrator, and makes her own determinations about how to proceed based
on the evidence" said Balkees Jarrah, international justice counsel at
Human Rights Watch. "Any decision whether to pursue an investigation and
against whom is not in the hands of the Palestinians or the Israelis."
Prosecution spokeswoman Florence Olara
said there are "no timelines" for how long a preliminary examination
can take. Some have taken months, others are continuing after years.
The review will likely focus initially on last year's Gaza
conflict. The Palestinians suffered heavy civilian casualties in the
war, prompting allegations by some rights groups that Israel committed
war crimes. Leaders of Hamas, which rules Gaza, could also face charges
because the militant group fired rockets indiscriminately at Israeli
civilian areas.
Prosecutors
could also look at the issue of Israeli settlement building, considered
illegal by much of the world. Since 1967, Israel has moved more than
550,000 of its civilians to occupied lands. However, prosecutors in The Hague do not have jurisdiction over events that happened before the Palestinians joined the court.

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