The International Criminal Court issued an arrest for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his Defense Minister Yoav Gallant as well as three Hamas leaders. File Photo by Amir Cohen/UPI |
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May 20 (UPI) — The International Criminal Court announced arrest warrants on Monday for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Yoav Gallant as well as three of Hamas‘s top leaders in connection with the October attack on Israel, which sparked the current Israel-Gaza war.
ICC prosecutor Karim A.A. Khan revealed the warrants, saying that Netanyahu and Gallant bear responsibility for numerous war crime charges including using starvation as warfare, willfully causing suffering to civilians, intentionally attacking and directing attacks against civilians, extermination, persecution and “other inhumane acts.”
“My office submits that the evidence we have collected, including interviews with survivors and eyewitnesses, authentication video, photo and audio material, satellite imagery and statements from alleged perpetrator groups, shows that Israel has intentionally and systematically deprived the civilian population in all parts of Gaza of objects indispensable to human survival,” Khan wrote.
The Gaza Ministry of Health said in a social media update Saturday that 35,386 Palestinians have died and 79,366 more have been injured since the start of the war that followed the Hamas attack on Oct. 7.
Arrest warrants for Netanyahu and Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant had been rumored since last month with Israel working through diplomatic back channels to attempt to block them.
Khan also announced charges against Yahya Siwar, head of Hamas in Gaza, Mohammed Diab Ibrahim Al-Masri, commander of Hamas’s military wing, and Ismail Haniyeh, head of Hamas’s political bureau.
Khan said all three were “criminally responsible” for numerous war crimes, including extermination, murder, taking hostages, torture, other inhumane acts, cruel treatment of prisoners outrage upon personal dignity against captives.
“We submit that the crimes against humanity charged were part of a widespread and systematic attack against the civilian population of Israel by Hamas and other armed groups pursuant to organizational policies,” Khan said in his statement. “Some of these crimes, in our assessment, continue to this day.”
Israeli military forces on Friday said that they recovered the bodies of three people who were taken hostage during the Oct. 7 attack and then killed while escaping the Nova music festival.
Israel President Isaac Herzog and other Israeli leaders condemned the arrest warrants against Netanyahu and Gallant, calling them “beyond outrageous.”
“Taken in bad faith, this one-sided move represents a unilateral political step that emboldens terrorists around the world and violates all the basic rules of the court according to the principle of the complementarity and other legal norms, Herzog said.
“Any attempt to draw parallels between these atrocious terrorists and a democratically elected government of Israel — working to fulfill its duty to defend and protect its citizens entirely in adherence to the principles of international law — is outrageous and cannot be excepted by anyone.”
Bezalel Smotrich, Israel’s finance minister, called the arrest warrant against Netanyahu and Gallan “arrest warrants for all of us” in Israel and said they should lead to the dismantling of the court.
Benny Gantz, a potential political rival to Netanyahu, called Hamas a “blood-thirty” organization” and said the arrest warrants against the Israeli represent “moral bankruptcy.”
Hamas equally condemned the warrants against its leaders, suggesting it is the victims of war crimes by Israel.
“Hamas movement strongly condemns the attempts of the prosecutor of the International Criminal Court to equate the victim with the executioner by issuing arrest warrants against a number of Palestinian resistance leaders,” Hamas said