Jumat, 24 Mei 2024

ICJ rules Israel must stop Rafah operation, what’s next? - Al Jazeera English

The International Court of Justice called on Israel to end its operation in Rafah, the southernmost town in Gaza.

Over the last two weeks, Israel has reduced entire neighbourhoods in Rafah to rubble and forcefully displaced hundreds of thousands of people.

Israel says it needs to move into Rafah to complete its mission of defeating Hamas. However, the ICJ ruled that Israel’s war aims effectively violate the rights of Palestinians under the Genocide Convention.

Here’s all you need to know about the ICJ’s new orders.

What was the ICJ ruling on South Africa’s case against Israel?

According to the court, Israel must stop its offensive on Rafah.

The court was not convinced that Israel had taken sufficient measures to protect civilian life and voted – 13 judges to two – that Israel must take effective measures to enable any UN-backed commission of inquiry to enter Gaza and probe genocide allegations.

The court also reaffirmed its previous January 26 ruling that Israel must scale up aid to Palestinians in Gaza.

“The ICJ is essentially saying: OK, enough,” said Alonso Gurmendi, an international law scholar at King’s College, London.  “It is a pretty substantial order … it [reflects] a loss of patience [with Israel] in my opinion.”

South Africa at the World Court to secure more emergency measures.
Director-General of South Africa’s Department of International Relations and Cooperation Zane Dangor and South African Ambassador to the Netherlands Vusimuzi Madonsela at the ICJ where South Africa requests new emergency measures over Israel’s attacks on Rafah, The Hague, Netherlands, May 16, 2024 [Yves Herman/Reuters]

What was South Africa’s complaint against Israel?

South Africa initially filed an emergency request for Israel to end its offensive on Rafah, but then broadened its request for a full ceasefire in Gaza.

Will this stop Israel’s attack on Rafah?

Minutes after the ruling came in, reports emerged of Israeli air raids in Rafah.

For now, Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has not made a formal statement. But analysts believe that Israel will continue to violate the ICJ’s order.

Legal scholars and analysts said Israel refused compliance with earlier ICJ provisional measures on January 26. The ICJ had called on Israel to scale up aid to protect the rights of Palestinians under the genocide convention.

Gurmendi added that the new provisional measure compounds the pressure on Western states that arm Israel.

“How can you justify selling weapons for Israel to use in Rafah? I don’t think you can. I think it is legally impossible,” he said. “So while this [ICJ order] won’t stop the operation in Rafah itself, it builds pressure on the idea that it is OK to just keep selling weapons to Israel.”

What else did the ICJ say?

It ordered Israel to open the Rafah crossing for unhindered provision of aid.

“The order is [legally] binding on Israel. Previous [ICJ] orders [to scale up aid] have already put states on notice that there is an imminent risk of genocide and therefore their duty – under the genocide convention –  to prevent that has already been triggered,” said Heidi Matthews, a legal scholar at York University in Toronto.

“Obviously, some folks will be disappointed that there wasn’t a full ceasefire order. This is still a big move, but it’s not a full ceasefire move,” she added.

Any reaction from Palestine or Palestinian groups?

Hamas welcomed the ICJ rulings. It said in a statement that Israel continues to commit massacres in the Gaza Strip. The group added that it expects the court to eventually issue an order for Israel to stop its war on the entire besieged strip.

“What is happening in Jabalia and other governorates of the Strip is no less criminal and dangerous than what is happening in Rafah.”

“We call on the international community and the United Nations to pressure the occupation to immediately comply with this decision and to seriously and genuinely proceed in translating all UN resolutions that force the Zionist occupation army to stop the genocide it has been committing against our people for more than seven months.”

How did Israel respond?

The response from Israeli officials has been largely defiant.

Many officials repeated prior accusations that the court was aiding “terrorists.”

Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich wrote on X, formerly Twitter, that Israel was in a “war for its existence,” adding that stopping the invasion of Rafah was akin to demanding Israel “cease to exist”.

He warned that stopping the assault meant the “enemy will reach the beds of our children and women throughout the country.” He then tweeted that “history will judge who stood by the Nazis of Hamas and ISIS [ISIL].”

Will the ICJ be able to enforce Friday’s ruling?

They have no enforcement power in the UN system. Enforcement relies on members of the court to uphold their obligations under international law and on the UN Security Council.

How does this court hearing differ from the last one?

Both hearings aimed to secure an end to Israel’s devastating war on Gaza. Experts told Al Jazeera that the ICJ’s new orders intensify pressure on Israel and allied states to protect Palestinians and end its war on Gaza, which has killed more than 35,000 people and made the enclave effectively uninhabitable.

Israel's Finance Minister and leader of the Religious Zionist Party Bezalel Smotrich.
Israel’s Finance Minister and leader of the Religious Zionist Party Bezalel Smotrich [Gil Cohen Magen/AFP]

What’s next?

ICJ orders are legally binding. However, the court’s ruling will now be discussed at the UN Security Council, where states can decide to take united action to enforce the court’s orders. Security Council resolutions are also legally binding.

However, the US has a veto, which it has historically used to shield Israel from the consequences of violating international law.

On April 18, the US vetoed a proposed resolution that would have made Palestine the 194th UN member.

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2024-05-24 20:15:00Z
CBMiaGh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmFsamF6ZWVyYS5jb20vbmV3cy8yMDI0LzUvMjQvZXhwbGFpbmVyLWljai1ydWxlcy1pc3JhZWwtbXVzdC1zdG9wLXJhZmFoLW9wZXJhdGlvbi13aGF0cy1uZXh00gFsaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuYWxqYXplZXJhLmNvbS9hbXAvbmV3cy8yMDI0LzUvMjQvZXhwbGFpbmVyLWljai1ydWxlcy1pc3JhZWwtbXVzdC1zdG9wLXJhZmFoLW9wZXJhdGlvbi13aGF0cy1uZXh0

International Court of Justice orders Israel to halt Rafah offensive - Sky News

The International Court of Justice (ICJ) has ordered Israel to stop its military offensive in the southern Gaza city of Rafah.

The top United Nations court said the humanitarian situation in Rafah had "deteriorated further" since its previous order for Israel to improve it, adding that what was happening in the besieged Palestinian territory was "disastrous".

It comes after South Africa put in an emergency request to the ICJ for it to order Israel to stop its Rafah assault.

The ICJ president Nawaf Salam said in The Hague: "The state of Israel shall... immediately halt its military offensive, and any other action in the Rafah governorate, which may inflict on the Palestinian group in Gaza conditions of life that could bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part."

The court also ordered Israel to open the Rafah crossing between Egypt and Gaza to allow in humanitarian aid, and said Israel must provide access to the territory for investigators and report back on its progress within a month.

The order was handed down a week after it was requested by South Africa, which in January formally accused Israel of committing genocide against Palestinians in a hearing at the UN court.

Israel, which claims its military operations in Gaza are in self-defence and targeted at Hamas fighters, has vehemently denied the accusations, with the office of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu calling them "false, outrageous and disgusting".

More on Gaza

It insisted its Rafah campaign will not "lead to the destruction of the Palestinian civilian population", adding it would continue to allow aid to enter Gaza "in accordance with the law".

Israel launched its assault on Rafah this month, forcing hundreds of thousands of Palestinians to flee a city that had become a refuge to around half of the population's 2.3 million people.

The ICJ is the highest UN body for hearing disputes between states, and its rulings are final and binding but have been ignored in the past.

Smoke rises during an Israeli airstrike on Rafah. Pic: Reuters
Image: Smoke rises during an Israeli airstrike on Rafah. Pic: Reuters

No enforcement powers

The court has no enforcement powers and Israel has signalled it will not comply with the latest ICJ order, which was adopted by a panel of 15 judges from around the world in a 13-2 vote, opposed only by judges from Uganda and Israel.

In response to the judgment, Israeli finance minister Bezalel Smotrich said: "Those who demand that the State of Israel stop the war, demand that it decree itself to cease to exist. We will not agree to that. If we lay down our weapons, the enemy will reach the beds of our children and women throughout the country."

South Africa has welcomed the latest ruling, with Zane Dangor, director general of the Department of International Relations and Cooperation, saying the order was "ground-breaking as it is the first time that explicit mention is made for Israel to halt its military action in any area of Gaza".

Judges arrive at the International Court of Justice in The Hague. Pic: Reuters
Image: Judges arrive at the International Court of Justice in The Hague. Pic: Reuters

Hamas also welcomed the ruling but said it was insufficient, with senior official Basem Naim saying "we believe it is not enough since the occupation aggression across the Gaza Strip and especially in northern Gaza is just as brutal and dangerous".

"We call upon the UN Security Council to immediately implement this demand by the World Court into practical measures to compel the Zionist enemy to implement the decision."

Israel says it has no choice but to attack Rafah to root out the last battalions of Hamas fighters it says are hiding there.

The ruling will likely now go to the UN Security Council

Once again, Israel finds itself on the wrong side of international law and is becoming rapidly isolated in the world as it pursues the elimination of Hamas inside Gaza.

This week, the chief prosecutor for the International Criminal Court requested arrest warrants against Benjamin Netanyahu and Yoav Gallant, three European states announced they would formally recognise a Palestinian state and now the International Court of Justice has ruled it must immediately end its operations in Rafah.

The difference between the ICC and ICJ is that the former deals with individuals and the latter nation states.

The ICJ has no power to enforce its rulings and Israeli officials have already definitely said they will ignore it.

Doing so, however, risks Netanyahu being accused of acting no differently to Vladimir Putin who refused to stop Russia's invasion of Ukraine despite the court ordering in 2022 that he do so. It could lead to further ostracisation of Israel in the world.

It would also put the White House in a tricky position - having fully supported the ICJ against Russia two years ago, Joe Biden would be accused of hypocrisy and of undermining international law if he rejects the court and chooses to support Israel on this occasion.

The ruling will likely now go to the UN Security Council. Israel will expect America's support there, but Washington might be persuaded to abstain rather than veto, especially as the ICJ ruling relates to Rafah and not the whole of Gaza.

But if Israel is forced to pull out of Rafah, it will leave Hamas infrastructure and fighting battalions in place - that way, the Israelis will have failed to achieve their objective of destroying Hamas and it will be spun as a defeat for Israel. That is not something Netanyahu will allow.

'We're doing this in a targeted and precise way'

Mr Netanyahu has vowed to both eliminate Hamas and get all the hostages back who were taken in the 7 October attacks.

"Hamas is in Rafah, Hamas has been holding our hostages in Rafah, which is why our forces are manoeuvring in Rafah. We're doing this in a targeted and precise way," Israeli chief military spokesperson Rear Admiral Daniel Hagari said on Thursday.

But the US - Israel's most powerful ally - has threatened to scale back its support over the deteriorating humanitarian situation in Gaza.

Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu and defence minister Yoav Gallant. Pic: Reuters
Image: Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu and defence minister Yoav Gallant. Pic: Reuters

What were the earlier ICJ rulings?

In a previous ruling in January, the court ordered Israel to prevent any acts of genocide against the Palestinians, while stopping short of ordering a halt to the military offensive.

And in a second order in March, the court said Israel must take measures to improve the humanitarian situation.

Also in January, the ICJ called on Hamas to release hostages it captured on 7 October.

Read more from Sky News:
Bodies of three hostages found in Gaza, IDF says
Israeli war cabinet member denies there is a famine in Gaza

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The chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Court - a separate court also based in The Hague - announced on Monday he had filed an application for arrest warrants against Mr Netanyahu and defence minister Yoav Gallant, as well as leaders of Hamas.

Prosecutor Karim Khan accused Mr Netanyahu and Mr Gallant of crimes including extermination, using hunger as a weapon and deliberately attacking civilians. Israel strongly denied the charges.

The Israelis said Hamas killed 1,200 people and took more than 250 hostages in the 7 October raid on southern Israel.

Since then, Israel's incursion has killed more than 35,000 people, according to the Hamas-run health ministry in Gaza.

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2024-05-24 16:18:45Z
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Majorca beach restaurant unveiled new rooftop bar a day before deadly collapse - Evening Standard

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2024-05-24 10:50:19Z
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London-born boy who died aged 15 to become first millennial saint - The Independent

A London-born teenager who died of leukaemia in 2006 is set to become the Catholic Church’s first millennial saint, after Pope Francis formally recognised a second miracle attributed to Carlo Acutis.

The late teenager, who moved with his family to Milan in Italy when he was a child, is known as the patron saint of the internet among Roman Catholics and has been referred to as “God’s influencer”.

According to a Vatican statement issued on Thursday, the miracle being recognised involves a Costa Rican woman, Liliana, whose daughter Valeria Valverde, 21, suffered severe head trauma from a bicycle accident in Florence on 2 July 2022.

File. An image of 15-year-old Carlo Acutis who died in 2006 of leukemia, is seen during his beatification ceremony celebrated by Cardinal Agostino Vallini, centre, in the St Francis Basilica, in Assisi, Italy, Saturday, 10 October 2020 (Associated Press)

The Vatican says that Valeria underwent critical surgery and had slim survival chances according to her doctors. Liliana reportedly prayed at Carlo Acutis’s tomb in Assisi on 8 July, while her secretary had already begun praying to him.

That same day, according to the Vatican, Valeria started to breathe on her own, and the following day she regained some movement and speech. By 18 July, a CAT scan showed her haemorrhage had vanished, and she entered rehabilitation on 11 August, making rapid progress.

Pope Francis has announced a meeting of Cardinals to discuss making Acutis a saint, according to the Vatican statement.

In 2020 Acutis became the youngest person in the modern era to be beatified after purportedly curing a Brazilian boy, Mattheus Vianna, of a serious birth defect that made eating difficult.

Acutis created a website to catalogue miracles and managed websites for local Catholic organisations in Italy before his death from leukaemia in 2006. He was 15.

“Carlo was the light answer to the dark side of the web,” his mother Antonia Acutis told The New York Times in 2020 after he was beatified and put on the path to sainthood in the Catholic Church.

Ms Acutis said that at the age of seven, he began attending daily mass. Her son’s life, she said, “can be used to show how the internet can be used for good, to spread good things”.

After Acutis’s death, the Diocese of Assisi petitioned the Vatican for his sainthood. They examined his emails and computer search history and interviewed witnesses while awaiting miracles to support his cause.

In February that year, Pope Francis credited Acutis with the miraculous healing of the Brazilian boy with a malformed pancreas after the child reportedly touched one of Carlo’s shirts.

According to a 2017 report by the National Catholic Register, only 120 of the more than 10,000 saints recognised by the Roman Catholic Church died as children or teenagers.

The Vatican has not yet announced a date for the formal canonisation ceremony.

Before Acutis, the last saint born in England was Cardinal John Henry Newman, who died in 1890 at the age of 89. He was canonised by Pope Francis in 2019. According to the Catholic News Agency, the first miracle attributed to Cardinal Newman was the inexplicable healing of a deacon with a severe spinal condition.

The second involved a pregnant American woman who recovered from a life-threatening diagnosis after praying for Newman’s intercession, with doctors unable to explain her sudden recovery.

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2024-05-24 09:11:45Z
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Singapore Airlines changes seatbelt rules, route after fatal turbulence - Al Jazeera English

Airline says it has adopted ‘more cautious approach’ after incident that killed one person and injured dozens.

Singapore Airlines (SIA) has changed its seat belt rules and altered at least one flight route after a bout of extreme turbulence killed one passenger and left dozens of others hospitalised.

A 73-year-old British man died of a suspected heart attack and dozens of passengers were injured on Tuesday when their flight from London to Singapore was buffeted by severe turbulence, forcing an emergency landing in Bangkok.

Following the incident, Singapore’s flag carrier has adopted “a more cautious approach to managing turbulence in-flight”, SIA told Al Jazeera in a statement on Friday.

Under the revised policy, meal service will no longer be provided when the seat belt sign is on, the airline said.

Cabin crew will also continue to secure all loose items and equipment during poor weather conditions and continue to advise passengers to return to their seats and secure their seat belts.

“Pilots and cabin crew are aware of the hazards associated with turbulence. They are also trained to assist customers and ensure cabin safety throughout the flight,” an SIA spokesperson said.

“SIA will continue to review our processes as the safety of our passengers and crew is of utmost importance.”

SIA has also avoided flying over the region of Myanmar where the turbulence occurred when travelling between London and Singapore, flying over the Bay of Bengal instead, according to route data on flight tracking site Flightradar24.

During Tuesday’s incident, passengers were slammed into the ceiling of the aircraft and personal belongings and food were thrown around the cabin.

Forty-six passengers and two crew members, including citizens of the United Kingdom, Australia, Malaysia and the Philippines, were being treated in hospital in Bangkok as of late Thursday.

Adinun Kittiratanapaibool, director of Bangkok’s Samitivej Srinakarin Hospital, told reporters that more than 20 of those were in intensive care with spinal cord, brain and skull injuries.

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2024-05-24 08:17:39Z
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Kamis, 23 Mei 2024

Majorca building collapse: Four dead and 21 injured, rescuers say - BBC.com

Four dead and 21 injured in Majorca building collapse

People in hi-vis vests and hard hats surrounded by rubble
Images from the scene show emergency personnel moving sizeable debris outside the building

Four people have died and 21 are injured after a two-storey building collapsed in Majorca, emergency services say.

Several people are believed to be trapped at the site of the Medusa Beach Club, a beachside restaurant on Cartago Street in Palma de Majorca.

The incident reportedly happened at about 20:30 local time (19:30 BST).

Local emergency services said psychologists have also been called to the scene.

Eyewitness told local media that many of those inside the building at the time of the collapse were tourists. May is the beginning of the busy tourist season in the area.

The mayor of Palma, Jaime Martínez, is said to have travelled to the scene with the Deputy Mayor of Tourism.

Picture of fire truck outside building
A fire truck pictured outside the building in Palma de Majorca

The president of the Balearic Islands, Marga Prohens, said she was shocked by the incident and sent her condolences to the victims’ families.

Ms Prohens also thanked the emergency services and Pedro Sánchez, Spain’s Prime Minister, for his support.

The prime minister said he is closely following the incident and said his government is willing to collaborate with “all the means and personnel” needed, in a statement on X.

Majorca is one of Spain’s Balearic Islands, which more than 14 million tourists visited last year according to official figures.

Map of Palma de Majorca
Majorca is one of Spain's Balearic Islands

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2024-05-23 20:39:15Z
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Macron puts New Caledonia voting reform on hold after riots - BBC

people demonstrate as Macron's motorcade passesReuters

President Emmanuel Macron says he will not force through a controversial voting reform in the French Pacific territory of New Caledonia following deadly rioting.

Speaking on a visit to the main island, Mr Macron said local leaders should engage in dialogue to find an alternative agreement for the archipelago's future.

Six people including two police officers have been killed and hundreds more wounded in riots, looting and arson.

Currently, voting in the territory is restricted to indigenous Kanaks and those who arrived from France before 1998.

The planned reform would see more French residents - including any who have been in New Caledonia for at least 10 years - able to vote.

Many Kanaks - who make up about 40% of the population - fear this would dilute their political voice and make any future independence referendum harder to achieve.

"I have pledged that this reform will not pass today in the current context," Mr Macron said.

"We will allow some weeks to allow a calming of tensions and resumption of of dialogue to find a broad accord" among all parties, he added, saying he would review the situation in a month.

macron in Noumea
Reuters

However Mr Macron insisted that the result of the last independence referendum, in which residents voted to remain part of France, could not be called into question.

New Caledonia has held four referendums on independence. The first two showed slim majorities for remaining part of France. The third was boycotted by pro-independence parties after the authorities refused to postpone the vote due to the Covid epidemic.

During his trip, Mr Macron had meetings with New Caledonian pro- and anti-independence leaders.

If the two sides were able to reach a new deal, the territory could then vote to adopt it in a referendum, he said.

Under the 1998 Nouméa Accord, France agreed to give New Caledonia - a group of islands between Australia and Fiji that became a French territory in the 19th Century - more political autonomy and to limit voting in provincial and assembly elections to those who were residents then.

More than 40,000 French nationals have moved to New Caledonia since.

Last week, the National Assembly in Paris proposed granting voting rights to French residents who had lived in the territory for 10 years, sparking a violent reaction.

The unrest has caused hundreds of millions of dollars worth of damage. None of the six people killed were shot by French security forces, French prosecutors say.

A state of emergency would be lifted when all the protesters' barricades had been dismantled, Mr Macron added. He described the violence as an "unprecedented insurrection movement" that no-one saw coming.

A 3,000-strong force deployed from France would remain in the territory including during the Paris Summer Olympics if needed, he said.

The airport in Nouméa, New Caledonia's capital, remains closed to commercial flights.

Military flights airlifted about 300 Australian and 50 New Zealand holidaymakers out of the territory. They reported witnessing arson and looting and experiencing food shortages.

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