On January 11, South Africa accused Israel of genocide in Gaza before the International Court of Justice – the UN’s top court. The country, which moved this court asked it to issue orders that will compel Israel to suspend military operations in the Palestinian region.
Adila Hassim, advocate of South Africa’s high court, presented the case for why Israel’s actions can be clearly construed as genocidal.
Below is her submission in full. Almost each line of the original text carries a footnote. The Wire has removed them for ease of reading. The original text and annotations are available here.
Genocidal acts
Thank you. Madam President, distinguished Members of the Court, it is a privilege to appear on behalf of the Republic of South Africa in this case of exceptional importance. It is a case that underscores the very essence of our shared humanity as expressed in the preamble to the Genocide Convention.
It is my task to address the Court on the genocidal acts that have led to this urgent request for provisional measures under Article 41 of the Statute of the Court. South Africa contends that Israel has transgressed Article II of the Convention, by committing actions that fall within the definition of genocide. The actions show a systematic pattern of conduct from which genocide can be inferred.
Overview
Allow me to place these acts in context. Gaza is one of the two constituent territories of the occupied Palestinian territories, occupied by Israel since 1967. It is a narrow strip, of approximately 365 sq km, as depicted in the map now displayed.
Israel continues to exercise control over the airspace, territorial waters, land crossings, water, electricity, electromagnetic sphere and civilian infrastructure in Gaza, as well as over key governmental functions. As the honourable minister has said, entry and exit by air and sea to Gaza is prohibited with Israel operating the only two crossing points.
Gaza, which is one of the most densely populated places in the world is home to approximately 2.3 million Palestinians, almost half of them children.
For the past 96 days, Israel has subjected Gaza to what has been described as one of the heaviest conventional bombing campaigns in the history of modern warfare. Palestinians in Gaza are being killed by Israeli weaponry and bombs from air, land and sea.
They are also at immediate risk of death by starvation, dehydration and disease as a result of the ongoing siege by Israel, the destruction of Palestinian towns, the insufficient aid being allowed through to the Palestinian population and the impossibility of distributing this limited aid while bombs fall. This conduct renders essentials to life unobtainable.
At this provisional measures stage, as this Court has made clear in The Gambia v. Myanmar case, it is not necessary for the Court to come to a final view on the question of whether Israel’s conduct constitutes genocide. It is necessary to establish only “whether . . . at least some of the acts alleged . . . are capable of falling within the provisions of the Convention”. On analysing the specific and ongoing genocidal acts complained of, it is clear that at least some, if not all, of these acts fall within the Convention’s provisions.
These acts are documented in detail in South Africa’s Application and confirmed by reliable, often United Nations, sources. It is thus unnecessary and impossible for me to recount all of them.
I will highlight only some in order to illustrate the pattern of genocidal conduct. The United Nations statistics that are relied upon are up to date as of 9 January 2024.
In South Africa’s oral submissions, we will illustrate the facts that we rely on with limited use of audiovisual material. Madam President, we do so with restraint and only where necessary, and always with respect to the Palestinian people.
Against this background, I move now to demonstrate in turn how Israel’s conduct violates Articles II (a), II (b), II (c) and II (d) of the Convention.
The genocidal acts
Article II (a): killing Palestinians in Gaza
The first genocidal act committed by Israel is the mass killing of Palestinians in Gaza in violation of Article II (a) of the Genocide Convention.
As the UN Secretary-General explained five weeks ago, the level of Israel’s killing is so extensive that “nowhere is safe in Gaza”.
As I stand before you today, 23,210 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli forces during the sustained attacks over the last three months, at least 70 per cent of whom are believed to be women and children. Some 7,000 Palestinians are still missing, presumed dead under the rubble.
Palestinians in Gaza are subjected to relentless bombing wherever they go. They are killed in their homes, in places where they seek shelter, in hospitals, in schools, in mosques, in churches and as they try to find food and water for their families. They have been killed if they failed to evacuate, in the places to which they have fled and even while they attempted to flee along Israeli declared “safe routes”.
The level of killing is so extensive that those whose bodies are found are buried in mass graves, often unidentified.
In the first three weeks alone following 7 October, Israel deployed 6,000 bombs per week. At least 200 times, it has deployed two-thousand-pound bombs in southern areas of Palestine designated as “safe”. These bombs have also decimated the north, including refugee camps. Two-thousand-pound bombs are some of the biggest and most destructive bombs available. They are dropped by lethal fighter jets that are used to strike targets on the ground, by one of the world’s most resourced armies.
Israel has killed an “unparalleled and unprecedented” number of civilians, with the full knowledge of how many civilian lives each bomb will take.
More than 1,800 Palestinian families in Gaza have lost multiple family members and hundreds of multigenerational families have been wiped out, with no remaining survivors — mothers, fathers, children, siblings, grandparents, aunts, cousins — often all killed together.
This killing is nothing short of destruction of Palestinian life. It is inflicted deliberately. No one is spared, not even newborn babies.
The scale of Palestinian child killings in Gaza is such that United Nations chiefs have described it as “a graveyard for children”. The devastation, we submit, is intended to and has laid waste to Gaza beyond any acceptable legal, let alone humane, justification.
Article II (b): causing serious mental and bodily harm to Palestinians in Gaza
The second genocidal act identified in South Africa’s Application is Israel’s infliction of serious bodily or mental harm to Palestinians in Gaza in violation of Article II (b) of the Genocide Convention.
Israel’s attacks have left close to 60,000 Palestinians wounded and maimed – again the majority of them women and children. This in circumstances where the healthcare system has all but collapsed. I return to this later in my speech. Large numbers of Palestinian civilians including children are arrested, blindfolded, forced to undress and loaded onto trucks, taken to unknown locations.
The suffering of the Palestinian people – physical and mental – is undeniable.
Article II (c): deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part
Turning to the third genocidal act, under Article II (c): Israel has deliberately imposed conditions on Gaza that cannot sustain life and are calculated to bring about its physical destruction. Israel achieves this in at least four ways.
First, by displacement. Israel has forced the displacement of about 85 per cent of Palestinians in Gaza. There is nowhere safe for them to flee to – those who cannot leave or refuse to be displaced have either been killed or are at extreme risk of being killed in their homes.
Many Palestinians have been displaced multiple times, as families are forced to move repeatedly in search of safety. Israel’s first evacuation order on 13 October required the evacuation of over 1 million people — including children, the elderly, the wounded and infirm; entire hospitals were required to evacuate, even newborn babies in intensive care. The order required them to evacuate the north to the south within 24 hours.
The order itself was genocidal. It required immediate movement, taking only what could be carried, while no humanitarian assistance was permitted, and fuel, water and food and other necessities of life had deliberately been cut off. It was clearly calculated to bring about the destruction of the population.
For many Palestinians, the forced evacuation from their homes is inevitably permanent. Israel has now damaged or destroyed an estimated 355,000 Palestinian homes – leaving at least half a million Palestinians with no home to return to. The Special Rapporteur on the human rights of internally displaced persons explains that houses and infrastructure “have been razed to the ground, frustrating any realistic prospects for displaced Gazans to return home, repeating a long history of mass forced displacement of Palestinians by Israel”.
There is no indication at all that Israel accepts responsibility for rebuilding what it has destroyed. Instead, the destruction is celebrated by the Israeli army: soldiers film themselves joyfully detonating entire apartment blocks and town squares; erecting the Israeli flag over the wreckage, seeking to re-establish Israeli settlements on the rubble of Palestinian homes — and thus extinguishing the very basis of Palestinian life in Gaza.
Second, together with the forced displacement, Israel’s conduct has been deliberately calculated to cause widespread hunger, dehydration and starvation. Israel’s campaign has pushed Gazans to the brink of famine. An “unprecedented 93% of the population in Gaza is facing crisis levels of hunger”. Of all the people in the world currently suffering catastrophic hunger, more than 80 per cent are in Gaza. The situation is such that the experts are now predicting that more Palestinians in Gaza may die from starvation and disease than airstrikes and yet Israel continues to impede the effective delivery of humanitarian assistance to Palestinians, not only refusing to allow sufficient aid in, but removing the ability to distribute it through constant bombardment and obstruction.
Just three days ago, on 8 January, a planned mission by United Nations agencies to deliver urgent medical supplies and vital fuel to a hospital and medical supply centre was denied by Israeli authorities.
This marked the fifth denial of a mission to the centre since 26 December, leaving five hospitals in northern Gaza without access to life-saving medical supplies and equipment. Aid trucks that are allowed in are seized upon by the hungry. What is provided is simply not enough.
[Video playing]
Madam President, Members of the Court, this is an image of an aid truck arriving in Gaza.
Third, Israel has deliberately inflicted conditions in which Palestinians in Gaza are denied adequate shelter, clothes or sanitation. For weeks, there have been acute shortages of clothes, bedding, blankets and critical non-food items. Clean water is all but gone, leaving far below the amount required to safely drink, clean and cook.
Accordingly, the WHO has stated that Gaza is “experiencing soaring rates of infectious disease outbreaks”. Cases of diarrhoea in children under five years of age have increased 2,000 per cent since hostilities began. When combined and left untreated, malnutrition and disease create a deadly cycle.
The fourth genocidal act under Article II (b) is Israel’s military assault on Gaza’s healthcare system, which renders life unsustainable. Even by 7 December, the United Nations Special Rapporteur on the right to health noted that “[t]he healthcare infrastructure in the Gaza strip has been completely obliterated”.
Those wounded by Israel in Gaza are being deprived of life-saving medical care. Gaza’s healthcare system – already crippled by years of blockade and prior attacks by Israel – is unable to cope with the sheer scale of the injuries.
Article II (d): reproductive violence
Finally, the United Nations Special Rapporteur on violence against women and girls has pointed to acts committed by Israel that would fall under the fourth category of genocidal acts, in Article II (d) of the Convention.
On 22 November she expressly warned the following: “the reproductive violence inflicted by Israel on Palestinian women, newborn babies, infants, and children could be qualified as . . . acts of genocide under Article 2 of the [Genocide Convention] . . . including ‘imposing measures intended to prevent births within a group’”.
Israel is blocking the delivery of life-saving aid, including essential medical kits for delivering babies, in circumstances where an estimated 180 women are giving birth in Gaza each day. Of these 180 women, the WHO warns that 15 per cent are likely to experience pregnancy or birth-related complications and need additional medical care. That care is simply not available.
Pattern of conduct indicates intent
In sum, Madam President, all of these acts, individually and collectively, form a calculated pattern of conduct by Israel, indicating a genocidal intent.
This intent is evident from Israel’s conduct in:
(1) specially targeting Palestinians living in Gaza;
(2) using weaponry that causes large-scale homicidal destruction, as well as targeted sniping of civilians;
(3) designating safe zones for Palestinians to seek refuge and then bombing these;
(4) depriving Palestinians in Gaza of basic needs — food, water, healthcare, fuel, sanitation and communications;
(5) destroying social infrastructure: homes, schools, mosques, churches, hospitals; and
(6) killing, seriously injuring and leaving large numbers of children orphaned.
Genocides are never declared in advance. But this Court has the benefit of the past 13 weeks of evidence that shows incontrovertibly a pattern of conduct and related intention that justifies a plausible claim of genocidal acts.
In The Gambia v. Myanmar case, this Court did not hesitate to impose provisional measures in relation to allegations that Myanmar was committing genocidal acts against the Rohingya within the Rakhine State. The facts before the Court today are, sadly, even more stark, and like The Gambia v. Myanmar case, deserve and demand this Court’s intervention.
Conclusion
Every day there is mounting irreparable loss of life, property, dignity and humanity for the Palestinian people. Our newsfeeds show graphic images of suffering that has become unbearable to watch. Nothing will stop this suffering, except an order from this Court. Without an indication of provisional measures, the atrocities will continue; with the Israeli Defense Forces indicating that they intend pursuing this course of action for at least a year. In the words of the United Nations Under-Secretary General on 5 January 2024:
“You think getting aid into Gaza is easy? Think again. Three layers of inspections before trucks can even enter. Confusion and long queues. A growing list of rejected items. A crossing point meant for pedestrians, not trucks. Another crossing point where trucks have been blocked by desperate, hungry communities. A destroyed commercial sector. Constant bombardments. Poor communications. Damaged roads. Convoys shot at. Delays at checkpoints. A traumatized and exhausted population crammed into a smaller and smaller sliver of land. Shelters which have long exceeded their full capacity. Aid workers themselves displaced, killed. This is an impossible situation for the people of Gaza, and for those trying to help them. The fighting must stop.”
Madam President, Members of the Court, that concludes my section on the genocidal conduct of Israel.
I thank you for your patient attention, and I ask that you call Advocate Ngcukaitobi to the podium to address the Court on genocidal intent.
Adila Hassim is one of the South African lawyers fighting the case against Israel’s genocide at the ICJ.