...

Logo Pasino du Havre - Casino-Hôtel - Spa
in partnership with
Logo Nextory

Analyst says ICC arrest warrants unlikely to end Gaza war

• Nov 22, 2024, 6:52 AM
2 min de lecture
1

There has been widespread reaction to the three arrest warrants issued on Thursday by the International Criminal Court against Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, his former defence minister, Yoav Gallant, and Hamas commander, Ibrahim Al-Masri.

ICC judges said there were “reasonable grounds” to believe the three men bore "criminal responsibility" for crimes during the war between Israel and Hamas.

Israel has said it killed Masri, also known as Mohammed Deif, in an airstrike in July but Hamas has neither confirmed nor denied this.

An international lawyer and analyst said the arrest warrants were expected due to the ongoing war and the rising death toll in Gaza.

"Palestinians are killed, maimed, deprived of food every single day. And the war has been going on for too long,” said Nomi Bar-Yaacov, an associate fellow of the International Security Programme at the Chatham House think tank in London

“I think this was avoidable. The pre-trial chamber waited quite a long time to see whether the trends will change. But the war continues. The death toll in Gaza is rising. You have 40,000 children, women, and few men waiting for emergency medical care.”

The court’s decision was condemned by Israel, but welcomed by Hamas, Palestinian Islamic Jihad, and ordinary people in Gaza.

Bar-Yaacov said Netanyahu's freedom of movement is now limited, as he cannot travel to ICC member states, including key European countries like the UK, France and Germany.

"I don't think Netanyahu will be arrested because he's not going to take the risk of travelling to any country that will be able to issue an arrest warrant. So in that sense, it limits his freedom of movement, but that will only strengthen his ties to Donald Trump."

The United States, a non-member of the International Criminal Court, is not bound to act on the arrest warrants, but she said she believes the move will further deepen global divides.

"I certainly think he'll be going to the US, especially since his mate Donald Trump has been elected president. I don't think that Netanyahu or Trump care in the sense of actually going to do anything," she added.

Bar-Yaacov called the ICC's warrants significant but doubted the move's impact on ending the war.

"This action has been taken. But the big question is whether it's going to give those people any relief and what action is actually going to be taken," she said.


Today

Experience the pulse of contemporary art at WEKRE in Ouagadougou
• 3:22 PM
2 min
Ouagadougou, the vibrant capital of Burkina Faso, is buzzing with creativity as it hosts WEKRE, an open-air exhibition that brings contemporary art closer to the community. Meaning "emergence" in the Mooré language, WEKRE aims to make
Read the article
Trial set to begin for six accused in Paul Pogba blackmail case
• 2:54 PM
2 min
The trial of six individuals close to football star Paul Pogba opens this Tuesday, November 26, at the Paris court. Among the accused is Mathias Pogba, the elder brother of the 2018 World Cup winner with the French national team. All are charged with atte
Read the article
Cape Verde's agricultural transformation: From drought to innovation
• 2:20 PM
2 min
Just four years after being hit by a severe drought, Cape Verde is undergoing a remarkable agricultural transformation. Once struggling to sustain crops, the archipelago is now embracing innovation, with lush greenery emerging as
Read the article
EU's top diplomat Josep Borrell visits Lebanon as escalations continue
• 11:51 AM
1 min
Borrell’s visit to Lebanon comes at the tail-end of a Middle East tour related to the ongoing wars and the crises in the Gaza Strip and Lebanon.
Read the article
Thousands displaced as violence escalates in Sudan’s Al-Jazirah state
• 10:31 AM
2 min
Thirty-year-old Hadeel Abdelnasir, a mother of three, fled her home in eastern Al-Jazirah two weeks ago as violence tore through her community. Now in Port Sudan, she shares her harrowing story of survival.
Read the article
COP29: A $300B a year deal for climate cash sparks outrage
• 8:56 AM
2 min
United Nations climate talks adopted a deal to inject at least $300 billion annually in humanity’s fight against climate change, aimed at helping developing nations cope with the ravages of global warming in tense negotiations.
Read the article
As fast fashion's waste pollutes Africa's environment, designers in Ghana are finding a solution
• 7:57 AM
3 min
In the trash dumps of Accra in Ghana and along the city's beaches, fast fashion, produced mostly in countries with cheap labor and sold in retailers around the world, arrives at its last stop.
Read the article