Advertisement
Advertisement
Israel-Gaza war
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more
Humanitarian aid trucks in southern Gaza last week. Photo: AFP

Preventing aid getting to Gaza could be ‘a crime’: ICC prosecutor

  • International Criminal Court prosecutor Karim Khan is probing any war crimes by both Hamas and Israel
  • On Sunday, Gaza received its largest aid shipment since the war between Israel and Hamas began

The International Criminal Court’s chief prosecutor warned on Sunday that blocking humanitarian aid from entering Gaza could constitute a crime.

“Impeding relief supplies as provided by the Geneva Conventions may constitute a crime within the court jurisdiction,” Karim Khan told reporters in Cairo.

He was speaking after a visit to Egypt’s Rafah crossing, where he said trucks full of desperately needed goods remained stuck and unable to cross into Gaza.

“I saw trucks full of goods, full of humanitarian assistance stuck where nobody needs them, stuck in Egypt, stuck at Rafah,” he said.

03:05

Humanitarian crisis unfolding in Gaza as food supplies run out after total Israeli blockade

Humanitarian crisis unfolding in Gaza as food supplies run out after total Israeli blockade

“These supplies must get to the civilians of Gaza without delay.”

Rafah is the only entry point through which international aid is currently able to trickle into the Hamas-run Palestinian territory, which is facing a near-total siege and relentless Israeli bombardment.

US urges Israel to protect civilians, increase aid to Gaza

Israel imposed the siege and unleashed its massive bombing campaign after Hamas gunmen stormed across the border on October 7, killing 1,400 people, mostly civilians, and seizing 230 hostages, according to Israeli officials.

Israel’s strikes have since then killed more than 8,000 people, half of them children, the Hamas-controlled health ministry in the territory said.

On Sunday, 33 trucks carrying water, food and medicine entered the border crossing from Egypt. It was the largest aid convoy since the war between Israel and Hamas began.

Since limited aid deliveries resumed through the Rafah crossing on October 21, a total of 117 trucks have entered.

Prior to the siege, some 500 trucks carrying aid and other goods entered Gaza every day.

Palestinians collecting bags of dried pulses from a UN-run aid supply centre in Deir al-Balah, Gaza on Saturday. Photo: AFP

Khan said he wanted “to underline clearly to Israel that there must be discernible efforts without further delay to make sure civilians (in Gaza) receive basic food, medicines”.

On Sunday the United Nations warned it feared a breakdown of public order after looting at food aid centres in Gaza run by its agency for Palestinian refugees, the UNRWA.

UN chief Antonio Guterres said the situation was “growing more desperate by the hour” as casualty numbers increase and essential supplies of food, water, medicine and shelter dwindle.

In a phone call with Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Sunday, US President Joe Biden also underscored the need to “immediately and significantly” increase the flow of aid.

Biden and Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi committed to the significant acceleration of assistance flowing into Gaza beginning Sunday, the White House said separately.

Khan said his office had an ongoing investigation into “any crimes committed on the territory of Palestine and any crimes committed, whether it’s by Israel and Palestine or whether it’s acts committed on the territory of Palestine or from Palestine into Israel”.

“This includes current events in Gaza and also current events in the West Bank,” Khan said.

He said he was “very concerned also by the spike of the number of reported incidents of attack by settlers against Palestinian civilians” in the territory Israel has occupied since 1967.

Demonstrators in Jerusalem carry posters with the images of Israeli hostages held by Palestinian militants. Photo: AFP

Khan also stressed that hostage-taking was a breach of the Geneva Conventions.

“I call for the immediate release of all hostages taken from Israel and for their safe return to their families,” he said.

The British lawyer said “Israel has clear obligations in relation to its war with Hamas, not just moral obligations but legal obligations” to comply with the laws of conflict.

“These principles equally apply to Hamas in relation to firing indiscriminate rockets into Israel,” he said.

Set up in 2002, the ICC is the only global independent tribunal to probe the world’s worst crimes including genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity.

The Palestinians signed up to the court’s founding Rome Statute in 2015.

Israel, which is not a signatory to the ICC, has refused to cooperate with the probe or recognise its jurisdiction.

Additional reporting by Associated Press and Reuters

48