Friday, January 12, 2024

IMPORTANT NEW BOOKS:

Frantz Fanon
by James S. Williams
Reaktion Books, 2024

[Publication date: January 1, 2024]

A biography of the revolutionary philosopher and psychiatrist.
 
Doctor, militant, essayist, ambassador, teacher, journalist, pan-Africanist, Frantz Fanon sought to decolonize mid-twentieth-century culture as he embodied a new kind of intellectual. Born in colonial Martinique, he fought for France during World War II but later renounced his citizenship and fought in the Algerian War of Independence. This book emphasizes Fanon’s gift for self-invention and performance as it follows his short but extraordinary life and explores how his pioneering work in psychiatry influenced his revolutionary philosophy.

The Squad: AOC and the Hope of a Political Revolution
by Ryan Grim
‎Henry Holt and Co.


[Publication date: December 5, 2023]

The Squad

Semafor's Best Political Book of 2023

A riveting insider account of the progressive movement in Congress centering A.O.C., Rashida Tlaib, Jamaal Bowman, Cori Bush, Ayanna Pressley, and Ilhan Omar―their rise, their efforts to set an ambitious agenda for the country, and their struggle to find their footing within the Democratic party.

The Squad
is the definitive, must-read book about the most exciting figures defining our new era. The story is urgent, and the stakes are high―for the country and the world―and Grim, an experienced political reporter who covered the Squad before they were the Squad, is uniquely qualified to tell it.

When Bernie Sanders, an obscure Vermont senator, launched his quixotic 2016 presidential campaign, few could have seen just how radically the Democratic Party would transform in just a few short years―or that such a transformation could be led by a Bronx bartender volunteering for Bernie in her spare time. The world as it was when that campaign began is almost unrecognizable today, and the Squad has both shaped and been shaped by the seismic social, cultural, and political changes underway.

Referred to informally as the Squad, led by the preternaturally politically savvy Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, the group laid down a marker for an aggressive left-wing agenda. Grim takes you behind the scenes as that new energy makes impact with Washington, and the Squad spends as much time fending off assaults from Donald Trump―who regularly singled them out and led chants of “send them back” at rallies―as they did battling their own party’s sclerotic leadership. As they’ve grown in office, they’ve had to contend with the eternal question that confronts outsiders who power their way into the inside: Are they still radical organizers willing and able to lead a political revolution? 

 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:



Ryan W. Grim is an American author and journalist. Grim was Washington, D.C. bureau chief for HuffPost and is the Washington, D.C. bureau chief for The Intercept. He is also a political commentator for Breaking Points and appears frequently on The Majority Report with Sam Seder,. His writings have appeared in several publications, including Rolling Stone, The Washington Post, and Politico. He is the author of This Is Your Country on Drugs and We've Got People: From Jesse Jackson to Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, the End of Big Money and the Rise of a Movement

 

The Rebels: Elizabeth Warren, Bernie Sanders, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, and the Struggle for a New American Politics
by Joshua Green
‎Penguin Press, 2024

[Publication date: January 9, 2024] 

From the author of the #1 New York Times bestseller Devil’s Bargain comes the revelatory inside story of the uprising within the Democratic Party, of the economic populists led by Elizabeth Warren, Bernie Sanders, and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.

In his classic book
Devil’s Bargain, Joshua Green chronicled how the forces of economic populism on the right, led by the likes of Steve Bannon, turned Donald Trump into their flawed but powerful vessel. In The Rebels, he gives an epic account of the long struggle that has played out in parallel on the left, told through an intimate reckoning with the careers of the three political figures who have led the charge most prominently. Based on remarkable inside sourcing and razor-sharp analysis, The Rebels uses the grand narrative of a political party undergoing tumult and transformation to tell an even larger story about the fate of America.

For many years, as Green recounts, the Democrats made their bed with Wall Street and big tech, relying on corporate money for electioneering and embracing the worldview that technological and financial innovation and globalization were a powerful net good, a rising tide lifting all boats. Yes, there were howls of pain, but they were written off by most of the elites as the moaning of sore losers mired in the past. There were always some Democratic politicians representing the old labor base who resisted the new dispensation, but these figures never made it very far on a national level. For one thing, they didn’t have the money. But as income inequality ballooned, widening the gulf between the wealthy elite and everyone else, pressures began to build.

With the 2008 crisis, those forces finally erupted into plain sight, turning this book’s protagonists into national icons. At its heart,
The Rebels tells the riveting human story of the rise and fight of Elizabeth Warren, Bernie Sanders, and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez from the financial crisis on, as outrage over the unfairness of the American system formed a flood tide of political revolution. That same tide that would sweep Trump into office was blunted on the left, as the Democratic party found itself riven by culture war issues between its centrists and its progressives. But the winds behind economic populism still howl at gale force. Whether the Democrats can bridge their divisions and home in on a vision that unites the party, and perhaps even the country, in the face of the most violently deranged political landscape since the Civil War will be the ultimate test of the legacies of all three characters. 

A masterful account of one of the defining political stories of our age,
The Rebels cements Joshua Green’s stature at the first rank of American writers explaining how we’ve arrived at this pass and what lies ahead.
 
 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
 
 
Joshua Green is author of the #1 New York Times bestseller, "Devil's Bargain: Steve Bannon, Donald Trump, and the Storming of the Presidency" (Penguin), a national correspondent for Bloomberg Businessweek, and a CNN political analyst. Previously, Green was an editor at the Atlantic and the Washington Monthly, and a political columnist for the Boston Globe. He's also written for the New Yorker, Esquire, Rolling Stone, Vanity Fair and other publications. Green regularly appears on CNN's shows, HBO’s Real Time with Bill Maher, and PBS’s Washington Week and Frontline. 
 

Thursday, January 11, 2024

The Extraordinary and Inspiring Palestinian Activist, Scholar, Lawyer, Teacher, and Philosopher Noura Erakat On What Our Collective Struggles Against Colonialism, Imperialism, and Fascism in Palestine and Beyond Mean and Embody Throughout the World

Noura Erakat on the collective trauma of Israel’s genocidal assault on Gaza | Witnessing Palestine

December 19, 2023

VIDEO:

Witnessing Palestine with Frank Barat is a new program from Mondoweiss inviting influential activists from around the world to discuss current developments in the struggle for Palestinian liberation. As we recorded this program, Gaza had been under Israeli bombardment from the air, land, and sea for 70 days. Over 18,000 Palestinians in Gaza are known to have been killed by the Israeli military; however, the true number is likely much higher because many people remain buried under the rubble of buildings as rescuers and aid workers cannot reach them. At the same time, more than 50,000 Palestinians in Gaza have been wounded. The Israeli military is continuing to ramp up its actions in the West Bank. A large invasion of Jenin in the northern West Bank has been ongoing for several days. The Israeli military has killed, injured, and arrested numerous Palestinians there. Joining Frank to discuss the current situation in Palestine and where the global movement for Palestinian freedom goes from here is Noura Erakat. 

Noura is a human rights attorney and an Associate Professor at Rutgers University in the Department of Africana Studies and the Program in Criminal Justice. She is an editorial committee member of the Journal for Palestine Studies and a co-Founding Editor of Jadaliyya.

Follow Noura on: – Instagram:   / nouraerakat   – Twitter:   / 4noura   - - - 


ABOUT THE HOST/PRODUCER: 


Frank Barat is a journalist, author, and organizer. He has worked on books with Angela Davis, Noam Chomsky, Ilan Pappé, Marc Lamont-Hill, Vijay Prashad, and Ken Loach. He works for the Palestine Institute of Diplomacy.

 

Francesca Albanese and Susan Abulhawa On How and Why the Liberatory Dimensions Of the Palestinians Massive Struggle Against Genocide and Dispossession in Gaza And Beyond Is The Leading Force of Resistance Against All Forms Of Oppression, Exploitation, Apartheid, Colonization, and Dehumanization in the World Today

Israel's genocide in Gaza exposes the racism of the international system | Witnessing Palestine


Premiered 16 hours ago

 

As the International Court of Justice prepares to hear South Africa's petition accusing Israel of genocide, Frank Barat talks to Francesca Albanese and Susan Abulhawa about the role Israel's genocidal war on Gaza plays in the global systems of diplomacy, economics, and culture. The outcome of this shocking destruction of a civilian population will have implications for the entire world. Is Palestinian resistance to the Israeli occupation and apartheid really the only thing standing in between a world governed by laws and one subject to the whims of those with money and weapons?
 
 
ABOUT THE SPEAKERS: 
 
 
Francesca Albanese is the United Nations Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the Palestinian Territory occupied since 1967. She is an Affiliate Scholar at the Institute for the Study of International Migration at Georgetown University, and a Senior Advisor on Migration and Forced Displacement for the think tank Arab Renaissance for Democracy and Development (ARDD), where she co-founded the Global Network on the Question of Palestine (GNQP), a coalition of renowned professional and scholars engaged in/on Israel/Palestine. 
 
Susan Abulhawa is a Palestinian-American writer and political activist. She is the author of Mornings in Jenin—translated into thirty languages—and The Blue Between Sky and Water. Born to refugees of the Six Day War of 1967, she moved to the United States as a teenager, graduated in biomedical science, and established a career in medical science. She is the Executive Director of the Palestine Writes Literary Festival. 

Follow Francesca on: – Twitter:   / franceskalbs   

Follow Susan on: – Instagram  / susanabulhawa   - - - 

 
ABOUT THE HOST/PRODUCER:


Frank Barat is a journalist, author, and organizer. He has worked on books with Angela Davis, Noam Chomsky, Ilan Pappé, Marc Lamont-Hill, Vijay Prashad, and Ken Loach. He works for the Palestine Institute of Diplomacy.



 

Renowned Activist Bree Newsome Bass On The Vile Politics, Ongoing State Violence, and Brazen Opportunist Hypocrisy of Exploiting African American Suffering On Behalf of White Supremacy in the United States and Settler colonialism and Genocide in Palestine--Past and Present

"Complete Hypocrisy": Bree Newsome Bass on Biden Fighting Racism While Funding Gaza Genocide

January 9, 2024

President Biden delivered his second campaign speech of the year Monday at the historic Mother Emanuel AME Church in Charleston, South Carolina, where a white supremacist gunman killed nine people in 2015. Biden remembered the victims, spoke of the "poison of white supremacy" and assailed his Republican rivals for not taking racism seriously, but Biden's speech was interrupted at one point by protesters demanding a ceasefire in Gaza, where Israel's U.S.-backed war has killed over 23,000 people. "There's no way we're fighting white supremacy … in the midst of genocide," says artist and activist Bree Newsome Bass, who criticizes Biden for using the Black church as a political prop. "The last thing that we need is to carry on business as usual." 
 
In 2015, Newsome Bass climbed a 30-foot flagpole outside the South Carolina Capitol to remove the Confederate flag following the church massacre. Democracy Now! is an independent global news hour that airs on over 1,500 TV and radio stations Monday through Friday. Watch our livestream at democracynow.org Mondays to Fridays 8-9 a.m. ET.

VIDEO:  




Latest Shows
 
BREE NEWSOME 
(b. 1985)

"You come against me in the name of hatred, repression, and violence. I come against you in the name of God. This (confederate) flag comes down today..It's time for a new chapter where we are sincere about dismantling white supremacy and building toward true racial justice and equality.
—Bree Newsome, June 27, 2015
No photo description available.
 
PHOTO:  Ms. Newsome scaled a flagpole to remove the Confederate battle flag from the State Capitol in Columbia, S.C., in 2015. Credit:  Adam Anderson Photo/Reuters
"What's Past is Prologue..."

#KeepItDown Confederate Flag Takedown

 
Bree Newsome takes down the Confederate Battle Flag at the South Carolina State Capitol:
 

Calls to remove the flag intensified after last week’s shooting.

[UPDATE: Democracy Now! has confirmed Bree Newsome and James Tyson have been released.]

Cornell William Brooks, NAACP President and CEO released this statement:

For 15 years, the NAACP has called for the removal of the Confederate battle flag and has maintained economic sanctions against the state of South Carolina. The NAACP, Governor Nikki Haley, a bipartisan coalition of policymakers, an expanding number of American businesses, and a courageous young woman named Bree Newsome are all united in opposition to the Confederate flag. Ms. Newsome temporarily removed the flag flying in front of South Carolina’s state house. As well as supporting the permanent removal of the flag legislatively, we commend the courage and moral impulse of Ms. Newsome as she stands for justice like many NAACP activists including Henry David Thoreau, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and numerous Americans who have engaged in civil disobedience. The NAACP calls on state prosecutors to consider the moral inspiration behind the civil disobedience of this young practitioner of democracy. Prosecutors should treat Ms. Newsome with the same large-hearted measure of justice that inspired her actions. The NAACP stands with our youth and behind the multigenerational band of activists fighting the substance and symbols of bigotry, hatred and intolerance.”

Around 5:30am this morning Bree Newsome climbed to the top of the flagpole flying the Confederate battle flag on the grounds of the South Carolina state capitol, unhooked the flag, and brought it down as police waited to arrest her.
 
RELATED STORY:
 

Massacre in Charleston: Nine Shot Dead at Historic Black Church

The victims were attending Bible study at the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church when the attack occurred.

Calls to remove the flag intensified after last week’s mass shooting of nine African-American worshipers at the historic Emanuel AME Church. The flag has been the source of controversy for decades in South Carolina, but a growing number of politicians, including South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley, are calling for its removal after photos were published online showing the accused gunman, Dylann Roof, posing with the flag.

Newsome and others calling themselves “concerned citizens” released a statement explaining, “Deciding to do what the SC Legislature has thus far neglected to do, the group took down the symbol of white supremacy that inspired the massacre, continued to fly at full mast in defiance of South Carolina’s grief, and flew in defiance of everyone working to actualize a more equitable Carolinian future.”

The state Bureau of Protective Services confirmed Newsome and one other person were arrested. They are charged with defacing a monument, which is a violation of state law 10-11-315. The law has not been used since it was passed in 2000 during another push to remove the flag from the capitol. They face three years in jail and a $5,000 fine.

Local newspaper, The State reports:

“At about 7:45 a.m., a maintenance worker and a state security officer, neither of whom would give their names or comment, raised a new banner after removing it from a plastic sheet. The two state employees who arrived on the State House grounds to put the flag back up were African-Americans.”

Watch all of Democracy Now!’s coverage of the Charleston church shooting and push to remove the confederate flag.

In the interview below, Kevin Alexander Gray, a South Carolina civil rights activist and community organizer says, “People’s tax dollars ought not go into supporting the idea of the Confederate States of America.” As former president of the state ACLU, he argued, “the flag flying on the statehouse dome was compelled speech. You were compelling people to support an ideology of white supremacy.”

 

ABOUT THE HOST/PRODUCER:

 

Amy Goodman is the host and executive producer of Democracy Now!, a national, daily, independent, award-winning news program airing on more than 1,100 public television and radio stations worldwide. Time Magazine named Democracy Now! its “Pick of the Podcasts,” along with NBC’s “Meet the Press.”


RELATED STORIES:

South Carolina Massacre: Why Don’t We Call Killing of Nine Black Churchgoers an Act of Terrorism?

Why are so many politicians and much of the media afraid to call the mass shooting an act of terrorism? We discuss the double standards in coverage of shootings …

Massacre at South Carolina’s Emanuel AME an Attack on Historic Landmark of African-American Freedom

The church attacked in the Charleston, South Carolina, massacre that left nine people dead is home to the oldest black congregation south of Baltimore.
 

Wednesday, January 10, 2024

Lara Elborno and Double Down News On the Genocidal Assault On Gaza and What Needs To Be Done About It On A Global Scale

The World's Most Documented Genocide in History

International law is officially dead 

Support and read more from Lara Elborno ► https://gazangirl.substack.com 

Support the Palestine Pod ►   / palestinepod   

Subscribe to the Palestine Pod ►    / thepalestinepod   

Follow Lara on Instagram ►   / gazangirl   

Join the Future of Journalism ►   / doubledownnews  

The Hearing on Provisional Measures will take place in the Hague on January 11-12, 2024

by LARA ELBORNO
January 10, 2023

If you have been following along, then you know that Israel is committing a genocide in Gaza according to the consensus of scholars of genocide and state crime. I covered this in a previous article and I just released, along with Double Down News, a viral video summarizing the argument that Israel is committing genocide. 

 

Efforts to stop this genocide and hold those responsible liable whether before the International Criminal Court or United Nations have been frozen, sabotaged by the US, or largely inefficient at changing the reality on the ground, allowing Israel to continue its genocidal campaign through uninterrupted bombardment day in and day out for over 90 days now, as all of Gaza continues to be starved, dehydrated, displaced, and lacking the most basic supplies or services as a matter of intentional Israeli policy, not an inadvertant byproduct of conflict. 

 

Enter South Africa. 

 

On December 28, South Africa filed suit before the International Court of Justice arguing that Israel, through its actions in Gaza, is acting in violation of its obligations under the Genocide Convention. In particular, South Africa argues that “[t]he acts and omissions by Israel complained of by South Africa are genocidal in character because they are intended to bring about the destruction of a substantial part of the Palestinian national, racial and ethnic group, that being the part of the Palestinian group in the Gaza Strip.” It’s an 84 page application. I read it so you don’t have to but I really encourage you do. Either way, allow me to address some of the key points made by South Africa before getting into Israel’s reaction and the implications of this move. 

 

Key takeaways

 

  • Historical context: The request contains descriptions of the Nakba critically noting that “80% of Palestinians in Gaza are refugees — and their descendants — from towns and villages in what is now the State of Israel, expelled or forced to flee during the mass displacement of over 750,000 Palestinians or ‘Nakba’ during the establishment of the State of Israel. The Nakba and the mass displacement associated with it therefore features prominently in the history and consciousness of Palestinians in Gaza, as it does for the wider Palestinian people.” (p. 12)

     

  • Gaza is occupied: The request affirms that “Gaza is still considered by the international community to be under belligerent occupation by Israel” despite the latter’s “disengagement” in 2005 because of continued Israeli control over the Gazan airspace, territorial waters, land crossings, water, electricity, electromagnetic sphere and civilian infrastructure as well as key governmental functions, such as the management of the Palestinian population registry for Gaza. (p. 14)

     

  • Features of Israel’s 16 year siege of Gaza: The request details the devastating consequences of Israel’s blockade imposed in response to Hamas’ electoral victory since 2006, including restrictions on freedom of movement fragmenting Palestinians in Gaza from Palestinians in the occupied West Bank, the restriction of food imports into Gaza “in accordance with calories consumed per person, to limit the transfers of food to a ‘humanitarian minimum’, without causing hunger or malnutrition” a practice Norman Finkelstein has referred to as Israel’s “starvation+” diet for Palestinians in Gaza (p. 25). The request further recalls that the 16 year Israeli siege of Gaza also included the implementation of a buffer zone restricting access to 24% of Gaza’s agricultural land for farming and the prevention of fishing beyond a certain distance from the shore of Gaza (p. 15). The request provides additional invaluable context on the situation in Gaza pre-October 7, 2023. For example, UNCTAD infamously warned in 2015 that “the restrictive measures imposed by Israel risked making Gaza uninhabitable by 2020”. Further, the request notes that the United Nations Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the Palestinian territories occupied since 1967 described Gaza in 2020 as ‘an impoverished ghetto with a decimated economy and a collapsing social service system” and in 2022 as having undergone “a multi-decade process of development, deindustrialization, resulting in a 45% unemployment rate and a 60% poverty rate, with 80% of the population dependent on some form of international assistance” with Palestinians in Gaza having “endured four highly assymetrical wars with Israel over the past 13 years, with enormous loss of civilian life and immense property destruction.” (p. 16)

     

  • Pattern of Israeli impunity re crimes against Palestinian civilians in Gaza: South Africa builds a strong case of Israel as a pariah that has consistently targeted Gazan civilians, their infrastructure, and land in an “excessive” manner (pp. 17-18) which is undoing foundational principles of international law like distinction and proportionality (p. 19). 

     

    • The request cites a UN report from 2009 reminding that with respect to Operation Cast Lead “statements by political and military leaders prior to and during the military operations in Gaza leave little doubt that disproportionate destruction and violence against civilians were part of a deliberate policy…” and further concluding that “the plan [was] directed, at least in part, at a different target: the people of Gaza as a whole…” “to make the daily process of living, and dignified living, more difficult for the civilian population…” (p. 20). The request notes that the same 2009 report “excluded” the possibility that hospitals were being used by Palestinian armed groups (p. 19) and confirmed instead Israel’s practice of “using Palestinians as human shields” which is prohibited under international humanitarian law (p. 19). Side note: I wish to point out that while Israel continues to hurl accusations, in this current moment, of Hamas operating from hospitals and using Palestinians as “human shields” it fails to mention that these accusations were investigated previously by the UN and proven to be false (with even the Israeli Supreme Court finding in 2005 that it is Israel which has unlawfully used Palestinians as human shields — every accusation is an admission vibes). 

       

    • Similarly, a fact finding commission established pursuant to the Human Rights Council report dealing with Operation Protective Edge in 2014 found that “the [IOF] carried out destructions that were not required by military necessity” and “the vast scale of destruction may have been adopted as tactics of war” (pp. 22-23). 

       

    • Finally, a UN report from 2020 cited to in the request noted that “the actions of Israel towards the protected population of Gaza amount to collective punishment under international law. The two million Palestinians of Gaza are not responsible for the deeds of Hamas and other militant groups, yet they have endured a substantial share of the punishment, intentionally so.” (p. 23)

       

  • Palestinians in the occupied West Bank suffer repeated systemic human rights violations living under Israel’s apartheid regime:South Africa paints a similarly dark picture of life in the occupied West Bank for 2.7 million Palestinians who suffer from “discriminatory laws, policies, and practices” constituting an “apartheid regime”. There’s reference to, inter alia, the (i) segregating Wall (which the ICJ is well aware of, having already decided in its advisory opinion in 2004 that such wall was illegal, ordering its dismantlement, an order blatantly ignored by Israel), (ii) discriminatory land zoning and planning polices, (iii) punitive and administrative house demolitions, (iv) violent Israeli army incursions into Palestinian homes, (v) arbitrary arrests and indefinitely renewable administrative detention (a.k.a. kidnapping Palestinian civilians including children without charge or trial) and (vi) a dual legal system subjecting Palestinians to military law and Jewish Israelis to civil law for the same crime. The request notes that this apartheid reality is also exacerbated by settler violence “overtly supported by Israeli politicians”. The result is that 2023 was the deadliest year on record for Palestinians since 2005 including for Palestinian children in the West Bank with at least 38 Palestinian children having been killed prior to October 7 and an additional 77 Palestinian children having been killed since October 7. On the matter of arbitrary arrests, the request notes that since October 7, Israel “detained more than 3,000 Palestinians from the West Bank and East Jerusalem, including for social media posts relating to the situation in Gaza” and “significantly increased the number of Palestinians held in administrative detention, without charge or trial, to 2070.” While all eyes were on the attacks against Gaza’s healthcare system, the request reminds that since October 7, Israel has carried out 236 attacks on healthcare in the occupied West Bank. (pp. 27-28)

     

  • Israel oversees an apartheid regime: While Israel’s apartheid regime has existed since the inception of the state, the analysis has gained mainstream acceptance in the human rights community with the publication of reports by Btselem, Human Rights Watch, and Amnesty International in 2021 and 2022 thoroughly describing this apartheid system. That being said, Israel has not yet been held accountable for subjecting Palestinians to an apartheid regime despite the fact that apartheid is a crime against humanity under international law. South Africa’s request does not mince words when it notes that this genocide is being carried out “in the broader context of Israel’s conduct towards Palestinians during its 75-year-long apartheid, its 56-year long belligerent occupation of Palestinian territory and its 16-year-long blockade of Gaza, including the serious and ongoing violations of international law associated therewith, including grave breaches of the Fourth Geneva Convention, and other war crimes and crimes against humanity”. (p. 2)

     

  • Facts and law: The request contains robust factual and legal analysis of violations of the Genocide Convention by Israel since October 7, 2023 including committing genocide and failing to prevent or punish: genocide, direct and public incitement to genocide, conspiracy to commit genocide, and complicity in genocide.

     

    • The detailed factual account of Israel’s actions in Gaza since October 7 is based in “significant part on statements and reports by United Nations chiefs and bodies and [NGOs], as well as eye-witneess accounts from Gaza — including from Palestinian journalists on the ground — in circumstances where Israel continues to restrict access to Gaza by international journalists, investigators and fact-finding teams.” (p. 4) 

       

    • As for the law, the request points to three of the five genocidal acts under the Genocide Convention, i.e. (i) killing Palestinians in Gaza (including children), (ii) causing serious bodily and mental harm to Palestinians in Gaza, and (iii) inflicting conditions of life intended to bring about their destruction as a group. As to the two remaining legal bases for genocide under the Genocide Convention, the request does not mention “forcibly transferring children of the group to another group” although there have been reports of Palestinian children being kidnapped by Israeli soldiers from Gaza and taken to Israel (a post on this is forthcoming). The request does mention the taking of measures to prevent Palestinian birth but not as a own standalone legal basis. Rather, it is discussed as evidence of the third legal basis for genocide — inflicting conditions of life intended to bring about their destruction as a group — along with four other policies applied by Israel to Palestinians in Gaza in this moment, i.e. (a) expulsions from homes and mass displacement, alongside the large-scale destruction of homes and residential areas; (b) deprivation of access to adequate food and water; (c) deprivation of access to adequate medical care; (d) deprivation of access to adequate shelter, clothes, hygiene and sanitation; and (d) the destruction of the life of the Palestinian people in Gaza. It is important to note that only one of the five actions is needed to make a showing of genocide in addition to genocidal intent. Here, according to South Africa, there are three genocidal actions taking place. 

       

  • Provisional measures and other urgent relief: In addition to asking for an expedited hearing to hear its request for the indication of provisional measures, South Africa has asked, pursuant to Article 74(4) of the Rules of the Court, for the President of the Court to call upon Israel to immediately halt all military attacks that constitute or give rise to violations of the Genocide Convention pending the holding of such hearing on provisional measures (p. 3). The court has not yet responded to this request, but the hearing on provisional measures is scheduled for January 11-12 in the Hague. It will be broadcast live on UN TV or the website of the Court and I will be tuning in and live tweeting on X (under @thegazangirl) and Instagram (under @gazangirl). Its request for provisional measures seeks, inter alia, an order that (1) Israel immediately suspend its military operations in and against Gaza; (2) Israel ensure that any military or irregular armed units which may be directed, supported or influenced by it, as well as any organisations and persons which may be subject to its control, direction or influence, take no steps in furtherance of the military operations referred to point (1) above; (3) South Africa and Israel each, in accordance with their obligations under Genocide Convention, in relation to the Palestinian people in Gaza, take all reasonable measures within their power to prevent genocide; and (4) Israel in accordance with its obligations Genocide Convention, in relation to the Palestinian people as a group, protected by the Genocide Convention, desist from the commission of any acts of killing, causing serious bodily or mental harm, inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part and measures intended to prevent births within the group. It also asks for Israel to be required to desist from and rescind relevant orders or restrictions relating to the (i) expulsion and forced displacement; (ii) deprivation of access to adequate food and water; (iii) deprivation of access to humanitarian assistance like adequate fuel, shelter, clothes, hygiene and sanitation; '(iv) deprivation of access to medical supplies and assistance; and (v) the destruction of Palestinian life in Gaza. South Africa also calls on the Court to require Israel to take steps to preserve evidence. 

     

  • Genocidal intent: South Africa refers to statements of Israeli State officials’ specific intent to commit and persist in genocidal acts or fail to prevent them as “significant and overt since October 2023” and clearly explains that “[t]hose statements of intent — when combined with the level of killing, maiming, displacement and destruction on the ground, together with the siege — evidence an unfolding and continuing genocide”. (p. 59) In particular, South Africa cites to over 60 statements of genocidal intent, including those statements expressed at the highest levels of government (pp. 59-67). It is notable that the true scope of genocidal statements made in Israeli government, military, media, and society at large is so much more than what is even in this request (which already seems like quite a lot). Law 4 Palestine has developed a database tracking over 500 statements of genocidal intent made by Israeli officials, media, and more since October 7, 2023. It is also noteworthy that since the filing of this request, statements evidencing genocidal intent continue to be made by Israeli officials and public figures, like for example this former Israeli foreign ministry official arguing for the “immediate destruction” of UNRWA on January 4, 2024.

     

  • Duty to prevent Genocide: One of the key features of the Genocide Convention is that its focus is not only on seeking accountability for Genocide once it has happened, but the Convention actually imposes on signatories an obligation to prevent Genocide before it happens. Therefore, a signatory to the Convention can violate it obligations not only by committing genocide, acts of complicity in genocide and incitement to genocide but also by failing to take steps to prevent genocide. It is on this basis that South Africa brought this petition, i.e. by arguing that it has a positive obligation to take steps to prevent genocide under the Convention. 

     

  • South Africa’s comments on the International Criminal Court: Despite confirming that the Office of the Prosecutor at the International Criminal Court “has an ongoing investigation with jurisdiction over Palestine” including over “current events in Gaza and also current events in the West Bank”, South Africa pointed out that “the Prosecutor has not given any more recent indication as to the state of any investigation in relation to the Situation in the State of Palestine, including in response to the request of the 17 November 2023 by South Africa and other States that the ICC investigate inter alia the crime of genocide”. (p. 24) While I would have liked South Africa to make a stronger statement against the ICC’s failure in this moment, it chose to restrain itself.