Horror after horror laid bare: Remember us
Horror after horror laid bare: Remember us
Abby Zimmet

Horror after horror laid bare: Remember us

In their historic case against “the ongoing slaughter of the people of Gaza, South Africa opened its presentation at the Hague with what rights experts deemed “chilling” and “devastating” evidence of Israel’s genocidal intent in “an exceptionally brutal military campaign” - from vast civilian deaths of mostly women and children to massive infrastructure destruction to looming starvation. A grim reminder: As they spoke, and today, and tomorrow, the atrocities - bolstered by U.S. funds - fester unchecked.

In “compellinglyarguedand powerfully presented” arguments, South African jurists at the International Court of Justice laid out what the U.K.’s Jeremy Corbyn called “horror after horror, laid out in plain sight for all to see,” in theircaseaccusing Israel of violating the landmarkGenocide Convention -incongruously enacted the same year Israel was born through the ethnic cleansing of Palestinians.Seekingan emergency order to halt Israel’s savage three-month assault on Gaza, South Africa’s 84-pagefilingoffered a comprehensive account of “textbook genocide,” by definition acts intended “to destroy (a) national, ethnic, racial or religious group.” In such a case, intent is critical; fortuitously, the chutzpah of Israeli leaders bent on revenge was on full, damning display. “Let the Prime Minister’s words speak for themselves,” said attorney Tembeka Ngcukaitobi, who cited_nine pages_of genocidal statements by Israeli officials, from a Knesset member’s vow to “burn Gaza to the ground” to Netanyahu’s, “Remember what Amalek has done to you - spare no one.” As a result, “The evidence of genocidal intent (is) overwhelming and incontrovertible.”

Lawyers also noted that, once Israeli officials “systematically and in explicit terms declared their genocidal intent,” their goals were inevitably taken up by soldiers on the ground; evidence of that murderous cycle included unsettlingvideoof IDF soldiers in Gaza dancing and chanting there are “no uninvolved civilians.” “What state would admit to genocidal intent?” rhetorically asked one jurist. “Yet the distinctive feature of this case is not silence, but the reiteration and repetition of genocidal speech.” At least part of Israel’s shameless, bloody audacity,notesJeremy Scahill, stems from a sense of invincibility born of decades of well-funded complicity by a United States they know will shield them from accountability. “South Africa laid out a meticulous case detailing Israels genocidal intent,” he writes. “The U.S. supported it all.” Given the U.S. role as “ultimate overlord” of Israeli abuses - and its “macabre ritual” of feigning sorrow for the deaths of children while circumventing Congress toexpeditethem - it was unsurprising, if still shocking, to hear fucking Anthony Blinken blithelydismissthe exhaustively documented charge of Israeli genocide as “meritless.” Color us speechless with rage.

Oxfam estimates Israelkills250 Palestinians a day, including 48 mothers and 118 children, many blown to pieces; Gaza’s90,000-plusdead, wounded, missing make it the deadliest conflict of the century. In wrenching closing argumentsat the Hague, Irish lawyer Blinne N Ghrlaigh offered more grievous facts: “Entire multigenerational families obliterated,” “huge swaths of Gaza wiped from the map,” the daily death of at least 3 medics, 2 teachers, one journalist and UN worker and, every other day, a first responder who’s spent months digging dead or wounded from the rubble with bare hands. Each day, 10 children will have one or both legs amputated, often without anaesthetic; more will earn the acronym WCNSF - Wounded Child, No Surviving Family. Sheendedher speech with two photos of a Gazan hospital whiteboard that health workers, inundated by casualties early in the war, had wiped clean of previously scheduled surgeries. The first image shows a messag written by MSF Dr. Mahmoud Abu Nujaila: “We did what we could. Remember Us”; the second shows the board shattered in an Israeli strike that killed Abu Nujaila and two other doctors.

And still it goes on. CAIR regularly documents Israel’s “war crimes of the day”: the summaryexecutionsof unarmed Palestinians in front of their families,.the shelling of Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital thatkilled or wounded 40 people,thebulldozingof bodies in cemeteries and medical tents with injured Palestinians inside, thekillingof four members of a Red Crescent ambulancecrewin Deir al-Balah, the targeted executions of at least 77journalistsincluding Hamza Al-Dahdouh, 27,sonof_Al Jazeera_’s Gaza bureau chief Wael Dahdouh, who’s nowlostfive family members.MournedWael of Hamza, “He was the soul of my soul.” Hundreds more Gazancivilianshave beendetainedat Israeli “torture camps” for the “crime” of not leaving their homes, which soldiers then burned. In interviews, those released say they were beaten, punched, spat on, electric shocked, burned with cigarettes, tied handcuffed and blindfolded to fences, denied food, water and bathrooms, “treated like chickens or sheep,” and “tortured all day.” Pleading with IDF soldiers they are innocent civilians, they aretold,“You are Hamas. Everyone who remains in Gaza is Hamas.”

Since the Oct. 7 Hamas attack, mass arrests, military raids and killings have alsosoaredin the occupied West Bank, where at least 340 Palestinians have died. This week, Israeli forcesstormedTulkarem refugee camp, blasting so indiscriminately into residential areas even a Palestinian fighter called the heavy gunfire “delusional - they assassinate innocents.” After IDF soldiers surrounded the al-Kholi family home,videoshows a long, loud barrage as six young men try to flee; three are caught and shot dead - Yousef Ali Al-Kholi, 22, Ahed Mousa, 23, and Tareq Shahin, 24. One soldier keeps firing into a still-moving body; then a jeep runs over another body. Relatives called the deaths “assassinations.” “The soldiers could have just surrounded and arrested them,” said Al-Kholis aunt. “The Occupation, they always kill.” Al-Kholis 12-year-old cousin Ahmad saidhe hid nearby; he could hear Yousef screaming but “soldiers were everywhere.” Once they left, Ahmad went to his body, took off the headband Yousef had given him, and dipped it in his blood “because he is my cousin. I love him. I love him as much as the sea.” And yes, he will remember him.

Irish lawyer’s stunning speech at The Hague accusing Israel of genocide in Gaza can be viewed below:

 

Original article published by Common Dreams on 12 January, 2024.

 

For more on this topic, P&I recommends:

https://www.commondreams.org/news/hundreds-of-thousands-march-for-gaza-as-world-demands-cease-fire

Abby Zimmet

Abby Zimet has written Common Dream’s Further column since 2008. A longtime, award-winning journalist, she moved to the Maine woods in the early 70s, where she spent a dozen years building a house, hauling water and writing before moving to Portland. Having come of political age during the Vietnam War, she has long been involved in women’s, labor, anti-war, social justice and refugee rights issues.