Palestinians Face 'Intense Pressure' Not to Sue Israel

إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربية W460

The Palestinians are facing "intensive pressure" not to sue Israel for war crimes at the International Criminal Court should they win upgraded U.N. status this week, an official said on Wednesday.

Speaking to reporters in Ramallah, senior PLO official Hanan Ashrawi said the Palestinian leadership had not given in to heavy international pressure to commit that they would not sue Israeli officials at the ICC should they win recognition as a non-member state at the United Nations.

"We have not succumbed to pressure, we did not give any commitment," she said, speaking a day before Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas was to present the upgrade request to the U.N. General Assembly in New York.

"We haven't decided that tomorrow we are going to be recognized as a state and the day after, we are going to the International Criminal Court," Ashrawi said.

Most of the pressure came from the British government, she said.

"The UK did try in an intensive effort to modify the text (of the resolution) and to get assurances and commitments," she explained.

"It wasn't only the UK but it was the most visible. We know that Israel, of course, was working through the U.S. and through the UK to try and get commitments that Israel will not be taken to the International Criminal Court."

If the request is approved by the 193 member states of the U.N. General Assembly -- which is largely seen as a foregone conclusion -- it will give the Palestinians access to a range of U.N. agencies and also potentially to the ICC, which is based in The Hague.

Israel strongly opposes the U.N. bid, saying a Palestinian state can only emerge through bilateral negotiations and not through a vote by the global body. Officials fear the Palestinians will use their new-found status to take legal action against Israeli officials at the ICC.

Ashrawi said she hoped that the threat alone would be enough to make Israel think twice about its actions vis-a-vis the Palestinians.

"We hope that this will be a positive inducement for corrective action" on the part of Israel, she said.

"It is our right to join all international agencies and organizations and we will accede to all international charters and conventions. We reserve our right to decide on how and when to proceed in accordance with our best interests."

Comments 4
Thumb mckinl 28 November 2012, 16:06

First order of business is to sue Israel over stolen lands and withheld funds ... to declare illegal the Apartheid division of the West Bank, the isolation of Gaza.

War crimes have no statute of limitation and can be pursued in due time. The important measure is to stop Israeli expansion and repression in its' tracks.

Missing phillipo 28 November 2012, 19:47

Going to the ICJ is a two edged sword. Israel would then be able to sue the Palestinian Authority for all the damages and death caused from the thousands of rockets and missiles that have been shot across her borders. She'll be able to sue concerning all the terrorist bombings that have taken place inside Israel, and many other matters.

Default-user-icon Mihael (Guest) 28 November 2012, 16:23

"Israel strongly opposes the U.N. bid, saying a Palestinian state can only emerge through bilateral negotiations and not through a vote by the global body." Oh yeah...and how was the State of Israel created? Through bilateral negotiations with the Palestinians? Of no of course not it was a product of the Allies - The US & British in particular. But that's okay...we have arrived at new phase in the world of politics. The Jewish & Zionist state of Israel is a cancerous tumour in Earth's core!

Missing phillipo 28 November 2012, 21:38

The big difference is that Israel would be able to show that most of the Palestinian deaths were of combattants, whereas it could prove that most of the Israeli deaths were civilians.