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Israeli achievement: No ICC probe over Gaza flotilla raid

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Israeli achievement: No ICC probe over Gaza flotilla raid
Analysis: International Criminal Court prosecutor reaffirms her previous decision not to launch an investigation into the deadly raid on Mavi Marmara ship in May 2010, after Israel succeeds in convincing her that all aspects of the incident have already been properly and thoroughly investigated by the IDF and by a government-appointed commission.
Tova Tzimuki|Published: 19.12.17 , 18:48

Israeli officials are pleased with the achievement in the International Criminal Court’s decision in late November not to prosecute Israel over the deadly raid on a flotilla carrying humanitarian aid to the Gaza Strip in 2010, as announced by ICC prosecutor Fatou Bensouda.

The Mavi Marmara ship left Turkey for Gaza in May 2010 despite the blockade imposed by Israel. Shayetet 13 naval commandos who stormed the ship outside Israel’s territorial water faced violent resistance, which ended with the death of nine of the Marmara passengers.




Prosecutor criticizes Pre-Trial Chamber for ignoring the violence resistance the soldiers encountered on the ship (Photo: IDF Spokesperson's Unit)

Three years later, in May 2013, the Union of the Comoros asked the ICC to launch an investigation into the incident. Prosecutor Bensouda held a preliminary examination, and decided about 18 months later not to initiate an investigation. She stated in her decision that “there is a reasonable basis to believe that war crimes were committed by some members of the Israel Defense Forces,” but ruled that the incident was "not of sufficient gravity.”

The Unions of the Comoros, which was likely operated by Palestinian organizations, had trouble accepting this conclusion and appealed the decision. A Pre-Trial Chamber of the ICC accepted the request and asked the prosecutor to reconsider her decision, determining that she had made errors in her assessment of the gravity of the incident.

Upon renewing her examination, Bensouda was flooded with some 5,000 pages of additional material, including testimonies from more than 300 Marmara passengers and autopsy reports prepared by the Turks. The Israeli team, led by Attorney General Avichai Mandelblit (who served as the military advocate general at the time of the first examination) and his senior advisor, attorney Gil Limon, presented strong arguments. The main argument was that Israel had already investigated the matter and conducted all the required examinations, and so there was no room for another investigation.

In late November, Bensouda issued a statement in which she reaffirmed her initial decision not to open an investigation and rejected the criticism. She wrote that some of the people who had asked to become part of the proceeding as victims appeared to have received help in wording their testimonies, and not just in filling out forms. For example, she said, 206 victims used identical or similar terms to describe the people responsible for what happened on the Mavi Marmara, 60 victims used expressions which repeated themselves in an unlikely manner and 24 forms included no witness signature or identification mark, but only the stamp of a law firm that had represented the Union of the Comoros in the past in legal proceedings in the ICC.



ICC prosecutor Fatou Bensouda (Photo: AP)

Bensouda rejected other testimonies on the basis of some of the witnesses’ involvement in the acts of violence on board the Mavi Marmara and said others had provided testimonies on things they couldn’t have possibly witnessed first-hand.

On the legal aspect, the prosecutor found there was no room for the Pre-Trial Chamber’s interference in her decision, claiming the judges sought to challenge her discretion rather than just examine if her considerations were reasonable.

Bensouda rejected the judges' analysis on how to examine the gravity of the IDF soldiers’ conduct on the ship. She believes the judges ignored the overall picture and that there was no room to determine that the flotilla activists were “tortured,” but only that they suffered an attack on their “personal dignity,” which is why there was no room for an investigation.

Bensouda further determined that the judges failed to properly address the context in which the IDF soldiers committed the alleged “crimes” and the violence resistance they encountered on the ship. She said the judges’ disregard of the activists’ resistance was particularly surprising in light of the fact that they determined that the IDF soldiers had used force which wasn’t necessarily required. According to the prosecutor, even if live ammunition was used before the takeover, that doesn’t necessarily point to the existence of a policy or plan to carry out crimes.

Israel’s most significant achievement, however, is convincing the prosecutor that it had investigated all aspects of the incident properly and thoroughly— both in the army and in through the Turkel Commission—and drawn conclusions in a way that would make any additional investigation redundant.

Israel, like the United States, is not a member of the ICC in The Hague for old political reasons. Nevertheless, hundreds of complaints have been filed against Israel so far, mainly by Palestinian organizations. The decision rejecting the demand to launch an investigation into the Marmara incident was distributed by the court in Hebrew, Arabic and Turkish, so that all relevant parties would be able to read it in their mother tongue.
 
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Statement of the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, Fatou Bensouda, on concluding the preliminary examination of the situation referred by the Union of Comoros: “Rome Statute legal requirements have not been met”


On 14 May 2013, a referral was received by my Office from the authorities of the Union of the Comoros, a State Party to the Rome Statute. The same day, I announced the opening of a preliminary examination "with respect to the 31 May 2010 Israeli raid on the Humanitarian Aid Flotilla bound for [the] Gaza Strip.''

Following a thorough legal and factual analysis of the information available, I have concluded that there is a reasonable basis to believe that war crimes under the jurisdiction of the International Criminal Court ("ICC" or the "Court") were committed on one of the vessels, the Mavi Marmara, when Israeli Defense Forces intercepted the "Gaza Freedom Flotilla'' on 31 May 2010. However, after carefully assessing all relevant considerations, I have concluded that the potential case(s) likely arising from an investigation into this incident would not be of "sufficient gravity" to justify further action by the ICC. The gravity requirement is an explicit legal criteria set by the Rome Statute.

Without in any way minimizing the impact of the alleged crimes on the victims and their families, I have to be guided by the Rome Statute, in accordance with which, the ICC shall prioritize war crimes committed on a large scale or pursuant to a plan or policy.

In the final analysis, I have, therefore, concluded that the legal requirements under the Rome Statute to open an investigation have not been met and I am announcing that the preliminary examination has been closed.

My Office's assessment of the situation referred by the Comoros was based on open and other reliable sources, which we subjected to our strict practice of independent, impartial and thorough analysis.

Under the Rome Statute, the referring State, in this case, the Union of the Comoros, has the right to request the Judges of the ICC to review my decision not to proceed to open an investigation, pursuant to article 53(3)(a) of the Statute.

I have made it clear in the past and I will repeat it here: my Office will execute its mandate, without fear or favour, where the Court's jurisdiction is established; and will vigorously pursue those – irrespective of status or affiliation – who commit mass crimes that shock the conscience of humanity. We will do so with unyielding commitment to end impunity for mass crimes and in total independence, but we can only do so in strict conformity with the Rome Statute legal framework.

Background

The Union of the Comoros has been a State Party to the ICC since 18 August 2006. The Court may therefore exercise jurisdiction over Rome Statute crimes committed on the territory of Comoros or by its nationals as of 1 November 2006.

On 14 May 2013, the Office of the Prosecutor received a referral on behalf of the authorities of the Comoros with respect to the 31 May 2010 Israeli interception of a humanitarian aid flotilla bound for the Gaza Strip. On the same day, the Prosecutor announced that her Office had opened a preliminary examination of the referred situation. On 5 July 2013, the Presidency assigned the situation to Pre-Trial Chamber I.

Of the eight vessels in the flotilla, only three were registered in States Parties. The Court has territorial jurisdiction under article 12(2)(a) of the Rome Statute ("State of registration of that vessel") over crimes committed on board these three vessels, registered respectively in the Comoros (the Mavi Marmara), Cambodia (the Rachel Corrie) and Greece (the Eleftheri Mesogios/Sofia). Cambodia and Greece are States Parties to the ICC since 11 April 2002 and 15 May 2002, respectively. The situation forming the subject of the referral began on 31 May 2010 and encompasses all alleged crimes flowing from the interception of the flotilla by the Israeli forces, including the other related interception of the Rachel Corrie on 5 June 2010.

The Office analysed the supporting materials and documentation accompanying the referral along with, among other things, the reports published by the four commissions that have previously examined the 31 May 2010 incident. It should be recalled that the Office does not have investigative powers at the preliminary examination stage. Not having collected evidence itself, the Office's analysis in the report must not be considered to be the result of an investigation. The Office's conclusions may be reconsidered in the light of new facts or evidence.

• Article 53(1) Report on the situation on Registered Vessels of Comoros, Greece and Cambodia
• Information on the Office's preliminary examinations
• Statement, 'The Public Deserves to know the Truth about the ICC's Jurisdiction over Palestine'
 
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