Israeli families bring genocide complaint against Hamas to ICC
The group that rules Gaza should be prosecuted for genocide as well, say nine families of Hamas’s October 7 attack victims.
The families of nine Israeli victims of last month’s Hamas attacks have lodged a complaint at the International Criminal Court (ICC) for genocide, according to their lawyer.
The families also want Hamas, the group that governs Gaza, prosecuted for suspected war crimes, and for the ICC to issue an international arrest warrant for its leaders, lawyer Francois Zimeray said in a statement on Friday.
On October 7, Hamas carried out raids that Israeli officials say killed more than 1,400 people.
“The complaint concerns victims who were all civilians,” Zimeray said, adding that several of them were at the Tribe of Nova music festival.
“The complaint states that the Hamas terrorists do not deny the crimes committed, which they have amply documented and broadcast, and that the … facts cannot therefore be disputed,” he said.
In an interview with France’s Radio Classique, Zimeray said he was always wary of “excessive qualifications” of events.
But, he said, he and his legal team had established that the “genocide” accusation “holds up before the law”.
Any individual or group can bring a case to the ICC, which is located in The Hague, but it is up to the court’s prosecutor to launch an investigation.
Contacted by the AFP news agency, the court was not immediately able to say whether it had received the paperwork on the case.
The ICC, founded in 2002, investigates and prosecutes grave offences across the world.
In 2021, it opened a probe into Israel as well as Hamas and other armed Palestinian groups for possible war crimes in the Palestinian territories.
Its prosecutor, Karim Khan, has said that any suspected war crimes in the ongoing conflict would fall under the ICC’s jurisdiction.
ICC teams have not, however, been able to enter Gaza, or Israel which is not a member of the ICC.