
Chris Sidoti, former Human Rights Commissioner and member of the United Nations Commission of Inquiry, 91自拍论坛 the commission Israel is committing genocide and there is no military necessity behind their actions, which are designed to 鈥渒ill as many Palestinians as possible鈥.
It found Israel is committing 鈥渆xtermination鈥 against Palestinians, according to four acts under the . They are killing members of the group; causing serious bodily or mental harm; deliberately inflicting conditions calculated to cause destruction; and imposing measures intended to prevent births.
鈥淥ur Commission was two years before the events of October 7, 2023, by a resolution of the in response to the escalation of violence in Gaza,鈥 Sidoti said.
The commission was tasked to investigate human rights, humanitarian law and international criminal law issues arising in the occupied Palestinian territory as a whole and also in Israel.
Sidoti noted the commission had in 15 months with the focus since October 7, 2023, on what has happened in Gaza. The report covers the destruction of Gaza鈥檚 healthcare system, sex and gender-based violence and the destruction of the education system and of cultural property.
鈥淲e鈥檝e [also] examined the nature of the Israeli military operation, the killing and injury that has resulted directly from that ... [and] the total destruction of housing. We have [then] been able to bring all of our work together in this more comprehensive examination of the question of genocide.鈥
Sidoti is adamant that the federal government must act now on Australia鈥檚 legal obligation to prevent genocide, rather than wait 鈥渁nother two or perhaps three years鈥 for the (ICJ) to make a ruling.
The ICJ in January last year there was a plausible risk of genocide in Gaza, describing conditions as 鈥渁pocalyptic鈥, a finding Sidoti said is sufficient to trigger Australia鈥檚 legal obligations under the
鈥淭hat requires us to take specific steps right across the spectrum of the relationship between Australia and Israel, including diplomatic, political, economic, military and cultural areas,鈥 Sidoti said.
鈥淭he secondary obligation is to not to take any steps that, in any way, aid or assist Israel鈥檚 illegal occupation of Palestine, or its illegal settlements within Palestine. So that means a prohibition on the two-way arms trade."
鈥淭here is two-way trade going on, and it needs to be broadly examined,鈥 Sidoti said, backing up the findings of NSW Senator David Shoebridge, as well as independent investigators such as for Declassified Australia.
鈥淎ustralia has rightly prohibited the provision of 鈥榳eapons鈥 to Israel but not components ... or the trade in surveillance technology,鈥 Sidoti said. 鈥淲e justify the provision of components because it鈥檚 an international system and we may provide them through a third state, like the United States, although there is some evidence that we are providing the components directly. But whether we provide them directly or indirectly, we shouldn鈥檛 be doing so.
鈥淲e [also] have a and operating in Jerusalem. We should be closing that. We should not be cooperating with the Israeli military [or] promoting trade with Israel.鈥
Palestine recognition
Australia recognised Palestine as a state at the United Nations General Assembly in New York on September 21, joining 157 of 193 UN member states having now done so. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said the move was a recognition of 鈥渢he legitimate and long-held aspirations of the Palestinian people鈥.
But with Gaza in ruins and the West Bank being destroyed by illegal occupations, why did Labor wait until now?
Sidoti said he thought it was because 鈥渢he situation is now so bad and so obviously totally unacceptable, the government felt compelled to act, led by other member states such as the UK and Canada. I think the step of recognition should have occurred years ago. But the fact that it鈥檚 occurring now can only be described as a good step.鈥
Asked if he holds real hope for a , Sidoti said 鈥測es, if for no other reason than there is no alternative. At some point the fighting and killing will stop and there will be no alternative but to negotiate a basis for peace. And the only basis for peace to begin with is the establishment of two states.
鈥淭he only question is when and how many more people must be slaughtered before the inevitable process of peace is seriously undertaken.鈥
Highwire
Labor is yet to publicly support the UN commission鈥檚 findings of genocide against Israel. Nor has it confirmed if it would carry out arrest warrants against Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his former defence minister Yoav Gallant if they land in Australia, as signatories to the International Criminal Court are required to do after it issued a war crimes warrant last year.
鈥淲e should be prepared to act [unequivocally] on the warrants to arrest the two of them and send them to The Hague,鈥 Sidoti said.
Asked about why the UN hasn鈥檛 been able to force an end to the genocide, Sidoti replied that it the UN has a structural problem; the Security Council allows for permanent members and cannot be relied upon to take relevant action. He said he hopes the in New York will take action, adding, 鈥淚t falls to the General Assembly in an institutional sense, but also to individual states.鈥
鈥淭he obligations of the Australian government are the obligations that lie on every member state, individually, with or without any collective decisions in the UN.鈥
Western leaders joined in New York, but with the notable exception of Italy, Spain, Canada and threats from Germany, the rest continue their weapons trade with Israel. Australia鈥檚 defence department a new $10 million contract with Elbit UK, according to Crikey鈥檚 Bernard Keane.
Meanwhile, the has said the almost complete destruction of civilian infrastructure and the lack of medical and food aid means that the last remaining lifelines for civilians in Gaza City are collapsing.