U.N. Chief Agrees To Admit ‘Palestine’ to ICC
United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon announced that Palestine will join the International Criminal Court on April 1.
The accession to the court will allow the Palestinians to press war-crimes charges against Israel.
Ban made the announcement late Tuesday night, days after Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas signed the Rome Statute, the international treaty under which the signatories accept the jurisdiction of the International Criminal Court, the international war crimes tribunal.
Ban also approved the Palestinian’s membership in 16 other international treaties, conventions and agreements.
The Palestinians also filed an ad hoc declaration for the ICC to investigate Israel for war crimes as of June 13. The date is one day after the kidnapping and murder of three Israeli teens by Palestinians from Hebron. The massive operation to find the teens and Israel’s 50-day military operation in Gaza over the summer would be covered under the retroactive date.
The declaration would start proceedings against Israel even as the Palestinians wait for the April 1 accession date, becoming the court’s 123rd member state. Israel is not a member of the court.
An ICC investigation could also lead to war crimes charges against the Palestinians.
The Palestinian’s move to join the ICC and other international treaties came after the United Nations Security Council late last month failed to pass a Palestinian statehood proposal.
In response, Israel froze some $125 million in tax revenue that it collects for the Palestinian Authority.
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