ICC Orders Prosecutors To Revisit Israeli 2010 Gaza Flotilla Raid

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Judges at the International Criminal Court asked prosecutors to reconsider their decision not to investigate an attack by Israeli armed forces on a flotilla attempting to break Israel’s blockade of Gaza.
Nine Turkish activists died in the raid, when Israeli commandos abseiled down from helicopters onto six ships bringing what they said were essential supplies to Gaza’s population.
In a ruling published on Thursday, the judges said prosecutors should review the conclusion they had reached last year that alleged crimes committed during the attack lacked sufficient gravity and scale to be investigated.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu condemned the International Criminal Court’s request to reopen a probe into Israel’s 2010 raid on a Turkish ship attempting to breach the blockade of the Gaza Strip.
In a statement issued shortly after the request Thursday, Netanyahu said that the court’s renewed focus on the Mavi Marmara raid, in which Israeli forces killed nine Turkish activists during clashes, was “motivated by cynical politics.”
While prosecutors could once again conclude there was no need to launch an investigation, they would have to find new arguments to support that conclusion.
Neither Israel nor Turkey are members of the permanent war crimes court, but one of the ships was registered in Comoros, which is, giving the court specific, narrow jurisdiction over the incident.
The case, argued by a Turkish law firm with the help of prominent British trial lawyers, is one of several attempts to bring the decades-old Israeli-Palestinian conflict before the court, based in the Dutch city of The Hague.
The Palestinian Authority, which was not a member at the time of the raid, joined earlier this year and has asked prosecutors to look into last year’s bombardment of Gaza and establishment of Israeli settlements on Palestinian territory.
Prosecutors are conducting a preliminary examination of alleged crimes committed on both sides of the conflict.
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