UN Experts Find Israel Guilty of Genocide in Gaza
A United Nations commission investigating violence in Israel and the occupied Palestinian territories has concluded that Israel is committing genocide in the Gaza Strip. The independent commission, which has been critical of Israel's actions for years, found that statements and actions by Israeli leaders demonstrate a deliberate policy to destroy the Palestinian people.
Four of Five Genocide Criteria Met
The UN Human Rights Council commission identified four of the five acts that qualify as genocide under international law: killing members of the group, causing serious bodily or mental harm, deliberately inflicting conditions calculated to destroy the group, and imposing measures to prevent births. Only the fifth criterion - forcibly transferring children - was not evidenced.
'The international community must not remain silent about the genocidal campaign that Israel is waging against the Palestinian people. Ignoring signs and evidence of genocide amounts to complicity,' said lead investigator Navi Pillay, a former International Criminal Court judge with extensive human rights experience.
Incriminating Statements from Israeli Leadership
The commission pointed to statements from Israeli President Herzog, Prime Minister Netanyahu, and former Defense Minister Gallant as evidence of intentional policy. Netanyahu's reference to revenge attacks throughout "that wicked city of Gaza" and Gallant's characterization of fighting "human beasts" were cited as demonstrating broader targeting beyond Hamas.
Both Netanyahu and Gallant already face International Criminal Court arrest warrants for alleged war crimes.
International Response and Context
Israel immediately dismissed the report as "slanderous" and "a one-sided attack on Israel." The country has refused cooperation with the commission, claiming bias, despite the panel also having criticized Hamas for war crimes against Israel.
The findings align with previous assessments from genocide scholars and human rights organizations. The Netherlands-based NIOD Institute for War, Holocaust and Genocide Studies had previously used the term "genocidal violence" to describe Israel's actions, while the International Association of Genocide Scholars concluded Israel's actions meet the definition of genocide.
UN Secretary-General António Guterres has avoided using the term genocide but recently called the violence "more severe than we have seen in recent times" and criticized international "indifference and lack of decisiveness" in what he termed a "moral crisis for the global conscience."
Source: OHCHR Press Release