The Hague Group forms to hold Israel accountable under international law for its genocide

March 6, 2025
Issue 
Members of The Hague Group
Photo: Progressive International

The Hague GroupĀ ā€” representing Bolivia, Cuba, Colombia, Honduras, Malaysia, Namibia and South Africa ā€” formed on January 31 to hold Israel accountable under international law for its illegal occupation of Palestine and ongoing genocide against Palestinians.Ā 

Representatives of the seven nations met in The Hague, Netherlands, to form the group and issued a stressing their countriesā€™ commitment to uphold international obligations to ā€œend the Israeli occupation of the State of Palestine and support the realisation of the inalienable right of the Palestinian People to self-determinationā€.

The statement cited the rulings made by the International Court of Justice (ICJ) about Israelā€™s ā€œperpetration of crimes of genocideā€ in Palestine, as well as the International Criminal Courtā€™s issuance of arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and former defence minister Yoav Gallant for crimes against humanity.

The signatories committed to complying with international obligations to prevent the supply of weapons to Israel, pointing to a 1986 United Nations Security Council resolution that imposed an international arms embargo against Apartheid South Africa as a precedent.

Signatories also intend to prevent the docking of ships carrying military fuel or weapons to Israel, which they say is ā€œin keeping with statesā€™ peremptory legal obligation to cooperate towards preventing genocideā€.

Finally, they called on all countries to join The Hague Group ā€œin the solemn commitment to an international order based on the rule of law and international lawā€ based on principles of justice.

The Hague Groupā€™s formation was supported and welcomed by various human rights groups and grassroots movements.

La Via Campesina ā€” an international anti-capitalist movement representing millions of peasants, small-scale farmers and Indigenous peoples ā€” welcomed the groupā€™s formation in a February 12 that said the group ā€œmarks a historic and urgent intervention in the fight against impunity and the ongoing genocide committed against the Palestinian peopleā€.

The movement condemned United States President Donald Trumpā€™s call to forcibly displace Palestinians in Gaza and convert the city into a US-owned ā€œā€.

It also called on all governments to join The Hague Group and urged all La Via Campesina member organisations and allied movements to publicly support and mobilise in favour of the groupā€™s efforts ā€” to ensure that it ā€œleads to concrete political and legal actions against Israeli impunityā€.

ā€œThe time for symbolic gestures has passed ā€” concrete action is now required to dismantle the structures of occupation, apartheid and settler-colonialism.ā€

International action

While the worldā€™s biggest powers have remained silent or actively supported Israelā€™s ongoing genocide, The Hague Group member countries have been among the most vocal in condemning the Zionist state.

Bolivia was the first country to completely with Israel over its brutal war on Gaza, which started in October 2023. Soon after, Honduras and Colombia their ambassadors from Tel Aviv, and Colombia cut ties with Israel in May last year.

South Africa brought a against Israel in the ICJ in December 2023 for violating the United Nationsā€™ Genocide Convention. The Hague Group members Bolivia, Colombia and Namibia later the case, which eventually that Israelā€™s occupation of Palestine clearly violates international law.

Malaysia all Israeli ships from docking in the country from December 2023, and also donated in aid to Gaza.

Namibia a ship carrying weapons destined for Israel from docking in the country last year, fulfilling its obligations under international law as a signatory to the Genocide Convention.

Colombian President Gustavo Petro has been in condemning Israelā€™s genocide and was one of the first countries to take concrete action by suspending coal exports to the Zionist state in June.

The Cuban people and government following the revolution have with the Palestinians, offering material support to the resistance and for Palestinians to study in Cuba.

Ongoing humanitarian crisis

Despite a ceasefire coming into effect in January ā€” which Israel is consistently ā€” the devastating impacts of the war on Gaza require Israel to be held accountable and material support for Palestinian self-determination.

The Lancet medical journal that Israelā€™s war on Gaza killed 64,260 people between October 7, 2023, and June 30 last year ā€” mostly women and children.

Israelā€™s deliberate destruction of hospitals, schools, agricultural land, water and sanitation facilities and refugee camps has created an urgent humanitarian crisis for returning Gazans ā€” .

Israel destroyed or damaged in Gaza, including 92% of homes and 88% of schools.

Israel destroyed 75% of Gazaā€™s cropland, 68% of agricultural wells, 72% of the fishing fleet and killed 95% of Gazaā€™s cattle. As a result, more than 96% of babies and women are not meeting their nutrient requirements and about 91% of the population is facing ā€œacute food insecurityā€.

This fits with Israelā€™s strategy of starvation as a tool of genocide, as it continues ā€” food, water, fuel and medicine ā€” from entering Gaza. Israel also the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in January, which is the most important humanitarian organisation providing education, healthcare, housing and material aid in Palestine.

The scale of Israelā€™s destruction of Gaza, along with its ongoing genocide against Palestinians ā€” including in the occupied West Bank ā€” means that international movements to isolate the Zionist state remain urgent.

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