Page:South Africa v. Israel (Order of 26 January 2024).pdf/43

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.

Declaration of Judge Bhandari

Humanitarian situation in Gaza—Present request for the indication of provisional measures—Court not deciding merits—Requirement for the existence of plausible rights—Consideration of factual evidence on the record—Relevance of conduct for plausibility finding.

1. I agree with the Court’s reasoning supporting its Order. I make this declaration to add an additional element to this reasoning.

2. First, by way of background, the attacks on civilians in Israel on 7 October 2023 were acts of brutality that must be condemned in the strongest possible terms. It is estimated that 1,200 Israelis lost their lives and 5,500 were wounded and maimed in those attacks.

3. To date, however, more than 25,000 civilians in Gaza have reportedly lost their lives as a result of Israel’s military campaign in response to those attacks, many of them women and children. Several thousands are reportedly still missing. Tens of thousands of others have reportedly been injured. Dwellings, businesses and places of worship have been destroyed. It is also reported by United Nations agencies that 26 hospitals and over 200 schools have been damaged. Approximately 85 per cent of Gaza’s population has been displaced as a result of the conflict. The situation in Gaza has turned into a humanitarian catastrophe.

4. I note in this connection that, while the present request only concerns the Genocide Convention, other bodies of international law also apply in an armed conflict such as this one, including in particular international humanitarian law.

5. This is an Order granting provisional measures, in accordance with Article 41 (1) of the Statute and the jurisprudence of the Court. According to this provision, “[t]he Court shall have the power to indicate, if it considers that circumstances so require, any provisional measures which ought to be taken to preserve the respective rights of either party”.

6. Needless to say, the case has not been fully argued at this point, nor does the Court have before it anything even approaching a full factual record. For these reasons alone, it is clear that the Court is not, and cannot be, deciding South Africa’s actual claims under the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (the “Genocide Convention”), as articulated in paragraph 110 of its Application instituting proceedings (the “Application”). Similarly, the Court is not, at this stage, deciding whether to grant any of the relief South Africa requests in paragraph 111 of its Application.

7. All the Court is doing is rendering a decision on South Africa’s Request for the indication of provisional measures (the “Request”), which is a discrete request to the Court. In making a decision on the Request, different legal tests and thresholds apply. These are elementary points, but, in the particular context of this case, they bear repeating. It is against this background that one must read the Court’s Order.

8. As part of its decision on whether to grant provisional measures, the Court must, in weighing the plausibility of the rights whose protection is claimed, consider such evidence as is before it at