REUTERS/Esa AlexanderSouth Africa accused Israel of committing genocide at the opening of an International Court of Justice case it brought over the Gaza war. Pretoria argues Israel is seeking to “destroy Palestinians in Gaza,” a charge Israel vehemently denies, calling it a “blood libel.” Both sides have deployed high-profile attorneys, and each have a representative on an expanded, 17-member panel of judges. Though the case could take years, the ICJ may issue provisional measures demanding Israel stop its assault in Gaza, which has left more than 23,000 people dead according to the enclave’s Hamas-run authorities. The court battle has underlined growing global divisions over the war: Whereas the U.S. denounced South Africa’s petition, the 57-member Organisation of Islamic Cooperation backed Pretoria. The case also carries huge symbolic weight. On one side, Israel’s founding came in the wake of the killing of six million Jews in the Holocaust. On the other, South Africa — which sees parallels between apartheid and Israel’s treatment of Palestinians, and whose apartheid rulers had a close military alliance with Israel — was the subject of an ultimately unsuccessful 1960s ICJ case seeking to end the system of segregation. “Like the [1960s] case,” a legal expert wrote in South Africa’s Mail & Guardian, “this is about more than just the present legal dispute.” |