General

ICC prosecutor ordered to investigate Israeli attack on Mavi Marmara

by Charlotte Silver, Electronic Intifada, 8 November 2015

Palestinians in the Gaza City port commemorate the Turkish activists killed by Israeli aboard the Mavi Marmara, May 2015.

Ashraf Amra
APA images

On Friday the appeals chamber of the International Criminal Court ruled
that the office of the prosecutor must review its decision to close a
preliminary examination into Israel’s deadly attack on a ship full of
Turkish activists in 2010.
In May 2010, Israel violently raided the Mavi Marmara, a Turkish vessel that was part of flotilla sailing in international waters on its way to break the Israeli siege on Gaza.
During the raid, Israeli soldiers killed 10 civilian passengers and
injured many more (nine died immediately and a tenth died of his wounds
in May 2014).
In November 2014, Fatou Bensouda,
the prosecutor of the ICC, closed her examination into the case,
finding it was without “sufficient gravity” to justify further action.
Upon concluding the preliminary examination, Bensouda noted that
there was a reasonable basis to believe Israel committed war crimes.
Nevertheless she wrote:
“Without in any way minimizing the impact of the alleged crimes on the
victims and their families, I have to be guided by the Rome Statute, in
accordance with which, the ICC shall prioritize war crimes committed on a
large scale or pursuant to a plan or policy.”
The case had been referred to the ICC prosecutor by the Union of the
Comoros, a state party to the Rome Statute, on behalf of the victims of
the attack. The Mavi Marmara sailed under the Comoros flag.

No justice

Rodney Dixon, who is part of the legal team representing the
government of the Comoros and the victims of the 2010 attack, told The
Electronic Intifada: “She has been directed to reconsider her decision.”
Representatives of the Comoros appealed the prosecutor’s decision, and in July 2015 a pre-trial chamber ruled that Bensouda had made errors in her decision to dismiss the case.
Bensouda appealed that decision, which the appeals chamber upheld on Friday.
When Bensouda closed the case last year she had argued there was no
evidence of a plan or policy to target civilians when Israel attacked
the flotilla.
A United Nations fact-finding mission had found that five out of the ten passengers killed were shot in the head at close range.
“She was not prepared to link what happened to the wider conflict or
the blockade of Gaza. She said it was an isolated incident,” Dixon
explained.
Both the pre-Trial chamber and the appeals court found she had made errors in her decision.
“This has been going on for a number of years and in that time the
victims haven’t received any justice,” Dixon said. “We want her to open
an investigation immediately and determine whether charges can be
brought or not.”

Comment by ProMosaik e.V.:

A very nice song by Doc Jazz to listen about Mavi Marmara.
Visit this link to see also our interview with Doc Jazz:
http://www.docjazz.com/index.php/34-articles/interviews/388-promosaik