UK police to assess war crimes claim against Israel

UK police to assess war crimes claim against Israel

World

UK police will assess whether to open a war crimes probe into Israel's war with Hamas.

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LONDON (AFP) – UK police said Tuesday that specialist officers will assess whether to open a war crimes probe into Israel's war with Hamas, following a referral from an advocacy group for Palestinians.

London's Metropolitan Police said its small war crimes team, which is hosted within its counter terrorism command, would determine if any further action or formal investigation will be launched.

The Met, the UK's biggest and best-resourced police force, confirmed it had received a "referral" last Friday "relating to allegations linked to the ongoing Israel-Hamas conflict".

"The information within the referral will now be assessed by specialist officers as part of a scoping exercise to determine whether any further action or formal investigation will be carried out," a police spokesman said.

"At this time, there is no UK-based investigation into this matter, or any other matters relating to this particular conflict."

The spokesman noted the assessment would be done using guidelines for probing possible war crimes crafted with the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS), which makes the final decisions on prosecuting cases in England and Wales.

However, the CPS must seek permission from the attorney general -- a senior government minister and the state's chief legal advisor -- over war crimes prosecutions.

Met Commander Dominic Murphy, who leads its counter terrorism command, insisted the force would adhere to the "very clear set of guidelines which we use when assessing all war crimes referrals made to us".

'EVIDENCE DOSSIER'

The UK-based International Centre of Justice for Palestinians (ICJP) -- an independent organisation of lawyers, academics and politicians advocating for Palestinian rights -- said it had filed a "war crimes complaint" with the Met.

The group said its investigators had handed the Met a 70-page "evidence dossier" which detailed a range of alleged crimes by Israel in recent months.

Announcing the move, ICJP director Tayab Ali said they include attacks against properties, monuments, hospitals, and blocking humanitarian aid and basic necessities "to wilfully cause great suffering or serious injury to body or health".

The dossier also accuses Israel of "intentionally using starvation of civilians and deprivation of objects indispensable to survival as a method of warfare".

It alleges complicity in that by "high-ranking Israeli officials and military personnel" as well as "nine named British citizens" serving in the Israeli military.

The file also includes "four British government ministers and officials alleged to have abetted these crimes".

The development comes as the International Criminal Court, the world's only independent court set up to probe the gravest offences including genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity, continues its probe into the long-running conflict.

It opened an investigation in 2021 into Israel as well as Hamas and other armed Palestinian groups for possible war crimes in the Palestinian territories.

Meanwhile, South Africa has in recent weeks launched an emergency case at the International Court of Justice, arguing that Israel stands in breach of the UN Genocide Convention, signed in 1948 in the wake of the Holocaust.