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Israel-Gaza war
WorldMiddle East

Gaza war: Israel says World Court order doesn’t rule out entire Rafah offensive

  • Officials say the emergency ruling to halt its assault allows room for some military action: ‘What they are asking us, is not to commit genocide’
  • While the court has no means to enforce its orders, the case is a sign of Israel’s growing diplomatic isolation over its campaign against Hamas

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A protester draped in a Palestinian flag holds up a sign outside the International Court of Justice in The Hague on Friday. Photo: Reuters
Reuters

Israel considers that an order by the World Court to halt its military offensive on Rafah in southern Gaza allows room for some military action there, Israeli officials said.

In an emergency ruling in South Africa’s case accusing Israel of genocide, judges at the International Court of Justice ordered Israel on Friday to immediately halt its assault on Rafah, where Israel says it is rooting out Hamas fighters.

“What they are asking us, is not to commit genocide in Rafah. We did not commit genocide and we will not commit genocide,” Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s national security adviser, Tzachi Hanegbi, told Israel’s N12 TV on Saturday.

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Asked whether the Rafah offensive would continue, Hanegbi said: “According to international law, we have the right to defend ourselves and the evidence is that the court is not preventing us from continuing to defend ourselves.”

Smoke rises during an Israeli air strike in Rafah on Friday. Photo: Reuters
Smoke rises during an Israeli air strike in Rafah on Friday. Photo: Reuters

The ICJ, which is based in The Hague, did not immediately comment on Hanegbi’s remarks. Hamas also did not immediately comment.

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Another Israeli official pointed to the phrasing of the ruling by the ICJ, or World Court, depicting it as conditional.

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