Hamas attacks Israel

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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View attachment 27322
So do you think MBS, Saudi Arabia, & in turn OPEC are going to throw open the taps to increase oil production to America at Canadian discount prices to appease Trump in his bit to 1/2 the cost at the US pumps in 18 months?
View attachment 27323
Whatever…
Nope. Trump is abandoning tie OPEC and the USD petrodollar. We (Canusa) can out pump OPEC and back our new dollar with oil. Now no OPEC means domestic pricing for oil and an export price for oil. That's how you get $1 a gallon and agriculture input costs down to sweet fuck all.
 
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petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
Apr 9, 2008
28,979
10,947
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Regina, Saskatchewan
Been a crazy week, & work has bleed into a couple hours of my morning already this morning. Not a lot of time for trying to stay abreast of events elsewhere.
1739034753618.jpeg
I’m assuming this isn’t the mother and those two children, & her two children, that are being swapped out for a bunch of terrorists today?

Israel to release 183 Palestinian prisoners in exchange. Negotiations on second phase of ceasefire started this week. Trump's call to move Palestinians from Gaza raised tensions.

Ohad Ben Ami and Eli Sharabi, who were taken hostage from Kibbutz Be'eri during the Hamas-led attack on southern Israel on October 7, 2023, and Or Levy, who was abducted that day from the Nova music festival, were led onto a Hamas podium by gunmen.

The three men appeared thin, weak and pale, in worse condition than the 18 other hostages already freed under the truce agreed in January after 15 months of war, so that would be a “no” on this being that mother & her two children.

"He looked like a skeleton, it was awful to see," Ohad Ben Ami's mother-in-law, Michal Cohen, told Channel 13 News as she watched the Hamas-directed handover ceremony, which included the hostages answering questions posed by a masked man as militants armed with automatic rifles stood on each side.

In exchange for the hostages' release, Israel was freeing 183 Palestinian prisoners, some convicted of involvement in attacks that killed dozens of people, as well as 111 detained in Gaza during the war.
1739037252476.jpeg
Ok, well, that answers that I guess.
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
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Former human rights chief commissioner sues for defamation
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Catherine Morrison
Published Feb 06, 2025 • 3 minute read

OTTAWA — A human rights lawyer whose tenure as head of the Canadian Human Rights Commission ended before it really began is suing a Conservative politician, a media personality and the Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs for defamation.


At a press conference Thursday, Birju Dattani spoke about lawsuits he has filed against Conservative deputy leader Melissa Lantsman, media personality Ezra Levant and the Jewish advocacy group Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs over statements made about him on social media last year.

One of the defendants has called Dattani’s claims “baseless.”

Dattani was named chief commissioner by Justice Minister Arif Virani in June 2024 and was to become the first Muslim and racialized person to hold the title.

But he resigned just before he was to start the position in August after the CIJA and others said he had made anti-Israel comments, including some under a different name, that were not flagged during the vetting process.


The CIJA said in a June 27 statement on its website that Dattani’s appointment was “unacceptable.” The organization said “social media posts and comments from Mr. Dattani reveal a troubling past of anti-Israel and even antisemitic positions.”

Virani tapped a law firm to investigate the complaints and file a report. The report said the investigation found no indication that Dattani held antisemitic beliefs but concluded that he omitted the name “Mujahid Dattani” from his background check form.

In a letter to Virani, Dattani denied that his failure to disclose the name was intentional and said he was only asked for his given name on the application.

After receiving the investigation report, Virani said in a letter to Dattani that the results raised serious concerns about his candour during the appointment process.


Dattani claims the three defendants continued to attack him online after the investigation concluded.

In August 2024, Lantsman took to X to call for a probe into how Dattani was hired. In another social media post, she called him an “antisemite.”

Levant, the founder of Rebel News, has called Dattani a “Hamas sympathizer” and an “Islamic extremist” on social media.

Dattani has asked for general damages — $500,000 against Lantsman, $650,000 against Levant and $450,000 against the CIJA _ aggravated damages in the amount of $150,000 each from Lantsman, Levant and the CIJA, and special damages in an amount to be determined before trial. He also has asked for declarations stating that the defendants defamed him.

In a news release, Dattani said he became the subject of “an online and media smear campaign, which grossly mischaracterized him as an antisemitic, terrorist supporter” shortly after his appointment. The release said that, despite the investigation’s conclusions, “the vicious online attacks continued by those named in the lawsuits.”


Lantsman’s office said in a statement issued to The Canadian Press that “the controversy surrounding the appointment of Mr. Dattani by the Liberal government is a matter of public record. Ms. Lantsman will vigorously defend herself against these baseless claims.”

Richard Marceau, vice president of external affairs and general counsel at the Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs, said in a media statement that “we received the Statement of Claim and are reviewing. What we said is sourced and factual.”

Ezra Levant said in a statement that the lawsuit is “an attempt to silence legitimate political criticism of a public person on a matter of public interest.”

“Dattani’s own words and actions are what have destroyed his reputation, and that’s why the Liberals cut him loose — not our criticism of it,” Levant said.


At a press conference on Parliament Hill Thursday, Dattani said the “campaign” against him has caused “serious and potentially irreparable damage” to his reputation.

“It has impacted my mental and physical health. It has also affected my family and loved ones,” he said. “I’m taking this step today to reclaim my reputation and to seek accountability for the damage that has been done to me and those closest to me.”

Dattani said he is crowdsourcing funds to help pay for the legal process.

He said he will continue to fight against antisemitism, Islamophobia, anti-Palestinian racism and all forms of hate and bigotry.

Dattani’s lawyer Alexi Wood said there has not yet been an official response from the defendants.

She said he could not speak to whether any future legal action could be taken against the federal government.

— With files from David Baxter.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
117,183
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Been a crazy week, & work has bleed into a couple hours of my morning already this morning. Not a lot of time for trying to stay abreast of events elsewhere.
View attachment 27421
I’m assuming this isn’t the mother and those two children, & her two children, that are being swapped out for a bunch of terrorists today?

Israel to release 183 Palestinian prisoners in exchange. Negotiations on second phase of ceasefire started this week. Trump's call to move Palestinians from Gaza raised tensions.

Ohad Ben Ami and Eli Sharabi, who were taken hostage from Kibbutz Be'eri during the Hamas-led attack on southern Israel on October 7, 2023, and Or Levy, who was abducted that day from the Nova music festival, were led onto a Hamas podium by gunmen.

The three men appeared thin, weak and pale, in worse condition than the 18 other hostages already freed under the truce agreed in January after 15 months of war, so that would be a “no” on this being that mother & her two children.

"He looked like a skeleton, it was awful to see," Ohad Ben Ami's mother-in-law, Michal Cohen, told Channel 13 News as she watched the Hamas-directed handover ceremony, which included the hostages answering questions posed by a masked man as militants armed with automatic rifles stood on each side.

In exchange for the hostages' release, Israel was freeing 183 Palestinian prisoners, some convicted of involvement in attacks that killed dozens of people, as well as 111 detained in Gaza during the war.
View attachment 27422
Ok, well, that answers that I guess.
Does any of that go against the Geneva Suggestions?
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
117,183
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In Israel, selling books about Palestinians is now 'incitement to terrorism'

'We never imagined we would sit in an Israeli jail for selling books'

David Issacharoff David Issacharoff

On Sunday afternoon, Mahmoud and Ahmed Muna were, as usual, selling books at their shop on one of the main roads of East Jerusalem.

Twenty-four hours later, they would be shackled by their hands and feet in the Jerusalem District Court, only 250 meters from their store.

The Educational Bookshop, opened in 1984, is the most well-known bookstore in East Jerusalem. Specializing in Arabic and English books on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and the history of Jerusalem, it has become a rare and iconic meeting place for researchers, diplomats, journalists and tourists from all sides. The owners proudly present it as a place where Palestinians and Israelis can mingle and talk: "A space for everyone. We have room for anyone's opinion, and we don't always agree, but we can talk about it."

I remember the first time I visited the shop, with a group of Israeli and Palestinian peace activists. We were hosted by Mahmoud, who made us coffee as we browsed the books. Over the years, it became an essential stop for me whenever I walked around the area. Growing up just a few kilometers from the shop – but a world away, in the Jewish part of Jerusalem – I wasn't exposed to books like these in my neighborhood stores or libraries.

The bookshop allowed me to page through books on Palestinian identity and culture, from music to food to the history of the land – and on the best-kept secret in Jewish Israeli society: the Nakba, the Palestinian perspective on the 1948 war, whose effects of displacement are still being felt to this day in full force, as the Israel-Hamas war may be winding down.

Murad, the brother of the shop's owner who also works there, told Haaretz that Israeli police, accompanied by a Shin Bet officer, left books and postcards scattered on the floor, labeling them – along with a copy of Sunday's Haaretz newspaper, featuring a headline on the previous day's hostage release – as incitement to terrorism.

"They took every book with a Palestinian flag on it and seized a significant number of books. They also took a coloring book for kids called 'From the River to the Sea,'" he added.

Three weeks after ultranationalist National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir resigned from the government in protest of the Gaza cease-fire, it seems that the police are still operating very much under his influence. In their statement, the police – without any evidence – labeled the booksellers as inciters and supporters of terror, claiming they pose a "danger" to the citizens of Israel.

Just one kilometer from the shop, in the heart of Jewish Jerusalem, one can find children's books about building the Third Temple, Jewish settlements and outposts in the West Bank, and glorifying IDF soldiers in the latest war in Gaza. But that erasure of Palestinians has long been part of the state's ideology: Maps of Israel, literally spanning from the river to the sea, already hang in classrooms across every sector of society.

On a random shelf in the Educational Bookshop, one can find a book by Israeli author Nir Baram, "A Land Without Borders," describing his impressions of the West Bank, alongside "Being Palestinian Makes Me Smile" by Palestinian comedian Amer Zahr, or Colum McCann's novel "Apeirogon," about a friendship between bereaved Israeli and Palestinian fathers. Why didn't the police officers confiscate those?

Did they also overlook "The Oxford Handbook of Antisemitism" or "Shalom Inshallah: Encountering Jews, Christians, and Muslims," a photography book?

Israel's war is now targeting Palestinian culture along with the Palestinian people. The Jewish people, who have a painful history of being the target of assaults on books and ethnic cleansing, have now fully normalized similar sentiments in a society in which Holocaust memory is still foundational, generations later. According to recent polls, nearly 70 percent of Israelis support U.S. President Donald Trump's plan to expel the Palestinian population of Gaza.

On Monday, dozens of activists and Jerusalem residents gathered at the store to show solidarity with the family and the business, forming a long line of shoppers. They then followed Murad to the courthouse, standing outside while the booksellers awaited the hearing of their appeal after a night in police custody. The police, realizing they had no case for charging them with incitement to terrorism, instead accused them of "disrupting public order."

In the Jerusalem courthouse, hurrying to the room where his brother and cousin were being held for their hearing, Murad said that what the police did "doesn't deter us."

"We thought there was freedom of speech in Israel. We never imagined in our wildest dreams that we would sit in jail for selling books."
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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As Netanyahu Stalls the Next Stage of the Hostage Deal, Israelis Must Turn Their Shock Into Action

Even from Washington, the prime minister is working to block the transition to the next stage of the deal. If the Israeli public and defense chiefs don't apply strong pressure on an indifferent government, the hostages will continue to suffer in worse conditions

Amos Harel
Feb 8, 2025

The horror show that Hamas staged in Deir al-Balah on Saturday morning surrounding the release of the three hostages – gaunt, frightened, the effects of prolonged captivity clearly visible on their faces – provoked shock and anger in Israel.

But beyond the anger toward the terrorist organization, which abducted Ohad Ben Ami and Eli Sharabi from their respective homes in Kibbutz Be'eri and Or Levy from the Nova music festival, it is important to translate the shock into practical measures.

If the Israeli public doesn't exert heavy pressure on the government to advance to the second phase of the deal and ensure the release of the 76 hostages remaining in the Gaza Strip (more than half of whom are presumed dead), they will continue to suffer under similar, and perhaps even harsher, conditions.

We can also expect a clear statement from the heads of the defense establishment – the chief of staff of the Israel Defense Forces, the heads of the Mossad and of the Shin Bet security service and the head of the IDF's Hostages and Missing Persons Command Center – even if the government is working diligently to oust most of them.

The need is even more urgent in light of Benjamin Netanyahu's actions. The prime minister, who extended his stay at a Washington luxury hotel (with a large and extravagant entourage) through Saturday evening, is investing considerable effort from the American capital to foil the transition to the next stage of the deal.

Initially, it was leaked from his camp that for now, he would prefer to extend the first stage – the weekly release of three living hostages in exchange for the release of Palestinians jailed in Israel – due to the difficulty of reaching agreement on the second stage.

But an unnamed Israeli source who spoke with Haaretz's Liza Rozovsky in Washington over the weekend went further. According to him, if Hamas "doesn't agree to cease to exist in the Gaza Strip," the options are to resume fighting or to extend the first stage of the deal.

Israel, he added, would agree to withdraw from the Philadelphi corridor and the buffer zone along the Gaza-Israel border only if Hamas leaders and "everyone connected to the organization" are exiled.

The implications of this for the remaining hostages are clear. All of the remaining living hostages in Gaza are men, most of them of fighting age – 50 or younger, and therefore either serving as reservists or theoretically capable of doing so. It's known that the male hostages in the Strip were in many cases treated even more harshly than their female counterparts, who were subjected to physical and psychological abuse. Most of the remaining hostages probably look like the three who returned to Israel on Saturday, half-starved.

It's not hard to imagine the condition of those remaining in the tunnels and what is liable to happen to them if the second stage is delayed.
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
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Some Israeli soldiers travelling abroad targeted for alleged war crimes in Gaza
Author of the article:Associated Press
Associated Press
Molly Quell
Published Feb 11, 2025 • 4 minute read

THE HAGUE, Netherlands — An Israeli army reservist’s dream vacation in Brazil ended abruptly last month over an accusation that he committed war crimes in the Gaza Strip.


Yuval Vagdani woke up on Jan. 4 to a flurry of missed calls from family members and Israel’s Foreign Ministry with an urgent warning: A pro-Palestinian legal group had convinced a federal judge in Brazil to open a war crimes investigation for his alleged participation in the demolition of civilian homes in Gaza.

A frightened Vagdani fled the country on a commercial flight the next day to avoid the grip of a powerful legal concept called “universal jurisdiction,” which allows governments to prosecute people for the most serious crimes regardless of where they are allegedly committed.

Vagdani, a survivor of Hamas’ deadly Oct. 7, 2023, attack on an Israeli music festival, told an Israeli radio station the accusation felt like “a bullet in the heart.”


The case against Vagdani was brought by the Hind Rajab Foundation, a legal group based in Belgium named after a young girl who Palestinians say was killed early in the war by Israeli fire as she and her family fled Gaza City.

Aided by geolocation data, the group built its case around Vagdani’s own social media posts. A photograph showed him in uniform in Gaza, where he served in an infantry unit; a video showed a large explosion of buildings in Gaza during which soldiers can be heard cheering.

Judges at the International Criminal Court concluded last year there was enough evidence to issue an arrest warrant for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for crimes against humanity for using “starvation as a method of warfare” and for intentionally targeting civilians. Both Israel and Netanyahu have vehemently denied the accusations.


Since forming last year, Hind Rajab has made dozens of complaints in more than 10 countries to arrest both low-level and high-ranking Israeli soldiers. Its campaign has yet to yield any arrests. But it has led Israel to tighten restrictions on social media usage among military personnel.

“It’s our responsibility, as far as we are concerned, to bring the cases,” Haroon Raza, a co-founder of Hind Rajab, said from his office in Rotterdam in the Netherlands. It is then up to authorities in each country — or the International Criminal Court _ to pursue them, he added.

The director general of Israel’s Foreign Ministry, Eden Bar Tal, last month said fewer than a dozen soldiers had been targeted, with no warrants issued, and dismissed the attempted arrests as a futile public relations stunt. “It’s sponsored by this very low number of entities that have direct connections to terrorist organizations,” he said.


Universal jurisdiction is not new. The 1949 Geneva Conventions — the post Second World War treaty regulating military conduct — specify that all signatories must prosecute war criminals or hand them over to a country who will. In 1999, the United Nations Security Council asked all U.N. countries to include universal jurisdiction in their legal codes, and around 160 countries have adopted them in some form.

“Certain crimes like war crimes, genocide and crimes against humanity are crimes under international law,” said Marieke de Hoon, an international law expert at the University of Amsterdam. “And we’ve recognized in international law that any state has jurisdiction over those egregious crimes.”

Israel used the concept to prosecute Adolf Eichmann, an architect of the Holocaust. Mossad agents caught him in Argentina in 1960 and brought him to Israel where he was sentenced to death by hanging.


More recently, a former Syrian secret police officer was convicted in 2022 by a German court of crimes against humanity a decade earlier for overseeing the abuse of detainees at a jail. Later that year, an Iranian citizen was convicted by a Swedish court of war crimes during the Iran-Iraq war in the 1980s.

In 2023, 16 people were convicted of war crimes through universal jurisdiction, according to TRIAL International, a Swiss organization that tracks proceedings. Those convictions were related to crimes committed in Syria, Rwanda, Iran and other countries.

In response to Brazil’s pursuit of Vagdani, the Israeli military has prohibited soldiers below a certain rank from being named in news articles and requires their faces to be obscured. It has also warned soldiers against social media posts related to their military service or travel plans.


The evidence Hind Rajab lawyers presented to the judge in Brazil came mostly from Vagdani’s social media accounts.

“That’s what they saw and that’s why they want me for their investigation,” he told the Israeli radio station Kan. “From one house explosion they made 500 pages. They thought I murdered thousands of children.”

Vagdani does not appear in the video and he did not say whether he had carried out the explosion himself, telling the station he had come into Gaza for “maneuvers” and “was in the battles of my life.”

Social media has made it easier in recent years for legal groups to gather evidence. For example, several Islamic State militants have been convicted of crimes committed in Syria by courts in various European countries, where lawyers relied on videos posted online, according to de Hoon.


The power of universal jurisdiction has limits.

In the Netherlands, where Hind Rajab has filed more than a dozen complaints, either the victim or perpetrator must hold Dutch nationality, or the suspect must be in the country for the entirety of the investigation — factors likely to protect Israeli tourists from prosecution. Eleven complaints against 15 Israeli soldiers have been dismissed, some because the accused was only in the country for a short time, according to Dutch prosecutors. Two complaints involving four soldiers are pending.

In 2016, activists in the U.K. made unsuccessful attempts to arrest Israeli military and political leaders for their roles in the 2008-09 war in Gaza.

Raza says his group will persist. “It might take 10 years. It might be 20 years. No problem. We are ready to have patience.”

There is no statute of limitations on war crimes.

— Josef Federman in Jerusalem contributed to this report.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
117,183
14,241
113
Low Earth Orbit
Some Israeli soldiers travelling abroad targeted for alleged war crimes in Gaza
Author of the article:Associated Press
Associated Press
Molly Quell
Published Feb 11, 2025 • 4 minute read

THE HAGUE, Netherlands — An Israeli army reservist’s dream vacation in Brazil ended abruptly last month over an accusation that he committed war crimes in the Gaza Strip.


Yuval Vagdani woke up on Jan. 4 to a flurry of missed calls from family members and Israel’s Foreign Ministry with an urgent warning: A pro-Palestinian legal group had convinced a federal judge in Brazil to open a war crimes investigation for his alleged participation in the demolition of civilian homes in Gaza.

A frightened Vagdani fled the country on a commercial flight the next day to avoid the grip of a powerful legal concept called “universal jurisdiction,” which allows governments to prosecute people for the most serious crimes regardless of where they are allegedly committed.

Vagdani, a survivor of Hamas’ deadly Oct. 7, 2023, attack on an Israeli music festival, told an Israeli radio station the accusation felt like “a bullet in the heart.”


The case against Vagdani was brought by the Hind Rajab Foundation, a legal group based in Belgium named after a young girl who Palestinians say was killed early in the war by Israeli fire as she and her family fled Gaza City.

Aided by geolocation data, the group built its case around Vagdani’s own social media posts. A photograph showed him in uniform in Gaza, where he served in an infantry unit; a video showed a large explosion of buildings in Gaza during which soldiers can be heard cheering.

Judges at the International Criminal Court concluded last year there was enough evidence to issue an arrest warrant for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for crimes against humanity for using “starvation as a method of warfare” and for intentionally targeting civilians. Both Israel and Netanyahu have vehemently denied the accusations.


Since forming last year, Hind Rajab has made dozens of complaints in more than 10 countries to arrest both low-level and high-ranking Israeli soldiers. Its campaign has yet to yield any arrests. But it has led Israel to tighten restrictions on social media usage among military personnel.

“It’s our responsibility, as far as we are concerned, to bring the cases,” Haroon Raza, a co-founder of Hind Rajab, said from his office in Rotterdam in the Netherlands. It is then up to authorities in each country — or the International Criminal Court _ to pursue them, he added.

The director general of Israel’s Foreign Ministry, Eden Bar Tal, last month said fewer than a dozen soldiers had been targeted, with no warrants issued, and dismissed the attempted arrests as a futile public relations stunt. “It’s sponsored by this very low number of entities that have direct connections to terrorist organizations,” he said.


Universal jurisdiction is not new. The 1949 Geneva Conventions — the post Second World War treaty regulating military conduct — specify that all signatories must prosecute war criminals or hand them over to a country who will. In 1999, the United Nations Security Council asked all U.N. countries to include universal jurisdiction in their legal codes, and around 160 countries have adopted them in some form.

“Certain crimes like war crimes, genocide and crimes against humanity are crimes under international law,” said Marieke de Hoon, an international law expert at the University of Amsterdam. “And we’ve recognized in international law that any state has jurisdiction over those egregious crimes.”

Israel used the concept to prosecute Adolf Eichmann, an architect of the Holocaust. Mossad agents caught him in Argentina in 1960 and brought him to Israel where he was sentenced to death by hanging.


More recently, a former Syrian secret police officer was convicted in 2022 by a German court of crimes against humanity a decade earlier for overseeing the abuse of detainees at a jail. Later that year, an Iranian citizen was convicted by a Swedish court of war crimes during the Iran-Iraq war in the 1980s.

In 2023, 16 people were convicted of war crimes through universal jurisdiction, according to TRIAL International, a Swiss organization that tracks proceedings. Those convictions were related to crimes committed in Syria, Rwanda, Iran and other countries.

In response to Brazil’s pursuit of Vagdani, the Israeli military has prohibited soldiers below a certain rank from being named in news articles and requires their faces to be obscured. It has also warned soldiers against social media posts related to their military service or travel plans.


The evidence Hind Rajab lawyers presented to the judge in Brazil came mostly from Vagdani’s social media accounts.

“That’s what they saw and that’s why they want me for their investigation,” he told the Israeli radio station Kan. “From one house explosion they made 500 pages. They thought I murdered thousands of children.”

Vagdani does not appear in the video and he did not say whether he had carried out the explosion himself, telling the station he had come into Gaza for “maneuvers” and “was in the battles of my life.”

Social media has made it easier in recent years for legal groups to gather evidence. For example, several Islamic State militants have been convicted of crimes committed in Syria by courts in various European countries, where lawyers relied on videos posted online, according to de Hoon.


The power of universal jurisdiction has limits.

In the Netherlands, where Hind Rajab has filed more than a dozen complaints, either the victim or perpetrator must hold Dutch nationality, or the suspect must be in the country for the entirety of the investigation — factors likely to protect Israeli tourists from prosecution. Eleven complaints against 15 Israeli soldiers have been dismissed, some because the accused was only in the country for a short time, according to Dutch prosecutors. Two complaints involving four soldiers are pending.

In 2016, activists in the U.K. made unsuccessful attempts to arrest Israeli military and political leaders for their roles in the 2008-09 war in Gaza.

Raza says his group will persist. “It might take 10 years. It might be 20 years. No problem. We are ready to have patience.”

There is no statute of limitations on war crimes.

— Josef Federman in Jerusalem contributed to this report.
Geneva Suggestions