A new agreement between
Lebanon and
Israel could block victims of Israeli
war crimes in
Lebanon from pursuing accountability and hinder future efforts to give the
International Criminal Court jurisdiction in the country, legal experts have said.
Lebanon and
Israel signed a 14-point framework agreement in Washington on Friday designed to work towards an end to fighting between
Israel and
Hezbollah.Article 13 of the deal says
Israel and
Lebanon will “cease all hostile or negative actions in international political or legal forums” to establish good faith between the two sides.The text, which is broadly phrased, could prevent victims of Israeli
war crimes allegedly committed during fighting since 8
October 2023 from seeking justice through international or national courts.Legal experts have also understood this to mean that
Lebanon would not be able to grant the ICC jurisdiction in the country, which advocates have pushed for to prosecute
Israel and its leaders for alleged
war crimes.“This will kill any hope of granting the ICC jurisdiction, even any hope of a UN fact-finding mission,” said
Farouk al-Moghrabi, a former adviser to the ministry of human rights who helped draft a law to give the ICC jurisdiction in
Lebanon. He said the law also would kill internal efforts to investigate and document crimes.
Nizar Saghieh, a lawyer and head of
Legal Agenda, a Lebanese NGO, said: “The government is normalising the crime and waiving its rights to ensure any investigation or the prosecution of these crimes, or even to assist the victim in their search for justice.”A spokesperson for the Lebanese presidency did not reply to a request for a comment.The head of
Hezbollah,
Naim Qassem, has rejected the agreement signed in Washington as a “humiliation”. The group has consistently called on the Lebanese government to stop direct negotiations with
Israel.
Israel and
Hezbollah have been fighting since 2023, when
Hezbollah launched rockets at
Israel in solidarity with
Hamas, triggering two Israeli invasions of southern
Lebanon and widespread bombing campaigns. Israeli strikes in
Lebanon have killed more than 8,000 people, while
Hezbollah attacks have killed dozens of Israeli soldiers and at least 49 civilians in
Israel.As part of its campaign in
Lebanon,
Israel has killed more than a dozen journalists, more than 300 emergency responders and hundreds of women and children.Human rights experts have said
Israel may have committed numerous
war crimes in
Lebanon, including the targeting of journalists on 13
October 2023, mass forcible displacement of hundreds of thousands of people and specific instances deliberately targeting civilians.One of the avenues for accountability for victims of alleged Israeli
war crimes in
Lebanon has been petitioning the government to grant the ICC limited jurisdiction to investigate and prosecute on its territory.The ICC issued arrest warrants for the Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, and the former defence minister, Yoav Gallant ,for alleged
war crimes and crimes against humanity committed in Gaza.
Israel and the US have undertaken an aggressive campaign against the ICC in response, including the US placing sanctions on ICC judges.skip past newsletter promotionafter newsletter promotionThe Lebanese government has so far not granted the ICC jurisdiction because of initial resistance from
Hezbollah and potential US sanctions. Friday’s framework agreement would be another obstacle to accountability in the country.
Lebanon’s national human rights commission put out a statement commenting on the framework agreement, emphasising that no agreement should prevent victims from seeking justice.“The commission emphasises that prosecuting perpetrators of
war crimes, crimes against humanity and torture does not constitute an act of hostility or a political stance, but rather a legitimate exercise of the rights to justice,” the statement said.The vague and broad nature of the framework agreement also made it uncertain what would be considered a “hostile or negative action”, it said.The office of the UN high commissioner for human rights recently arrived in
Lebanon for a fact-finding mission on possible
war crimes committed during the last war. It is unclear whether such work will be prohibited under the new agreement.“The fact that this is happening after all of these crimes, this is normalisation of the crimes and ensuring some kind of impunity to
Israel,” Saghieh said.