'Pressure should be exerted on Israel to halt arms sales,' says ex-Human Rights Watch chief
Former Director of Human Rights Watch (HRW), Kenneth Roth, said pressure should be exerted to halt military aid and arms sales to the Israeli government.
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Roth, in an interview with Anadolu on the current situation in Gaza, urged a worldwide economic boycott against Israel and said Tel Aviv’s attacks on Rafah on the border with Egypt should stop.
"Israel must provide information to the court by Feb. 23. It's unclear how they will defend themselves because they have not complied with the court's decision so far," said Roth, referring to an International Court of Justice order on Jan. 26 for Israel to take "immediate and effective" measures to enable the provision of urgently needed services and humanitarian assistance in the Gaza Strip.
Regarding the boycott of Israeli products worldwide, Roth said: "The issue is not private Israeli companies but the Israeli government. Pressure needs to be put on the Israeli government -- through war crimes charges and an end to military aid and arms sales." 'Using hunger as a weapon of war'
Roth noted that the Israeli government uses "hunger as a weapon of war" by inflicting suffering on Palestinians.
"This is a blatant war crime. It is also inconsistent with the International Court of Justice order in the genocide case that Israel permit adequate humanitarian aid into Gaza, which it is not doing," he said.
Pointing out that approximately 1.4 million Palestinians, most of whom have been forcibly displaced from various parts of Gaza, see Rafah as their "last refuge," Roth said: "Netanyahu had said he would develop an evacuation plan before attacking the city, but now he has attacked without any evacuation."
Roth expressed concerns that many are worried about the implementation of a plan to force Palestinians, who have the idea of right-wing ministers who support Netanyahu to stay in power and avoid imprisonment on corruption charges, to make a one-way trip to Egypt following Israel's attacks on Rafah, likening it to the Nakba, or Catastrophe, when Palestinians were expelled from their lands to make way for an Israeli state. Attacks on Rafah latest 'war crimes' by Israel
Roth said the attacks on Rafah, where civilian casualties are very high, are the latest in a series of "war crimes" committed by Israel, including attacks on densely populated areas, targeting health services during emergencies, rendering hospitals dysfunctional and preventing humanitarian aid from reaching civilians in Gaza living on the brink of starvation.
He noted that the Chief Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court (ICC), Karim Khan, is conducting an open investigation into the allegations. "We are all eagerly awaiting war crime charges,” he said.
Roth also pointed out that the investigation is increasing pressure on US President Joe Biden to halt or at least condition an annual $3.8 billion military aid and arms sales to Israel.