Published 22 August 202424 August 2024 · open letter / Palestine An open letter from legal experts on the ICJ Advisory Opinion International Legal Scholars Against Genocide To the Prime Minister, Minister for Foreign Affairs, Minister for Defence and Attorney General As Australian and/or Australian-based lawyers and legal scholars, we call on the Australian government to act without delay to ensure Australia’s compliance with its international obligations, as articulated by the International Court of Justice (ICJ) Advisory Opinion on the Legal Consequences Arising from the Policies and Practices of Israel in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem. The ICJ Advisory Opinion of 19 July 2024 provides an authoritative legal statement of the illegality of the policies and practices of Israel in the Occupied Palestinian Territory and found multiple grave breaches of international law. Specifically, the ICJ found with overwhelming majorities that: the State of Israel’s prolonged occupation of the Occupied Palestinian Territory, which includes Gaza, the West Bank and East Jerusalem, is unlawful and, therefore, Israel is under an obligation to bring this unlawful occupation to an end as rapidly as possible; Israel’s prolonged occupation violates multiple facets of the right to self-determination of Palestinian people, including permanent sovereignty over their natural resources. The Court confirmed that this right is erga omnes and jus cogens in nature. The erga omnes and jus cogens nature of this right mean that this is not a bilateral dispute, but rather a multilateral issue with legal ramifications for all states, including Australia. The State of Israel engages in systematic violations of Art. 3 of the Convention on the Elimination of all Forms of Racial Discrimination, which prohibits racial segregation and apartheid. The State of Israel engages in a systematic practice of unlawful settlement in parts of the Occupied Palestinian Territory. Importantly, the Court found that both the maintenance of settlements and ongoing settler violence against Palestinians are not isolated acts carried out by ‘rogue’ individuals or groups, but part of a broader policy of unlawful annexation. We also note that in her separate opinion the recently re-elected Judge Hilary Charlesworth emphasised the specific harms inflicted by Israel’s policies on Palestinian women and girls. Her emphasis on intersectional harm is a reminder of the additional legal obligations that all states, including Australia, have under international human rights law toward different Palestinian groups including women and girls, but also Palestinians living with disabilities, Afro-Palestinians and Palestinian children. These historic findings by the ICJ do not create new obligations for states. These obligations have existed for decades, and – regrettably – most states, including Australia, have been in violation of them. Rather, the Advisory Opinion is a formal, authoritative reminder of these obligations. In particular, we note that the ICJ held that all states are under a number of concrete and far-reaching obligations, including the obligation: not to recognise any changes in the physical character or demographic composition, institutional structure or status of the territory occupied by Israel on 5 June 1967, including East Jerusalem, except as agreed by the parties through negotiations and to distinguish in their dealings with Israel between the territory of the State of Israel and the Palestinian territory occupied since 1967; to abstain from treaty relations with Israel in all cases in which it purports to act on behalf of the Occupied Palestinian Territory or a part thereof on matters concerning the Occupied Palestinian Territory or a part of its territory; to abstain, in the establishment and maintenance of diplomatic missions in Israel, from any recognition of its illegal presence in the Occupied Palestinian Territory; to take steps to prevent economic, trade or investment relations that assist in the maintenance of the illegal situation created by Israel in the Occupied Palestinian Territory; not to render aid or assistance in maintaining the situation created by Israel’s illegal presence in the Occupied Palestinian Territory; while respecting the Charter of the United Nations and international law, to ensure that any impediment resulting from the illegal presence of Israel in the Occupied Palestinian Territory to the exercise of the Palestinian people of its right to self-determination is brought to an end; and to contribute to multilateral efforts at the UN to ensure the General Assembly and Security Council consider and take appropriate further action to realise the obligations outlined in the Advisory Opinion to put an end to the illegal presence of Israel in the Occupied Palestinian Territory. We consider the legal obligations pertaining to trade and investment to be crucial from a legal and practical point of view. Any good-faith interpretation of this obligation involves, at the very least, a comprehensive arms and energy embargo on Israel that covers the export, import and transfer of weapons, including parts, components and other dual-use items as well as military jet fuel. In addition, given the Court’s detailed exposition of the role of water management, city planning and infrastructure, and land policies in Israel’s illegal practices of occupation, racial segregation and annexation, this obligation extends to all dealings between Australia and Israel in these sectors. Australia must urgently suspend all investment, trade and scientific, technical and technological cooperation in these areas and engage in a systematic evaluation of all economic ties with Israel. We consider Australia’s government’s imposition of sanctions and travel bans against seven individuals and one entity for involvement in settler violence against Palestinians in the West Bank to be insufficient. This is because the ICJ found that settler violence in the West Bank is not the aberrational doing of individual extremist settlers, but part of Israel’s broader policy of unlawful occupation, annexation and apartheid. In light of this, the Australian government must impose targeted sanctions, including asset freezes against Israeli individuals and entities involved in Israel’s illegal occupation, settlement enterprise, annexation, persecution, racial segregation and/or apartheid policies. Australia has been vocal about its ongoing commitment to international law and institutions. We call for a public statement by the Minister of Foreign Affairs welcoming the Advisory Opinion and confirming that Australia will comply with its obligations promptly and fully, and demand Australia take concrete steps ensure compliance with its international obligation. If you wish to add your name to the statement, use this form. For enquiries, please email legalscholarsagainstgenocide@gmail.com Signatories 1. Dr Julia Dehm, La Trobe Law School 2. Sophie Rigney, RMIT University 3. Lana Tatour, University of New South Wales 4. Dr Emma Russell, La Trobe University 5. Jonathan Symons, Macquarie School of Social Science, Macquarie University 6. Emma Palmer, Griffith University 7. Professor Thalia Anthony, UTS Law Faculty 8. Amanda Porter, University of Melbourne 9. Dr Ghena Krayem, University of Sydney 10. Dr Ntina Tzouvala, Australian National University, College of Law 11. Dr Claerwen O’Hara, La Trobe Law School 12. Anthony Burke, University of New South Wales 13. Dr Shannon Woodcock, University of Melbourne 14. Dylan Holdsworth, Deakin University 15. Maria Giannacopoulos, University of New South Wales 16. Sumedha Choudhury, University of Melbourne 17. Matthew Zagor, ANU College of Law 18. Dr Richard Joyce, University of Melbourne Law School 19. Maree Pardy, Deakin University 20. Liz Hicks, University of Melbourne 21. Associate Professor Jessica Whyte, University of New South Wales 22. Dylan Asafo, University of Melbourne 23. Adam Masri, Deakin University 24. Sarah Schwartz, University of Melbourne, Victorian Aboriginal Legal Service 25. Dr Rachel Killean, University of Sydney Law School 26. Erin Fitz-Henry, University of Melbourne 27. Professor Luis Eslava, La Trobe University 28. Dr Dave McDonald, Melbourne Law School, University of Melbourne 29. Associate Professor Elise Klein, ANU 30. Dr Kathryn Greenman, University of Technology Sydney 31. Dr Tamsin Phillipa Paige, Deakin Law School 32. Dr. André Dao, Melbourne Law School, University of Melbourne 33. Professor Dianne Otto, Melbourne Law School, University of Melbourne 34. Dr Souheir Edelbi, School of Law, Western Sydney University 35. Dr Ozlem Susler, La Trobe University 36. Professor Emeritus Kim Economides, Flinders University 37. Dr Bree Carlton, University of Melbourne 38. Marika Sosnowski, Melbourne Law School, University of Melbourne 39. Sarah Joseph, Griffith University 40. Erin Buckley, La Trobe University 41. Professor Karima Laachir, Australian National University 42. Edwin Bikundo, Griffith University 43. Dr Sara Dehm, Faculty of Law, University of Technology Sydney 44. Dr Lauren Sakae Nishimura, Melbourne Law School, University of Melbourne 45. Wanshu Cong, Australian National University 46. Muhannad Alasali, Metro-Bek City Council 47. Haris Jamil, University of Melbourne 48. Ufuk Taner, University of Melbourne 49. Jeanine Leane 50. Isabella Raco, RMIT 51. Dr Jordana Silverstein, University of Melbourne 52. Sarah Cupler, University of Melbourne 53. Ratu Ayu Asih Kusuma Putri, Melbourne Law School, University of Melbourne 54. Sahiba Maqbool, La Trobe University 55. Dr Johanna Commins, Melbourne Law School, University of Melbourne 56. Dr Elliot Dolan-Evans, Monash University 57. Harmonie Cribbes, Refugee Legal 58. Tanvee Nandan, University of Melbourne 59. Apoorva Sharma, La Trobe University 60. Sanam Amin, Melbourne Law School 61. Anna Saunders, University College London 62. Amireh Fakhouri, University of Melbourne 63. Viva Swords, Lawyer 64. Danish Sheikh, La Trobe University 65. Janelle Koh, University of Melbourne 66. Leila Kouatly, Australian National University 67. Dr Burcu Cevik-Compiegne, The Australian National University 68. Rita Jabri Markwell, Birchgrove Legal 69. Amina Youssef Immi, House Legal 70. Sarah Aljassim, Solicitor 71. Bilal Rauf, Barrister 72. Akin Ozyigit, TELUS Health 73. Majed Kheir (Jnr), Kheir Lawyers 74. Zaid Khan, Barrister 75. Ben Fogarty, Barrister 76. Roba Rayan, Justice 77. Fia Hamid-Walker, Melbourne Law School 78. Faiza Rahman, University of Melbourne 79. Dr Laura Bedford, University of Melbourne 80. Ameena, University of Technology Sydney 81. Associate Professor Joanna Kyriakakis, Monash University 82. Greg Barns SC, Former National President Australian Lawyers Alliance 83. Benedict Coyne, Barrister-at-Law 84. Hanan Sahmoud, University of Melbourne 85. Wael Skaf, District Legal 86. R. Bulli, Sydney & Family Criminal Defence Lawyers 87. Nagham, Lawyer 88. Enis Erdem, Criminal Defence Lawyer 89. Hannah Gordon, University of Melbourne 90. Caitlin Murphy, Melbourne Law School 91. Samiya Malik, University of South Australia 92. Laura Griffin, La Trobe University Law School 93. Dr. Lina Koleilat, Australian National University 94. Maria Elander, La Trobe University 95. Dr. Adil Hasan Khan, Melbourne Law School 96. Ihab Shalbak, University of Sydney 97. Nesam McMillan, University of Melbourne 98. Simon Miller, General Counsel 99. Cristy Clark, University of Canberra 100. Shaun McVeigh, Melbourne Law School 101. Dirk Moses, University of Sydney 102. Dr Balawyn Jones, La Trobe University 103. Dr Martin Cark, La Trobe Law School 104. David Mejia-Canales, Human rights lawyers 105. Monique Hurley, Human rights lawyer 106. Nashy Universe, RMIT University 107. Cait Storr, University of Melbourne 108. Cassandra Seery, Melbourne Law School 109. James Parker, Melbourne Law School 110. Roanna Mcclelland, University of Melbourne 111. Nikolai Haddad, Lawyer 112. Dr Vicki Sentas, University of New South Wales 113. Daniel Joyce, UNSW Sydney 114. Dr Stacey Henderson, Flinders University 115. Rohan Bilimoria, Law Ninjas 116. Aman, University of New South Wales 117. Paul Czarnota, Barrister 118. Ashleigh Buckett, Lawyer 119. Amal Naser, Lawyer 120. Saika Sabir, Melbourne law school 121. Caitlin Biddolph, University of Technology Sydney (UTS) 122. Kate Jama, University of Melbourne 123. Saika Sabir, Melbourne Law School 124. Dr Daniel McLoughlin, University of New South Wales 125. Katyayani Sinha, Melbourne Law School 126. Maria Bhatti, Western Sydney University 127. Michael Swanson, Barrister 128. Niall Connolly, Catherine Henry Lawyers 129. A/Prof Tanja Dreher, UNSW 130. Dr Dorothea Anthony, University of Wollongong 131. John Sebastian, University of Melbourne 132. Tricia Dearborn, Writer/Editor 133. Dr Erin O’Donnell, University of Melbourne 134. Dr Janice Sim, Griffith School of Criminology and Criminal Justice 135. Kellie Tranter, Lawyer 136. Professor Shiri Krebs, Deakin University 137. Shohini Sengupta, University of New South Wales 138. Emeritus Professor David Dixon, UNSW Law & Justice 139. Ben Golder, UNSW 140. Holly Cullen, University of Western Australia & Deakin University 141. Associate Professor Marc de Leeuw, UNSW LAW 142. Luke McNamara, UNSW Law & Justice 143. Louise Chappell, UNSW Faculty of Law and Justice 144. Louise Page 145. Dr Astrid Lorange, UNSW 146. Amelia Thorpe, UNSW 147. Kelly Tudhope, Lawyer 148. KZA Parker, Independent legal scholar 149. Dr Juliette McIntyre, University of South Australia 150. Andy Kaladelfos, University of New South Wales 151. Ehab Afiouny,, Lawyer 152. Cevdet Basiacik, Lawyer, First Light Lawyers 153. Dylan Lino, Universoty of Queensland 154. Rawan Arraf, Executive Director and Principal Lawyer, Australian Centre for International Justice 155. Amra Lee, ANU 156. Dr Sahar Ghumkhor, University of Melbourne 157. Omar Shabaneh, Senior Lawyer, University of Tasmania 158. Shifrah Blustein, Lawyer 159. Maureen Doyle, Retired 160. Lisa Radford, VCA, University of Melbourne 161. Dr Susan Reid, University of Sydney 162. Peter Duncan, Attorney General in the 1970s Dunstan Labor Government; Minister in the Hawke and Keating Labor Governments 163. Sandra Wendlandt, Barrister 164. Rabea Khan, Barrister 165. Rain Jago Ratajczak, Lawyer and Genocide Scholar 166. Eleanor Rhines, Retired 167. Nilufer Okur, Associate Solicitor 168. Alex Fleck, PhD Candidate at UNSW 169. Claire Howell, Barrister 170. Andrew Zhu, University of Melbourne 171. Mary Cotter 172. Megan Beatrice, RMIT University International Legal Scholars Against Genocide We acknowledge that we live and work on stolen lands of Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander people and respect that sovereignty of those lands was never ceded. We pay respects to Elders, past and present, and recognise the violence of ongoing genocide in this country. More by International Legal Scholars Against Genocide › Overland is a not-for-profit magazine with a proud history of supporting writers, and publishing ideas and voices often excluded from other places. If you like this piece, or support Overland’s work in general, please subscribe or donate. 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