by Yonah Jeremy Bob
Case could have implications for Israeli settlements
Ledra Palace checkpoint is pictured in the Turkish Cypriot northern part of the divided city of Nicosia, Cyprus, August 5, 2019
(photo credit: REUTERS/MURAD SEZER)
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International Criminal Court Prosecutor Fatou Bensouda said she would make a decision regarding the Turkish occupation of Northern Cyprus before her term ends on June 16.
She
made the comments on Wednesday while speaking to a virtual conference
hosted by the Institute of International and European Affairs.
Amid the ICC
debate on whether Israeli settlements should be deemed a war crime is
the question of the Turkish occupation of Northern Cyprus, which has
been almost completely ignored.
Until
now, the timeline regarding an ICC decision about Northern Cyprus has
been muddled. The issue is a rare case that deals with alleged forced
population transfer as a war crime (as opposed to “classic” war crimes
such as genocide), and the ICC’s decision could have far-reaching
implications in how it could treat Israeli settlements.
The
Palestinians asked for ICC intervention in January 2015, Bensouda
declared Israeli settlements war crimes in December 2019, and the ICC
Pre-Trial Chamber gave a green light for a full criminal war crimes
probe on February 5.
In
contrast, the first complaint by a Cypriot official, represented by
Shurat Hadin, against Turkey’s settlements in Northern Cyprus was filed
in July 2014 – half a year earlier than the claims against Israel.
It
is unclear why Bensouda moved forward sooner on the Israeli-Palestinian
situation than on Northern Cyprus, but until her statement on
Wednesday, it was unclear if she would address the situation at all.
In
fact, there had been indications that Bensouda would decide about
Northern Cyprus by the end of 2020, but this never materialized.
It
is also unclear whether she had hoped for a decision first on the
Israeli-Palestinian situation to use as legal backing for her Northern
Cyprus decision.
“For
a period of seven years, Bensouda has brazenly ignored our
communication involving Turkey’s occupation of Northern Cyprus despite
all our repeated demands and warnings,” said Shurat Hadin director
Nitsana Darshan-Leitner. “Finally, when we complained to the IOC
[International Criminal Court Independent Oversight Commission], it
forced the prosecutor’s hand to suddenly pursue the situation in
Northern Cyprus.
“It
was our intention to tie the court’s hands by creating a prerequisite
dynamic involving other territorial disputes around the world, like the
Turkish occupation. We wanted to ensure that the ICC would not be able
to deal with the Palestinian complaints against Israel without first
determining how Turkey is occupying Northern Cyprus. Let’s see the ICC
really go after Erdogan.”
Shurat
Hadin sent a letter on January 18 to the ICC’s IOC complaining about a
lack of movement on the Northern Cyprus situation, as well as on other
unrelated issues concerning the Palestinian Authority.
Bensouda does have some reasons she could give why the Cyprus case might move slower.
First,
the government of Cyprus itself has never officially referred the case.
R
ather, Shurat Hadin filed a complaint on behalf of a specific member
of the EU parliament from Cyprus, Costas Mavrides.
From
a technical perspective, this means that if Bensouda does move forward,
it would be based on her rarely used power to self-initiate a case. An
ICC prosecutor does not do this lightly, and when they do, they need
permission from the ICC judges.
But there are counter-arguments.
Unlike
the Israeli case, where the main country being probed (Israel) is not
even a member of the Rome Statute and is against referring the case,
Cyprus is a proud participating member of the Rome Statute.
If Cyprus does not refer the case to the ICC, it is likely out of fear of Turkey.
The
entire world views Turkey as illegally occupying Northern Cyprus,
following its invasion in 1974 in response to a short-lived coup by
Greek Cypriots.
The
Cypriot-Shurat Hadin complaint alleged that “the Turkish occupation is
one of the most brazen settlement enterprises in modern times.”
In
addition, out of a total of around 50,000 Turkish citizens living in
the area in 1996, the complaint said that Turkey’s aggressive policies,
including forced “displacement” of Cypriots from their homes, had gone
as far as “murder or disappearances of thousands of Greek Cypriots.”
The
bottom line from the complaint is that official and coordinated Turkish
government policies have settled more than 100,000 Turks in the area,
who now constitute around half the population.
The
communication describes the Turkish government’s systematic policy to
bolster its control over Northern Cyprus, encouraging ethnic Turkish
immigration while acting aggressively to transfer native Greek Cypriots
from the territory.
Some
experts have told The Jerusalem Post that Turkey’s invasion, occupation
and active altering of the landscape in Northern Cyprus is the true
paradigm of population transfer being a war crime.
Experts
say that Turkey has expelled large groups of Greek Cypriots without any
due process or pretension of concerns for their rights, has taken the
possessions of those expelled communities, and has not followed any of
the laws of belligerent occupation for protecting their rights.
No
neutral legal experts really debate most of these points, and there is
no UN resolution that could be interpreted as giving Turkey any rights
in Cyprus.
In
contrast, UN Resolution 242 says that Israel and the Palestinians must
resolve their border dispute through negotiations to the extent that a
majority of countries view Israeli settlements as illegal (although the
US during the Trump administration viewed them as legal).
This
is not because they think all of the West Bank must be handed to the
Palestinians, as much as they disapprove of the timing, but rather, they
do not want Israel changing facts on the ground until the dispute is
settled. But if there were to be a peace deal, they would not oppose
certain Israeli settlements to remain, as proposed under the Camp David
II Clinton parameters.
Yonah Jeremy Bob
Source: https://www.jpost.com/middle-east/icc-prosecutor-to-decide-cyprus-file-before-exit-659356
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