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בית הקר, רח' התע" ש10 רמת ג, 52512 Beit Hakeren, 10 Hata'as St. Ramat Gan 52512, Israel www.israellawcenter.org _______ __________________________________ _____________________________________________________ ________________________ _____________________________ טל: 97237514175 Tel: פקס: 97237514174 Fax: 2125910073 Tel (US): June 22, 2015 Herman von Hebel, Registrar International Criminal Court Maanweg 174, Den Haag 2516 AB The Netherlands Dear Registrar, Re: Palestine / ICC I write to you on behalf of "Shurat HaDin", an Israeli non-governmental organization, whose vision and activities include, inter alia, achieving justice and compensation for terror victims from terrorist organizations, their sponsors, and the financial institutions that aid and abet their criminal activities. ("the Applicant"). 1 For reasons which will be set out hereinafter, the Applicant requests that you retroactively revoke your decision to receive the purported declaration made by the so- called “State of Palestine” pursuant to Article 12(3) of the Rome Statute ("the Declaration") and refrain from accepting any further referrals from the same entity whether under article 12(3) or Article 14. Relevant Chronology On 5 August 2014, at the height of armed conflict which broke out between Israel and the Hamas organization, the Prosecutor – Ms. Fatou Bensouda - received the official in the Palestinian Authority dealing with foreign affairs – Riad al-Malki and clarified for him “the different mechanisms for a State to accept the jurisdiction of the ICC”. Subsequent to this meeting Ms. Bensouda gave a spontaneous and detailed comment to the Guardian Newspaper which she titled “The Public deserves to know the truth about the ICC’s jurisdiction over Palestine”. Among other things, the Prosecutor opined as follows: 1 http://israellawcenter.org/

Letter to ICC Registrar

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Shurat HaDin has requested that the ICC retroactively revoke its decision to receive the purported declaration made by the “State of Palestine” pursuant to Article 12(3) of the Rome Statute ("theDeclaration") and to refrain from accepting any further referrals from the same entity.

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  • , '" 10 ,52512

    Beit Hakeren, 10 Hata'as St. Ramat Gan 52512, Israel

    www.israellawcenter.org ___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

    :97237514175 Tel: :97237514174 Fax:

    2125910073 Tel (US):

    June 22, 2015 Herman von Hebel, Registrar International Criminal Court Maanweg 174, Den Haag 2516 AB The Netherlands Dear Registrar,

    Re: Palestine / ICC

    I write to you on behalf of "Shurat HaDin", an Israeli non-governmental

    organization, whose vision and activities include, inter alia, achieving justice and compensation for terror victims from terrorist organizations, their sponsors, and the financial institutions that aid and abet their criminal activities. ("the Applicant").1

    For reasons which will be set out hereinafter, the Applicant requests that you

    retroactively revoke your decision to receive the purported declaration made by the so-called State of Palestine pursuant to Article 12(3) of the Rome Statute ("the Declaration") and refrain from accepting any further referrals from the same entity whether under article 12(3) or Article 14.

    Relevant Chronology

    On 5 August 2014, at the height of armed conflict which broke out between Israel and the Hamas organization, the Prosecutor Ms. Fatou Bensouda - received the official in the Palestinian Authority dealing with foreign affairs Riad al-Malki and clarified for him the different mechanisms for a State to accept the jurisdiction of the ICC.

    Subsequent to this meeting Ms. Bensouda gave a spontaneous and detailed comment to the Guardian Newspaper which she titled The Public deserves to know the truth about the ICCs jurisdiction over Palestine. Among other things, the Prosecutor opined as follows:

    1 http://israellawcenter.org/

  • - 2 -

    The Palestinian Authority sought to accept the jurisdiction of the ICC in 2009. My office carefully considered all of the legal arguments put forth and concluded in April 2012, after three years of thorough analysis and public consultations, that Palestines status at the UN as observer entity was crucial since entry into the Rome statute system is through the UN secretary general, who acts as treaty depositary. Palestines status at the UN at that time meant it could not sign up to the Rome statute. The former ICC prosecutor concluded that as Palestine could not join the statute, it could also not lodge an article 12-3 declaration bringing itself under the ambit of the treaty, as it had sought to do.

    In November 2012, Palestines status was upgraded by the UN general assembly to non-member observer state through the adoption of resolution 67/19. My office examined the legal implications of this development and concluded that while this change did not retroactively validate the previously invalid 2009 declaration, Palestine could now join the Rome statute.[emphasis added].

    That Palestine has signed various other international treaties since obtaining this observer state status confirms the correctness of this position.2

    On 1 January 2015, Mohammed Abbas referring to himself as the President of the State of Palestine - deposited with your office a declaration purportedly pursuant to article 12(3) of the Rome Statute (the Declaration).3 Your office accepted this document without reservation and two weeks later, on 16 January 2015, the Prosecutor announced that she was opening a preliminary investigation. On 1 April 2015, having deposited its documents of ratification with the Secretary General of the United Nations on 2 January 2015, Palestine was welcomed as the 123rd State Party to the Rome Statute.4 Statutory Framework

    Article 12 of the Statute states as follows:

    Preconditions to the exercise of jurisdiction

    2 http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/aug/29/icc-gaza-hague-court-

    investigate-war-crimes-palestine 3 http://www.icc-cpi.int/iccdocs/PIDS/press/Palestine_A_12-3.pdf 4 http://www.icc-

    cpi.int/en_menus/icc/press%20and%20media/press%20releases/Pages/pr1103.aspx

  • - 3 -

    1. A State which becomes a Party to this Statute thereby accepts the jurisdiction of the Court with respect to the crimes referred to in article 5. 2. In the case of article 13, paragraph (a) or (c), the Court may exercise its jurisdiction if one or more of the following States are Parties to this Statute or have accepted the jurisdiction of the Court in accordance with paragraph 3: (a) The State on the territory of which the conduct in question occurred or, if the crime was committed on board a vessel or aircraft, the State of registration of that vessel or aircraft; (b) The State of which the person accused of the crime is a national. 3. If the acceptance of a State which is not a Party to this Statute is required under paragraph 2, that State may, by declaration lodged with the Registrar, accept the exercise of jurisdiction by the Court with respect to the crime in question. The accepting State shall cooperate with the Court without any delay or exception in accordance with Part 9.

    Rule 44 of the Rules of Procedure and Evidence states as follows:

    Declaration provided for in article 12, paragraph 3: 1. The Registrar, at the request of the Prosecutor, may inquire of a State that is not a Party to the Statute or that has become a Party to the Statute after its entry into force, on a confidential basis, whether it intends to make the declaration provided for in article 12, paragraph 3. 2. When a State lodges, or declares to the Registrar its intent to lodge, a declaration with the Registrar pursuant to article 12, paragraph 3, or when the Registrar acts pursuant to sub-rule 1, the Registrar shall inform the State concerned that the declaration under article 12, paragraph 3, has as a consequence the acceptance of jurisdiction with respect to the crimes referred to in article 5 of relevance to the situation and the provisions of Part 9, and any rules thereunder concerning States Parties, shall apply.

    The issue central to this application is whether the State of Palestine the existence of which the Applicant denies - has settled territory over which it may exercise jurisdiction or effective control for the discrete purpose of article 12(2)(a) of the Rome Statute. The boundaries of Palestine are still subject to dispute even among Palestinian leaders who continue to debate the question whether to seek recognition of a State within boundaries resulting from the 1967 Arab-Israeli conflict or whether to petition for more. Yet even if there was consensus to declare a State of Palestine within 1967 borders, this would not entitle the Palestinian Authority in Ramallah to

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    refer a situation, as it did, in territory over which its own judicial apparatus has no effective control nor capacity to effect cooperation pursuant to Part IX of the Rome Statute such as those parts of Jerusalem subject to the sovereign authority of the State of Israel. The present article 12(3) declaration and the previous one submitted in 2009 jointly constitute a gross breach of undertakings given by the Palestinian Authority itself in the context of the Oslo Accords whereby it agreed that Israel would have exclusive jurisdiction over all criminal offences committed by Israeli citizens in Gaza. The article 12(3) referrals also unilaterally frustrate the spirit of the Oslo Accords the purpose of which was to negotiate the establishment of a future Palestinian State. It was and still is a matter for your discretion and your discretion alone whether to receive a referral under article 12(3). Support for the argument that the Registrar enjoys administrative and discretionary primacy over the Office of the Prosecutor in this matter is to be found in Rule 44(1) of the Rules of Procedure and Evidence. This latter provision grants the Registrar the discretionary power to act as a conduit for a confidential inquiry by the Prosecutor as to whether a State Party intends to make a declaration pursuant to Article 12(3). The language of this rule, which would otherwise be superfluous, infers that only the Registrar and not the Prosecutor is entitled to interact with a State Party for the purpose of receiving a declaration pursuant to article 12(3) and may refuse to do so. In the present instance, it was the Prosecutor who unilaterally decided that Palestine could now join the Rome Statute and you accepted this erroneous conclusion by receiving the Declaration - without reservation and before Palestine was formally admitted to the Court on 1 April 2015. As mentioned above the Declaration is defective because it purports to empower the Prosecutor to initiate a preliminary investigation into crimes committed in the nebulous geographical spatial entity known as the occupied Palestinian territory, including East Jerusalem.5 The Applicant believes that you should have been aware that Mohammed Abbas has no power whatsoever to facilitate the essential modes of cooperation envisaged in Part 9 of the Rome Statute most particularly in East Jerusalem which is under the complete sovereign control of Israel. The fact that Ms. Bensouda reached the conclusion that the Palestinian Authority possessed all the requirements for State Party membership prior to its ratification of the Rome Statute pre-empted a decision on an issue which your predecessor Ms. Silvia Arbia - believed was subject to judicial determination;6 namely, the applicability of

    5 http://www.icc-cpi.int/iccdocs/PIDS/press/Palestine_A_12-3.pdf. 6http://www.icc-cpi.int/NR/rdonlyres/74EEE201-0FED-4481-95D4-

    C8071087102C/279778/20090123404SALASS2.pdf;

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    article 12(3) to the Declaration. Ms. Bensoudas erroneous conclusion should not have influenced the exercise of your discretion and you should have refused to receive the Declaration on account of its defective nature. The Applicant states its firm view that the declaratory process under article 12(3) was intended to provide sovereign non-State Parties with the opportunity to refer crimes committed by their nationals or on their national territory. Article 12(3) must, it is submitted, be read in conformity with article 34 of the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties according to which signatory parties to a convention cannot create obligations or rights for a third party state and its citizens (such as Israel) without the latters consent. Conclusion

    By performing her "preliminary examination"7 of the "Situation in Palestine", the Prosecutor is currently acting ultra vires. The Applicant requests that you retroactively revoke your receipt of the Declaration rendering, by implication, its subsequent communication to the Office of the Prosecutor null and void. Immediate action on your part is imperative in order to prevent a further Palestinian referral which, so it is rumoured, will be submitted on 25 June 2015. Immediate action on your part is also required in order to prevent the occurrence of any future similar scenario where an entity with aspirations of statehood might seek to subvert customary international law governing the attribution of sovereignty by an abuse of the declaratory process under article 12(3).

    Respectfully yours,

    Nitsana Darshan-Leitner, Esq Shurat HaDin-Israel Law Center, President

    Silvana Arbia to Ali Khashan, 2009/404/SA/LASS, 23 January 2009: Without prejudice to a

    judicial determination on the applicability of article 12, paragraph 3 to your correspondence, I

    wish to inform you that a declaration under article 12, paragraph 3 has the effect of the acceptance of

    jurisdiction with respect to crimes referred to in article 5 of relevance to the situation and the application

    of the provisions of Part 9 and any rules thereunder, concerning State Parties, pursuant to Rule 44 of the

    Rules of Procedure and Evidence. [emphasis added]. 7 Regulation 25(1)(c) of the Regulations of the Office of the Prosecutor.