Dutch court urged to hear case over 2014 Israel Gaza strike

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The Hague, Sept 17 (AFP/APP):A Dutch court heard preliminary arguments Tuesday in a case about a deadly 2014 Israeli airstrike, in which Israeli prime ministerial candidate Benny Gantz is one of two named defendants.

A Dutch-Palestinian seeking justice for his relatives killed in the air strike, urged the court to go ahead with a trial for war crimes.

This preliminary hearing, to determine whether or not it should try the case, started as Israelis go to the polls to elect a new government — with Gantz a leading candidate for the prime minister’s post.

Gantz, 60 was the chief of general staff of the Israeli defence force at the time of the Gaza bombing as part of Operation Protective Edge, in which Ismail Zaida said six of his relatives were killed.
The second defendant is former Israeli air force chief Amir Eshel, 60.

“I am seeking justice,” Zaida told judges at The Hague’s District Court. He would not get a fair hearing before an Israeli court, he argued, because it “discriminated against Palestinians seeking accountability for war crimes”.

Zaida’s mother, three brothers, a sister-in-law, a young nephew and a friend were killed in the strike on Bureij refugee camp in Gaza on July 20, 2014.

“As a Palestinian, my client has no access to a partial and independent judge” before an Israeli court, Zaida’s lawyer Liesbeth Zegveld told the judges.

“In other words, it’s impossible for him to take his claim anywhere else,” she said.

During an emotional statement, Zaida showed pictures of his dead relatives telling the judges “much depends on the outcome of this judicial process”, which he called a “David versus Goliath” legal battle.

Zegveld argued that the case could be heard under Dutch law, which says that it has universal jurisdiction in civil cases for citizens who are unable to get justice for war crimes elsewhere.

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