Clear Conclusions: A UN Commission Finds Israel Responsible for Genocide in Gaza

UN report claims genocide in Gaza.
Image from YouTube (Video uploaded by the U.N. Human Rights Council on September 17, 2025)

Yet another blistering addition to the ghoulish accounts of cruelty regarding the ongoing actions of Israel in Gaza made its appearance on September 16. It came in the form of a report by the United Nations Independent International Commission of Inquiry on the Occupied Palestinian Territory, a lashing publication finding Israel guilty of committing genocide on the Strip. Of the five elements outlined in the 1948 Genocide Convention, Israel was found guilty of four. (The state’s interest in transferring Palestinian children from one group to another is yet to show itself.)

The relevant acts outlined in the report include instances of killing, causing serious bodily or mental harm, the deliberate infliction of conditions of life calculated to bring about physical destruction, and imposing measures intended to prevent births, all conducted with the specific intent to destroy the Palestinian people as a group. “Today we witness in real time how the promise of ‘never again’ is broken and tested in the eyes of the world,” said the Commission’s chair Navi Pillay in a press conference following the report’s release.

This report finds itself in the adhesive if gruesome company of such publications as Amnesty International’s December 2024 effort, You Feel Like You are Subhuman to the August 2025 conclusions of the International Association of Genocide Scholars. The Special Rapporteur on the human rights situation in the Palestinian territories, occupied since 1967, Francesca Albanese, has also been admirably busy drumming up interest in the links between genocide and starvation. Such bountiful material has yet to convince the Israeli authorities to pause their efforts in Gaza, now culminating in the systematic destruction of Gaza City and the displacement of its population.

The Commission authors, all sound and weighty figures of international jurisprudence, also found that Israeli President Isaac Herzog, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and former Defence Minister Yoav Gallant “incited the commission of genocide and that Israeli authorities have failed to take action against them to punish this incitement.” More broadly, Israel’s political and military leaders responsible for prosecuting the war strategy “are ultimately responsible for the commission of the underlying acts of genocide by members of the Israeli security forces,” with such leaders being “agents of the State of Israel.”

The mental state for establishing genocide had been established by relevant statements made by members of the Israeli authorities. In addition to this, there was “circumstantial evidence of genocidal intent and that genocidal intent was the only reasonable inference that could be drawn from the totality of the evidence.” Israeli authorities and security forces “had and continue to have the genocidal intent to destroy, in whole or in part, the Palestinians in the Gaza Strip.”

The Commission also makes various recommendations, including the obvious one of ending the commission of genocide and Israel’s compliance with the three provisional orders of the International Court of Justice (ICJ) made in January, March and May last year; the immediate implementation of a permanent ceasefire in Gaza and conclusion of military operations in the occupied Palestinian territory that entail genocidal acts; the restoration of the United Nations aid model, unimpeded; and the investigation and punishment of acts of genocide and incitement to genocide against the Palestinians in the Strip.  

Pointed words are also reserved for the international community, among them that all Member States pull their weight in insuring the prevention of genocidal acts in the Strip, cease the transfer of arms and equipment to Israel or third parties “where there is reason to suspect their use in military operations that have involved or could involve the commission of genocide,” ensure that corporations and individuals within their territories and jurisdiction are not part of the genocidal program, and facilitate necessary investigations and prosecutive proceedings against the State of Israel and corporations and individuals regarding genocide, its facilitation and incitement.

The Commission arose in 2021, when it was established by the UN Human Rights Council to investigate alleged violations of international law in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem, and in Israel. The September report makes much of three previous reports issued by the COI, and three papers relevant to international law violations committed by all the parties to the conflict.

To have reached findings of genocidal intent is a tall order indeed. The mental threshold needed to satisfy genocidal intent is a dizzyingly high bar to meet. The ICJ, even as it considers Israel’s own actions in Gaza at the litigious prodding of South Africa, has shown itself reluctant to identify the destructive intent (dolus specialis) against an identifiable group as protected by the UN Genocide Convention. In the Bosnia v Serbia case, Serbia was not found to be responsible for the commission of genocide, but for its failure in preventing it with respect to the killings of over 7,000 Bosnian Muslims at Srebrenica in July 1995. The Court imposed a giddy standard of proof: that the pattern of acts in destroying the identifiable group should “have to be such that it could only point to the existence of such intent.” It was a standard criticised by Judge Awn Al-Khasawneh in his dissenting opinion, feeling that such acts as “population transfers” and “evidence of massive killings systematically targeting the Bosnian Muslims” evidenced obvious genocidal intent.

In 2015, the ICJ also found that neither Serbia or Croatia had committed acts of genocide against each others populations during the disintegration of Yugoslavia, despite killings and the infliction of serious bodily or mental harm to both groups by virtue of them being members of an ethnic group.

Judge Antônio Augusto Cançado Trindade, in his dissenting opinion in Croatia v Serbia, proffers a salutary observation: “perpetrators of genocide will almost always allege that they were in armed conflict, and their actions were taken ‘pursuant to an ongoing military conflict’; yet, ‘genocide may be a means for achieving military objectives just as readily as military conflict may be a means for instigating a genocidal plan.”

There is certainly much to draw upon, be it the Commission’s findings, or the excoriating report by UN Special Rapporteur Albanese. The latter tartly exposes the misuse of international humanitarian law as an instrument of Israeli advancement, making a mockery of aid to the very people the state seeks to dislocate, kill and humble.

The response from Israel is also instructive in terms of how that state fits within the law of nations, which it has sought to reinterpret with postmodern elasticity. A statement from the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs makes short work of the report as “distorted” and “false”,accusing the authors as “Hamas proxies, notorious for their antisemitic positions” and demanding the “immediate abolition of this Commission of Inquiry.” That would be all too convenient.

 

 

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About Dr Binoy Kampmark 271 Articles
Dr Binoy Kampmark is a senior lecturer in the School of Global, Urban and Social Studies, RMIT University. He was a Commonwealth Scholar at Selwyn College, University of Cambridge. He is a contributing editor to CounterPunch and can be followed on Twitter at @bkampmark.

9 Comments

  1. It’s clear Albanese is defying international law in his continued support of Israel. What are we to do about it? Shamefully, Wong has said she’ll wait for a more “definitive” decision, which might be up to 2 years… They spit in our faces.

  2. Deliberate murder and theft as a policy is extreme horrible crime, and to be be driven by baseless superstition is sickening. I declare that there is no god, no proof, no evidence, no appearance, no FBI or KGB files, no DNA, no special elite, no chosen race, no promised land, no paper proof to support land, property, citizenship going back, no NOTHING to justify this irrational idiotic, criminal campaign. Crimes within superstition are cancerous to life, civilisation, peace, progress.

  3. to quote from above: “..Of the five elements outlined in the 1948 Genocide Convention, Israel was found guilty of four…”
    Every Australian citizen who is possessed of a sense of decency, a balanced moral compass, a critical and enquiring intellect, regardless of ethnicity, creed or cultural belief is distressed by the horrific images that confirm the UN declaration of genocide perpetrated on Palestinians by Israel. This report, together with undeniable political and community interference by agencies of the Israeli government in Australian communities make it plain that Australia has no justification in continuing to deny the malignant intent of the Zionist movement. That said, it is past the time when our Prime Minister should expel the Israeli Ambassador and cease diplomatic relations until such time as Israel conforms with UN resolutions regarding the sovereign rights of Palestinians. Boycott, divestment and sanctions of Israeli trade, commerce and cultural exchange is now an appropriate principle to enact. It is evident that Israel prefers to exist outside internationally accepted codes for humanitarian co-existence so it is appropriate that the government of Israel be isolated politically, militarily, economically and culturally until such time the citizens of Israel adjust their political structures and accept and comply with World standareds.

  4. Michaelia Cash, Shadow Minister for Foreign Affairs has said that Israel is entitled to self defence even if this means the complete obliteration of Gaza and the genocide of the Palestinian people.

    Jen, Australia UK, Canada and others will next week at the UN recognise Gaza and the West Bank and the Palestinian peoples as a sovereign nation which means, provided the General Assembly adopt that proposition, that the UN can finally adopt sanctions to require the Israeli Army to withdraw its troops and allow aid groups (and journalists) into Gaza to commence the work of rebuilding; subject always to the Security Council not applying a veto (i.e. probably from the US).

    Jen, I believe that Australia is trying to stick to the rule of international law and, at this time, I cannot see much more that Albanese and Wong can do.

  5. Albanese Labor has declared war on humanity, aninternational laws and conventions as it continues its immoral stand with Zionist Israel. Albanese Labor stands condemned for its complicity in Zionist Israel’s genocidal apartheid.

  6. Last night (Thursday US time) the United Nations Security Council considered a resolution calling for:

    “an immediate, unconditional and permanent ceasefire in Gaza respected by all parties, the release of all captives held by Hamas and other groups, and a lifting of restrictions on humanitarian aid into Gaza.”

    The Resolution was drafted by the council’s 10 elected members and was approved by 14 of the 15 members of the council. The Resolution noted the “catastrophic” humanitarian situation in Gaza after nearly two years of war in the Gaza Strip, which has killed at least 65,141 people.

    The United States vetoed the Resolution so it will not now pass and yet another opportunity to bring this war to a conclusion has been missed by an intransigent and pig-headed US administration.

    Maybe I’m being cynical but I can’t help linking this latest refusal to call an end to the war with comments on Wednesday by Bezalel Smotrich, Israel’s far-right finance minister, who described Gaza as a “real-estate bonanza”, according to local Hebrew media reports. He went on to say that he was discussing with the Trump administration how to share the proceeds.

    Smotrich, speaking at an urban renewal conference in Tel Aviv, said a “business plan” has been submitted to US President Donald Trump. Smotrich also said “the demolition, the first stage in [Gaza City’s] renewal, we have already done. Now we just need to build.”

  7. Julian

    I see, Smotrich admits to being ‘a far-right person, a homophobe, racist, fascist’ and those are his good qualities!

    Weighty matters on the Palestine situation to be discussed at the United Nations next week. In the meantime Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas has been blocked from attending the UN General Assembly session , after he and 80 other Palestinian officials had their visas revoked by the US State Department.

    As a comfort to those of us who still believe in democracy, the rule of law and free speech ‘the United Nations General Assembly voted overwhelmingly to allow Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas to address next week’s world leaders’ debate via video, after the U.S. denied him a visa to travel to New York. With 145 nations in favour, 5 against, and 6 abstentions’.

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