Netanyahu’s flight to US takes a different route to evade ICC arrest warrant: Haaretz
- Netanyahu's journey to Washington followed a visit to Hungary, which defied the ICC's authority, allowing him to evade an arrest warrant.
- Netanyahu faces accusations of war crimes, including starvation and murder, as well as ongoing legal troubles related to bribery and fraud.
- Israel expanded military operations in Gaza amid international criticism, with Hamas responding by launching rockets, resulting in at least 39 deaths in Gaza.
- Netanyahu's trips abroad, including to the U.S., have been criticized as efforts to divert attention from his domestic legal issues.
50 Articles
50 Articles
Should France have stopped Benyamin Netanyahu when he flew over France to the United States?
As a signatory to the Rome Statute, France had an obligation to cooperate with the International Criminal Court, which it had failed to do by letting the Israeli Prime Minister fly over its airspace to Washington.
The line of the new Italian ambassador to The Hague promotes 'national interests': ambiguous statements
In the last week, there have been two interesting episodes related to the International Criminal Court in The Hague. The first, more well-known, concerns Italy, which for the third time in a few months ignored an ICC arrest warrant: Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu's plane flew over Italian airspace without consequences, as if our country had no obligation to stop it and hand it over to the Court.
Does our country have to stop Benjamin Netanyahu if he has to set foot in our territory?
Belgium has signed the Rome Statute, which is the founding treaty of the International Criminal Court. If Mr. Netanyahu was found in Belgium, for example because his plane, struck with serious damage, would have been forced to land in Zaventem, he should theoretically be referred to an investigating judge, who would issue a provisional arrest warrant, on the basis of the request for arrest from The Hague. ...
No EU country will arrest Netanyahu on ICC warrant - Belgian PM
No EU country would enforce the International Criminal Court's (ICC) arrest warrant for Israel's Benjamin Netanyahu, Belgian Prime Minister Bart De Wever has claimed. During last week's visit from the Israeli prime minister, Hungary announced its intention to withdraw from the Rome Statute, the treaty that grants authority to the ICC. The court, which depends on national jurisdictions to execute arrests, accuses Netanyahu of war crimes in the Ga…
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