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Brazil has officially joined South Africa’s genocide case against Israel at the International Court of Justice (ICJ), becoming the latest country to accuse Tel Aviv of violating the 1948 Genocide Convention in its war on Gaza.
Invoking Article 63 of the ICJ statute, Brazil submitted a declaration of intervention, affirming that Israel’s actions — including mass civilian killings, destruction of infrastructure, and forced displacement — constitute acts of genocide. Brazil now joins Spain, Ireland, Mexico, Turkiye and others backing South Africa’s case, filed in December 2023. This legal intervention follows a UN report which concluded that Israel’s conduct meets four of the five criteria for genocide under international law. The report cited deliberate starvation, targeted civilian attacks, and statements by Israeli leaders as evidence of genocidal intent. Over 65,000 Palestinians, mostly women and children, have reportedly been killed since the war began.
While the ICJ issued an interim order in January 2024 requiring Israel to prevent further atrocities and allow aid access, Israel has continued its offensive, drawing sharp global rebuke. Despite increasing international condemnation, the United States remains Israel’s staunchest ally, dismissing the ICJ case and imposing sanctions on the International Criminal Court after it issued arrest warrants for Israeli leaders. Brazil’s move signals a deepening diplomatic rift and a shift in global consensus. As Israel’s isolation grows, comparisons to apartheid-era South Africa are becoming harder to ignore, with calls for sanctions, boycotts, and diplomatic accountability growing louder.
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