World

Israel bans entry of those denying October 7 massacre or working with ICC

As Israelis prepared to receive the bodies of four hostages, the Israeli Knesset on Wednesday passed legislation barring non-citizens from entering or residing in the country if they or their affiliated organizations deny the October 7 massacre or the Holocaust, or if they support international prosecution of Israeli security personnel.

The legislation, which was approved without opposition, builds on a 2017 amendment that barred providing visas and travel permits to individuals or organizations advocating boycotts of Israel.

Proposed by Michel Buskila of the New Hope-United Right party and originally initiated by New Hope MK Zeev Elkin, the law aims to strengthen Israel’s ability to counteract what it described as “hostile elements” who “seek to harm the state.” According to the bill’s explanatory notes, existing legal measures were insufficient.

The Knesset also advanced another bill targeting cooperation with the International Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague. That proposal, submitted by Likud MK Amit Halevi, passed its preliminary reading with 25 votes in favor and 10 against.

If enacted, the law would criminalize collaboration with the ICC, making it illegal for Israeli citizens, authorities, and public entities to provide services or resources to the court. Individuals found guilty of doing so could face up to five years in prison.

The bill also seeks to prevent ICC officials and affiliates from entering Israel, owning property, or conducting economic activities in the country without special authorization. Supporters argue that the ICC poses a significant threat to Israel’s sovereignty and security personnel, reinforcing Israel’s longstanding position that it does not recognize the court’s jurisdiction.

The International Criminal Court issued unprecedented arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and former Defense Minister Yoav Gallant in November, the first time warrants have been issued against leaders from a democratic country. Both officials would be liable for arrest if they travel to countries that are party to the ICC.

The court also issued a warrant for Hamas commander Mohammed Deif. Although he was killed in an airstrike in July, Hamas never confirmed Deif’s death.

Israel is not a member of the ICC and does not recognize its jurisdiction. The ICC charter prohibits the court from prosecuting nationals of countries with independent judiciaries.

At least 1,200 people were killed, and 252 Israelis and foreigners were taken hostage in Hamas’s attacks on Israeli communities near the Gaza border on October 7. Of the 69 remaining hostages, 36 are believed to be dead.

ANI

Ani service

Recent Posts

Indian Air Force Rafales, Su-30s carrying out major Exercise “Aakraman”

By Ajit Dubey The Indian Air Force is carrying out Exercise Aakraman (Attack) over a…

13 hours ago

Indian American organisations rally against terrorism after Pahalgam tragedy

Several Indian American organisations have strongly condemned the recent terrorist attack in Jammu and Kashmir's…

13 hours ago

Pahalgam Attack: PM Modi briefs Israeli PM Netanyahu on “barbaric nature” of terrorist attack

Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Thursday spoke to the Prime Minister of Israel, Benjamin Netanyahu…

14 hours ago

Israel-India partnership advances new osteoarthritis treatment

India's Sun Pharma and Israel's Moebius Medical published new data on MM-II, a non-opioid treatment…

15 hours ago

Mukesh Ambani mourns death of innocent citizens in Pahalgam, offers free treatment for injured at Reliance foundation hospital Mumbai

Reliance Industries Chairman and Managing Director, Mukesh Ambani, joined the nation in mourning the deaths…

15 hours ago

South Korea: Chinese AI app DeepSeek illegally shared data of 1.5 million Korean users

Chinese generative AI platform DeepSeek passed on personal details of Korean users to firms in…

17 hours ago