On 11 May 2022, beloved Jerusalemite Palestinian journalist Shireen Abu Akleh was assassinated in Jenin by an Israeli Occupation Forces (IOF) sniper.
Shireen, wearing a press bulletproof vest and a protective helmet, was in Jenin to report the most recent IOF raid when she was shot in the head, underneath her helmet. During her funeral processions, IOF attacked the pallbearers carrying her coffin and the Palestinian mourners honouring her life and martyrdom.
Following Shireenâs death, calls for accountability and justice flooded the internet. Among those calls were demands for an investigation by Israeli courts, American courts (given that Shireen also carried American citizenship), the United Nations (UN), and the International Criminal Court (ICC).
According to so-called international law, killing journalists is illegal. In 1997, UNESCO passed titled âProtection of Journalists against Violenceâ. The UN continuously condemns the killing of journalists worldwide and for state-sanctioned âjusticeâ.
In 2015, Palestine joined as a member of the ICC, meaning that the ICC technically has legal jurisdiction over the region and is able to carry out judicial investigations and enact âaccountabilityâ.
But when has âinternationalâ law ever protected the Palestinian right to a liberated life, or any liberation struggle of the Global South from colonialism and Western hegemony?
After the Second World War, the UN was established along with the definition of âwar crimesâ to seek accountability for the millions killed, dispossessed, and displaced during the Holocaust and, presumably, to ensure such an atrocity never happens again.
The Nuremberg Trials were concluded with the and conviction of 161 individuals, including 37 who were sentenced to death. Other Nazis were repatriated to the United States, employed at or the , or even returned to their jobs in the Western bloc of Europe within a few years. , perhaps even more fine tuned and sophisticated than it was during Hitlerâs era.
The international bodies positioned as the arbiters of justice and guardians of human rights, by design, fail to address the systemic material realities and injustices created by imperialism because they were created by and for Western powers protecting their vision of the world order.
The UN, ICC, and other international agencies installed by and for the Global North cannot deliver true accountability and justice for colonised peoples seeking liberation, because that entails dismantling their raison dâĂȘtre, Western hegemony, once and for all.
The United States, in particular, invokes international law only when convenient. For example, it spearheaded the Nuremberg then hiring and rehabilitating Nazi officials, that educated, armed, and trained the âIslamic jihadâ then launched the War on Terror, and continues to bankroll the Zionist project while concluding that the IOF was âlikely responsibleâ for Shireen Abu Aklehâs murder.
When the ICC does contradict US interests, like when an investigation into American crimes in Afghanistan was , US state actors deem the court an âunaccountable political institution, masquerading as a legal body.â But when the ICC issues an arrest warrant for Putin, however, the decision is â.â
At the UN, the US its Security Council veto power to unilaterally block any attempt to recognise Palestiniansâ mere human rights or hold Israel accountable for its human rights abuses.
Even if the UNSC were to suggest meaningful âjusticeâ and âaccountabilityâ on behalf of Palestinians, the US imperialist hegemon ensures the burial of these resolutions in an endless cycle of vetoes overriding majority votes, while continuing to fund the IOF and providing weapons they use to kill Shireen Abu Akleh and all Palestinian martyrs.
Shireen Abu Akleh is not the only example. Omar Abdulmajeed Assad, the 80-year-old Palestinian man who was killed by IOF during his arrest in 2022, was also an American citizen, but even with a US passport, they were both Palestinians whose existence posed a direct threat to the interests of the imperial core.
Even Rachel Corrie, a non-Palestinian who was killed by a bulldozer in 2003 for defending a Palestinian home from demolition by the IOF, has never seen for her assassination.
Vague demands for accountability from liberal human rights organisations and imperialist states that maintain the ongoing Nakba only leave space for opportunistic gestures, like the USâs âinconclusiveâ investigation of Shireen Abu Aklehâs assassination or the IOFâs recent horrific âapologyâ.
Palestinians have known for years that justice for the occupation and the ethnic cleansing of Palestinian people cannot be delivered by Western bureaucracies or meaningless apologies.
When thinking of justice, the focus should instead be shifted to Palestinians on the ground resisting ongoing genocide on a daily basis, from prisoners detained in Israeli jails, to Gazans enduring and surviving an air, land, and sea blockade and brutal airstrikes, to the youth-led armed struggle.
Shireen Abu Akleh deserves accountability because she is a Palestinian martyr who was murdered on occupied Palestinian land as a result of Israeli state-sanctioned snipers, not because she happens to be an American citizen, or because Resolution 29 condemns the killing of journalists.
Like all Palestinian martyrs, Shireen Abu Aklehâs life was stolen by a US-funded settler-colonial ethnostate as she fought for the freedom of her people and land.
Real accountability entails liberation from Zionist settler-colonialism and genocide, not a so-called third-party âneutralâ investigation, a UN resolution, , or an ICC indictment.
Justice can only be achieved by the Palestinian people, whose steadfast struggle for liberation has been ongoing for over 75 years.
Tara Alami is a Palestinian writer and organiser from occupied Jerusalem and occupied Yafa. She is based in TiohtiĂ :ke (Montreal).
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