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Gaza Genocide - Who Called It

“If you are neutral in situations of injustice, you have chosen the side of the oppressor. If an elephant has its foot on the tail of a mouse and you say that you are neutral, the mouse will not appreciate your neutrality.”
— Desmond Tutu

Introduction

Naming Israel’s actions in Gaza as genocide is not inflammatory rhetoric; it is the accurate application of international law to overwhelming evidence. Under the 1948 Genocide Convention, recognizing genocide is not optional — it invokes binding obligations on states to prevent and to punish. To look at Gaza today and still refuse to call it genocide is to side with the oppressor.

Leaked directives from media outlets and cautious formulations from institutions like the United Nations reveal a deliberate avoidance of the word “genocide.” But words matter: genocide is a crime under international law, not a metaphor. To deny it when the threshold has been met is to enable it. As Tutu warned, neutrality in the face of grave injustice is complicity.

This essay documents the declarations, legal findings, and warnings — from states, organizations, experts, and courts — that have pierced through the conspiracy of silence, naming Gaza’s agony for what it is.

Explicit Declarations of Genocide

Media and Institutional Avoidance of “Genocide”

This avoidance — in both media and international institutions — illustrates the essay’s core claim: neutrality is complicity, silence is denial.

States’ Duty to Act

The Genocide Convention (1948) and the ICJ’s Bosnia ruling (2007) are unambiguous: once a state becomes aware of a serious risk of genocide, it has a legal duty to act to prevent it. This duty is not symbolic or rhetorical — it requires concrete measures.

States must deploy every means reasonably available to influence the perpetrator and halt the genocide. This includes: - Summoning or expelling ambassadors - Cutting arms transfers - Imposing economic and diplomatic sanctions - Pursuing international arrest warrants - And, if necessary, considering collective military intervention under Chapter VII of the UN Charter

The obligation is one of both conduct and result: gestures are not enough. Inaction is complicity.

As Mario Savio declared in 1964:

“There’s a time when the operation of the machine becomes so odious, makes you so sick at heart, that you can’t take part. You can’t even passively take part. And you’ve got to put your bodies upon the gears and upon the wheels, upon the levers, upon all the apparatus, and you’ve got to make it stop. And you’ve got to indicate to the people who run it, to the people who own it, that unless you’re free, the machine will be prevented from working at all.”

The machinery of genocide grinds on in Gaza. States that look away, or worse, arm the perpetrator, grease its wheels.

Closing Note

The International Court of Justice dares to pontificate about saving the planet with lofty climate rulings, yet hesitates in the face of an active, televised genocide. Gaza is pulverized into a graveyard of shattered lives, while those with the power to intervene — the states who signed the Genocide Convention — remain paralyzed by politics or complicit through support.

This is the guilt of those who armed the slaughter, silenced the truth, and shielded the perpetrator while Gaza burned.

Imagine — your people forced into tents under relentless bombardment, starving, denied medicine, watching your children die one by one, while the world’s most powerful states arm the slaughter and dare to speak of “neutrality.”

Neutrality is not neutrality. It is siding with the oppressor.

This hypocrisy deserves nothing but condemnation. History will remember not only the perpetrators of this genocide — but the accomplices.

References

  1. ICJ Provisional MeasuresInternational Court of Justice, “Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide in the Gaza Strip (South Africa v. Israel), Order of 26 January 2024.”
  2. Bosnia v. SerbiaICJ Judgment, “Case Concerning the Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (Bosnia and Herzegovina v. Serbia and Montenegro), Judgment of 26 February 2007.”
  3. Raz SegalJewish Currents, “A Textbook Case of Genocide,” October 2023.
  4. William Schabas – Various public interviews and panel statements (2024–2025).
  5. Francesca Albanese et al. – Joint letters from UN experts to Member States, 2024.
  6. New York Times Memo – Leaked editorial guidance, April 2024 (via The Intercept).
  7. OIC Statement – “OIC Extraordinary Islamic Summit Declaration on Gaza,” December 2023.
  8. ECCHR Declaration – ECCHR Press Release, December 2024.
  9. Amnesty International Germany – Statement on starvation as genocide, July 29, 2025.
  10. Medico International – Statement on Gaza destruction, July 29, 2025.
  11. UN Special Committee Report – Annual Report, November 2024.
  12. Statements by Global South States – ICJ Oral Hearings, 2024–2025.
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