South Africa's genocide case is a diplomatic win, whatever the verdict
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[January 26, 2024]
By Tim Cocks
JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) - South Africa's genocide case against Israel may
have ruffled feathers in the capitals of vital Western trading partners,
but it has boosted the country's standing as a champion of the
downtrodden Global South.
That gamble is likely to pay off, thanks to renewed rivalry for Africa's
minerals and U.N. votes between the West, China and Russia, turbocharged
by Russia's war on Ukraine.
Regardless of what the International Court of Justice (ICJ) rules on
Friday, the case is clearly embarrassing for Israel and its allies in
Washington, Brussels and London.
And grumble they might, but they can scarcely afford to alienate
Africa's industrial and diplomatic heavyweight -- especially with the
United States' main superpower rival, China, wooing the continent with
money, railways and tech transfers.
"If you're going to start punishing South Africa for going to the
International Court of Justice, then you're going to have to start
punishing a lot of other African countries (for supporting the
Palestinians)," Steven Friedman, director of South Africa's Centre for
the Study of Democracy, said.
"If you do that, then you might as well send (Chinese President) Xi
Jinping a letter saying 'you've won'".
Underscoring the point, on a visit to Angola on Thursday, U.S. Secretary
of State Antony Blinken said of South Africa's ICJ case, "whether or not
we have a disagreement, one particular matter doesn't take away from the
important work that we're doing together in so many other areas."
South African officials often compare their erstwhile struggle against
white minority rule to the Palestinian cause -- a comparison Israel
strongly disputes.
"POINT OF PRIDE"
South Africa projects itself as critic of a world order it sees as
mainly serving the interests of the United States and its rich-country
allies, who promote international norms they enforce on foes but often
not on friends or even on themselves.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, it was South Africa's President Cyril
Ramaphosa who denounced the rich world for hogging all the vaccines,
notes Chris Ogunmodede, analyst and editor of World Politics Review.
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Pro-Palestinian protesters gather near the International Court of
Justice (ICJ), on the day judges hear a request for emergency
measures by South Africa to order Israel to stop its military
actions in Gaza, in The Hague, Netherlands January 12, 2024.
REUTERS/Thilo Schmuelgen/File Photo
South Africa was instrumental in marketing BRICS -- the forum led by
Brazil, Russia, India, China and itself -- as an alternative to
Western hegemony, with 40 nations queuing to join last year.
"(The ICJ case) is ... another indication of the important place
South Africa seeks to occupy as (one of) the continent's leading
voices on global affairs," Ogunmodede said.
This aim will be enhanced by taking a firm stand on the Gaza war,
which has displaced some 1.9 million Palestinians, killed at least
26,000, according to Gaza officials, and inspired global outrage.
That South Africa took no such unequivocal moral stance on Russia
has raised eyebrows. Last year, the government unsuccessfully sought
a waiver from its obligation to arrest President Vladamir Putin for
alleged war crimes in Ukraine so he could attend a BRICS summit.
"(An) elementary principle of morality is that it can’t be
selective. South Africa did not do right by the Ukrainian people,"
author and columnist Ferial Haffajee wrote in the national Daily
Maverick this month, but she praised South Africa for picking a
first-rate legal team to fight the ICJ case.
South Africans are proud of the strong rule of law that emerged from
their anti-apartheid struggle, which often resolves rancorous
domestic political disputes.
"Seeing their judges on the bench of the ICJ wearing South African
scarves is like watching the Springboks (national rugby team) win
the world cup," Chris Vandome, a senior southern Africa researcher
at Chatham House, said.
"It's a point of pride."
(Reporting by Tim Cocks; Additional reporting by Anait Miridzhanian
in Johannesburg; Editing by Toby Chopra)
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