As the International Court of Justice (ICJ) heard South Africa’s case of Israel's alleged genocide, could the court address women’s rights in Afghanistan?
International attention has focused in recent weeks on the International Court of Justice, as the UN's highest judicial body heard South Africa’s case alleging that Israel is violating the 1948 Genocide Convention in Gaza. One group looking on with great interest is Afghan women, both inside the cou...
The ICJ is mainly responsible for settling disputes between states over matters of international law. Some of its recent cases have concerned human rights. In November 2019, Gambia brought a case under the Genocide Convention against Myanmar regarding alleged genocide against ethnic Rohingya. In June 2023, the Netherlands and Canada filed a case against Syria alleging it is violating the UN Convention Against Torture.
Many governments around the world have denounced the Taliban’s full-scale attack on the rights of women and girls. "While the International Criminal Court is investigating Taliban atrocity crimes, the ICJ offers governments that have expressed their solidarity with Afghan women another practical way to put Taliban abuses under judicial scrutiny," Human Rights Watch says.
It'll be as useless as the Israeli ruling. The ICC is the court people need to get these in front of, the ICJ has no enforcement mechanism and isn't binding.