UN probe terms Israeli attacks on reproductive centres ‘genocidal’

Published March 14, 2025
PALESTINIANS uncover corpses buried in the grounds of Al Shifa hospital in Gaza City, on Thursday.— AFP
PALESTINIANS uncover corpses buried in the grounds of Al Shifa hospital in Gaza City, on Thursday.— AFP

GENEVA: A United Nations investigation concluded on Thursday that Israel carried out “genocidal” acts in Gaza through the systematic destruction of sexual and reproductive healthcare facilities.

The UN Commission of Inquiry said Israel had “intentionally attacked and destroyed” the Palestinian territory’s main fertility centre, and had simultaneously imposed a siege and blocked aid including medication for ensuring safe pregnancies, deliveries and neonatal care.

“Israel categorically rejects the unfounded allegations,” its mission in Geneva said in a statement.

The commission found that Israeli authorities “have destroyed in part the reproductive capacity of Palestinians in Gaza as a group through the systematic destruction of sexual and reproductive healthcare”, it said in a statement.

Around 4,000 embryos destroyed in strike on Al-Basma IVF Centre

It said this amounted to “two categories of genocidal acts” during Israel’s offensive in Gaza.

The United Nations’ genocide convention defines that crime as acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group. Of its five categories, the inquiry said the two implicating Israel were “deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction” and “imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group”.

“These violations have not only caused severe immediate physical and mental harm and suffering to women and girls, but irreversible long-term effects on the mental health and reproductive and fertility prospects of Palestinians as a group,” the commission’s chair Navi Pillay said in a statement.

The three-person Independent International Commission of Inquiry was established by the UN Human Rights Council in May 2021 to investigate alleged international law violations in Israel and the Palestinian territories.

Pillay, a former UN rights chief, served as a judge on the International Criminal Court and presided over the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda.

Israel accused the commission of advancing a “predetermined and biased political agenda… in a shameless attempt to incriminate the Israel Defence Forces”.

Destruction of IVF clinic

The report said maternity hospitals and wards had been systematically destroyed in Gaza, along with the Al-Basma IVF Centre, the territory’s main in-vitro fertility clinic.

It said Al-Basma was shelled in December 2023, reportedly destroying around 4,000 embryos at a clinic that served 2,000 to 3,000 patients a month.

The commission found that the Israeli Security Forces intentionally attacked and destroyed the clinic, including all the reproductive material stored for the future conception of Palestinians.

The commission found no credible evidence that the building was used for military purposes. It concluded that the destruction “was a measure intended to prevent births among Palestinians in Gaza, which is a genocidal act”.

Furthermore, the report said the wider harm to pregnant, lactating and new mothers in Gaza was on an “unprecedented scale”, with an irreversible impact on the reproductive prospects of Gazans.

Such underlying acts “amount to crimes against humanity” and deliberately trying to destroy the Palestinians as a group, the commission concluded.

‘Extermination’

The report came after the commission conducted public hearings in Geneva on Tuesday and Wednesday, hearing from victims and witnesses of sexual violence.

It concluded that Israel had targeted civilian women and girls directly, “acts that constitute the crime against humanity of murder and the war crime of wilful killing”.

Women and girls have also died from complications related to pregnancy and childbirth due to the conditions imposed by the Israeli authorities impacting access to reproductive health care, “acts that amount to the crime against humanity of extermination”, it added.

The commission added that forced public stripping and nudity, sexual harassment including threats of rape, as well as sexual assault, comprise part of the Israeli Security Forces’ “standard operating procedures” toward Palestinians.

Published in Dawn, March 14th, 2025

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