
The International Court of Justice. Photo: FAIR/video capture.
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The International Court of Justice. Photo: FAIR/video capture.
By John Perry – May 30, 2024
When Nicaragua accused Germany of aiding and abetting Israelâs genocide in Gaza at the International Court of Justice (ICJ) last month, readers of corporate media might have seriously wondered whether Nicaraguaâs case had any legitimacy.
The case targeted Germany as the second biggest supplier of arms to Israel, because the US, Israelâs biggest supplier, does not accept the courtâs jurisdiction on this issue. The object (as Nicaraguaâs lawyer explained) was to create a precedent with wider application: that countries must take responsibility for the consequences of their arms sales to avoid them being used in breach of international law.
Many in corporate media took a more jaundiced view. The Financial Times (4/8/24) led by telling readers, âThe authoritarian government of Nicaragua accused Germany of âfacilitating genocideâ in Gaza at the opening of a politically charged case.â The second paragraph in a New York Times article (4/8/24) cited âexpertsâ who saw it âas a cynical move by a totalitarian government to bolster its profile and distract attention from its own worsening record of repression.â The Guardian (4/9/24) qualified its comment piece by remarking that âNicaragua is hardly a poster child when it comes to respect for human rights.â
Double standards are evident here. If the US government were to do what it has failed to do so far, and condemn Israelâs genocidal violence, Western corporate media would not remind readers of US crimes against humanity, such as the Abu Ghraib tortures, extraordinary renditions, or the hundreds imprisoned without trial at GuantĂĄnamo. Itâs hard to imagine Washington would be accused of âhypocrisyâ (Guardian, 4/9/24) for calling out Israelâs crimes. Any condemnation of Israel by the US or one of its Western allies would be taken at face valueâin clear contrast to the mediaâs treatment of such action by an official enemy country like Nicaragua.
Germany âat its finestâ
Of establishment media, Spainâs El PaĂs (4/11/24) was perhaps the most vitriolic in its portrayal of Nicaragua. Its piece on the court case was headlined âThe Worst Version of Nicaragua Against the Best Version of Germany.â
âThe third international court case on the Gaza war pits a regime accused of crimes against humanity against a strong and legitimate democracy,â the piece explained. âIt may be a noble cause, but its champion couldnât be worse.â
The article, which relayed none of the evidence offered by either side, commented rather oddly that Germany was âat its finestâ arguing the case, and that its âdefense against Nicaraguaâs charges is solid and its legitimacy as a democratic state is unassailableââa comment presumably intended to contrast its legitimacy with âthe Nicaraguan dictatorship.â
In addition to its article cited above, the New York Times (4/8/24) had a report more focused on the case itself. However, it was CNN (4/9/24) and Al Jazeera (4/8/24) that stood out as covering the case on its own merits rather than being distracted by animosity toward Nicaragua.
The negative presentation in much of the media was repeated when, later in April, they headlined that Nicaraguaâs request had been ârejectedâ by the ICJ (e.g., AP, 4/30/24; NPR, 4/30/24), with the New York Times (4/30/24) again remembering to insert a derogatory comment about Nicaraguaâs action being âhypocritical.â These followup reports largely overlooked the impact the case had on Germanyâs ability to further arm Israel during its continued assault on Gaza.
Nicaraguan âNazisâ
Corporate media had been gifted their criticisms of Nicaragua by a report published at the end of February by the UN Human Rights Council. A âgroup of human rights experts on Nicaraguaâ (the âGHRENâ) had produced its second report on the country. Its first, last year, had accused Nicaraguaâs government of crimes against humanity, leading to this eyebrow-raising New York Times headline (3/2/23): âNicaraguaâs âNazisâ: Stunned Investigators Cite Hitlerâs Germany.â
The GHRENâs leader, German lawyer Jan-Michael Simon, had indeed likened the current Sandinista government to the Nazis. Times reporter Frances Robles quoted Simon:
âThe weaponizing of the justice system against political opponents in the way that is done in Nicaragua is exactly what the Nazi regime did,â Jan-Michael Simon, who led the team of UN-appointed criminal justice experts, said in an interview.
âPeople massively stripped of their nationality and being expelled out of the country: This is exactly what the Nazis did too,â he added.
Itâs quite an accusation, given that the Nazis established over 44,000 incarceration camps of various types and killed some 17 million people. Robles gave few numbers regarding the crimes Nicaragua is accused of, but did mention 40 extrajudicial killings in 2018 attributed to state and allied actors, and noted that the Ortega government had in 2023 âstripped the citizenship from 300 Nicaraguans who a judge called âtraitors to the homeland.ââ
Robles also quoted Juan SebastiĂĄn Chamorro, a member of the Nicaraguan oligarchic family who are among the Sandinista governmentâs fiercest opponents; Chamorro claimed there was evidence of âmore than 350 people who were assassinated.â Even if true, this would seem to be a serious stretch from âexactly what the Nazis did.â
Nicaragua Acts To Stop Genocide and Strengthen International Law
Like most Western reporters, Roblesâwho also wrote the recent ICJ piece for the Timesâgave no attention to the criticisms of the GHRENâs work by human rights specialists, who argued that the GHREN did not examine all the evidence made available to it and interviewed only opposition sources. For example, former UN independent expert Alfred de Zayas castigated its first report in his book The Human Rights Industry, calling it a âpolitical pamphletâ intended to destabilize Nicaraguaâs government.
Even if one takes the GHREN account at face value, the Gaza genocide is at least 100 times worse in terms of numbers of fatalities, quite apart from other horrendous elements, such as deliberate starvation, indiscriminate bombing, destruction of hospitals and much more. Itâs unclear why the accusations against Nicaragua should delegitimize the case against Germany.
Hague history
Many media reports did mention Nicaraguaâs long history of support for Palestineâwhich undermines the accusation of cynicism underlying the caseâbut few noted the Latin American countryâs history of success at the Hague. As Carlos ArgĂźello, the Nicaraguan ambassador to the Netherlands who took the lead at the ICJ, pointed out, Nicaragua has more experience at the Hague than most countries, including Germany. This began with its pioneer case against the US in 1984, when it won compensation of ÂŁ17 billion (that was never paid) for the damage done to Nicaragua by the US-funded Contra war and the mining of its ports.
One notable exception to that historical erasure came from Robles at the Times (4/8/24), who did refer to the 1984 case. But the point was clearly not to remind readers of US crimes, or to demonstrate that Nicaragua is an actor to be taken seriously in the realm of international law. The two academics she quoted both served to portray the current case as merely âcynical.â
The first, Mateo JarquĂn, Robles quoted as saying that the Sandinista government has âa long track recordâŚof using global bodies like the ICJ to carve out space for itself internationallyâto build legitimacy and resist diplomatic isolation.â Robles didnât disclose JarquĂnâs second surname, Chamorro. Like her source in the earlier article, he is a member of the family that includes several government opponents.
Robles also quoted Manuel Orozco, a former Nicaraguan working at the Washington-based Inter-American Dialogue, whose major funders include the US Agency for International Development and the International Republican Institute, notorious for their role in promoting regime change, including in Nicaragua. Orozco told Robles that âNicaragua lacks the moral and political authority to speak or advocate for human rights, much less on matters of genocide.â
âEffectively siding with Germanyâ
On April 30, the ICJ declined to grant Nicaragua its requested provisional measures against Germany, including requiring the cessation of arms deliveries to Israel. Headlining this outcome, the Associated Press (4/30/24) said the court was âeffectively siding with Germany.â The outlet did, however, continue by explaining that the court had âdeclined to throw out the case altogether, as Germany had requested,â and will hear arguments from both sides, with a resolution not likely to come for years.
That was better than NPRâs report (4/30/24), which only mentioned that the court was proceeding with the case in its final paragraph.
But German lawyer and professor Stefan Talmon (Verfassungblog, 5/2/24), clarified that the courtâs ruling âseverely limits Germanyâs ability to transfer arms to Israel.â
âThe courtâs order was widely interpreted as a victory for Germany,â Talmon commented. âA closer examination of the order, however, points to the opposite.â He concluded that although the ICJ did not generally ban the provision of arms to Israel, it did impose significant restrictions on it by emphasizing Germanyâs obligation to âavoid the risk that such arms might be used to violate the [Genocide and Geneva] Conventions.â
And Talmon pointed out that the court appeared to make its decision that an order to halt war weapons shipments was unnecessary based on Germanyâs claim that it had already stopped doing so.
âBy expressly emphasizing that, âat presentâ, circumstances did not require the indication of provisional measures, the Court made it clear that it could indicate such measures in the future,â Talmon wrote.
Establishment media, seemingly distracted by the âhypocrisyâ of Nicaragua challenging a country whose âlegitimacy as a democratic state is unassailable,â mostly failed to notice that its legal efforts were therefore at least partially successful: It forced Germany to back down from its unstinting support for Israelâs genocide in Gaza, and alerted German politicians to the fact that they are at risk of being held accountable under international law if they transfer any further war weapons.
(FAIR)
John Perry is a writer based in Masaya, Nicaragua whose work has appeared in the Nation, the London Review of Books, and many other publications.
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