The 77 well-known lawyers, in a joint statement cited by Daily Frankfurter Argemein on Sunday, are also known as Netanyahu’s existence in Germany and also known as the violation of the laws and rights governing the country.
They were particularly important for politician and future prime minister Friedrich Martin Joseph Meltz when they discovered a way to invite Israeli Prime Minister during the election campaign and announced they would have a phone conversation with Netanyahu after their victory.
The lawyers also condemned the actions of several universities in cancelling a speech by Francesca Albanese, the UN Special Rapporteur on the human rights situation on Palestinian territory.
Francesca revealed after a recent trip that Germany had tried to silence her as she was talking about the Israeli war of massacres over Gaza, exposing the situation in Berlin’s downsizing for freedom of expression.
Michaela Kuchler, a special representative of the federal government on its relationship with Jewish organizations, had accused UN officials of having “anti-Semitic content” in her speech.
Several Western countries, including Germany, had given ambiguous responses about the ICC’s warrant for arrest against Netanyahu and his former minister, Joab Gallant, due to war crimes committed during the Gaza War.
In its statement, the ICC said there was a “rational basis for believing” that Netanyahu and Gallant “use hunger as a way of war” and that they “deliberately” committed crimes and crimes against humanity targeting Palestinian civilians.
Germany is obligated to execute arrest warrants, but has yet to announce whether it will comply with the ICC’s ruling against Israeli authorities issued in November 2024.
MNA/IRN