
Why Muslim charities face disproportionate scrutiny in the UK
The settlement is considered illegal under international law and the UK's own foreign policy stance. The funding significantly contributed to the expansion of the Bnei Akiva yeshiva high school, increasing student enrolment and establishing it as a core institution in the Susya settlement.
This case has drawn considerable criticism from political figures and human rights campaigners, who argue that charitable status should not extend to organisations funnelling money into settlements that might undermine international law.
Even more shocking is that this entire controversial process was overseen by the UK charity regulator. The Charity Commission authorised these donations on the grounds that a donation to a school located in the occupied territories would, in principle, qualify as a grant for the advancement of education and therefore be considered a 'legitimate' charitable activity.
The regulator clarified that a charity operating within the occupied Palestinian territories does not, in itself, constitute a criminal offence or a breach of charity law.
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These settlements are illegal under international law, and the UK government officially recognises them as such. Yet the charity regulator approved the donations, justifying them on educational grounds - something a legal review could appropriately address.
In the meantime, this episode reifies concerns and accusations frequently levelled at the regulator's impartiality, particularly in relation to Muslim charities.
Stricter oversight
The charity regulator's treatment of the two aforementioned charities stands in stark contrast to its handling of the Islamic Centre of England (Icel), a Shia Muslim centre in West London. The centre is religiously and culturally aligned with the Iranian diaspora living in the Maida Vale district, and attended by Shia from various national backgrounds.
The Charity Commission issued a warning to Icel in 2020, after a group of protesters held a vigil for Iranian General Qassem Soleimani, who had been killed in a US drone strike. Soleimani was on the UK's designated sanctions list.
In November 2022, the charity regulator launched a formal statutory inquiry into the centre, citing major governance concerns over issues such as the vigil, the charity's online content and trustees' alleged conflicts of interest. The inquiry was formally concluded in May 2025, with the regulator requiring Icel trustees to implement stricter oversight of speakers, religious services, events and online content.
There is a general impression among those who followed Icel's activities that it was targeted because of its critical stance on the Israeli occupation of Palestinian lands. While the charity regulator did not explicitly acknowledge this, the right-wing media frequently portrays Icel as the Iranian government's 'nerve centre', largely due to its connection with Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
This disparity reveals a deeper issue: the Charity Commission's apparent double standards, particularly in its treatment of Muslim organisations
A forthcoming academic report titled 'The Islamic Centre of England: Understanding its Role within Muslim Communities across Britain' finds that Icel is financially independent, with no ties to Iranian funding, and plays a positive role in supporting local Muslim communities. The report acknowledges the connection between the resident imam of Icel and Khamenei, but not as a political agent - instead, as a spiritual guide for local Shia communities.
The report, by professors Oliver Scharbrodt (Lund University) and Alison Scott-Baumann (Soas), highlights how strict restrictions from the UK charity regulator 'may inadvertently limit the rights of Muslims to freedom of expression and peaceful assembly'.
Even if one accepts the Charity Commission's rationale for warning Icel over its commemoration of Soleimani, a key question remains: why is it deemed legitimate to fund projects in illegal settlements - condemned by both the UN and the UK - that ultimately expand and entrench those settlements, an act which the UK government itself opposes and condemns?
This disparity reveals a deeper issue: the Charity Commission's apparent double standards, particularly in its treatment of Muslim organisations.
Muslim organisations have long alleged that the charity regulator holds a structural bias against them. While pro-Israel charities' funding activities in illegal settlements are approved, Muslim charities are routinely subjected to exceptional levels of scrutiny, often based on vague or politicised concerns.
Silencing solidarity
Human Aid UK, a British Muslim charity, was the subject of a two-year investigation by the Charity Commission after police detained its staff in 2019 and seized funds. Although the funds were returned months later and no wrongdoing was found, the regulator continued its inquiry, prompting Human Aid UK to accuse it of bias against Muslim charities and of acting as an 'extension of police and security services' harassment policy'.
Between April 2012 and November 2014, more than a quarter of the Charity Commission's statutory inquiries - 20 out of 76 - focused on Muslim charities, according to the Guardian, whose analysis included all investigations that remained open at the end of the given timeframe. Many of these probes involved organisations operating mosques, providing humanitarian aid, or working in Syria.
A 2017 academic article in the ReOrient journal asserted that the Charity Commission's evolving structure and practices disproportionately affect Muslim charities. The article noted that while Muslim organisations make up only 1.21 percent of the sector, they accounted for 38 percent of all disclosed statutory investigations between January 2013 and April 2014, raising serious concerns about institutionalised bias.
Amid pressure from the Charity Commission, Icel administrators often asked organisers to avoid discussing Israel's war on Gaza or openly showing solidarity with Palestinians, fearing that such acts could jeopardise the charity's legal status.
The normalising of Islamophobia in UK public life is fuelling hate and violence Read More »
Similar concerns have been raised by the Muslim Council of Britain, the country's largest Muslim umbrella body, which alleges that the charity regulator takes a harsh line on Muslim charities that support Palestine. This has fuelled accusations that the Charity Commission is increasingly becoming a tool to silence Muslim charities and prevent them from expressing solidarity with the victims of Israel's war crimes.
The charity regulator is meant to be independent and 'free from the influence of others'. But its actions, based on the aforementioned examples, appear to be influenced by government foreign policy. The differential treatment of charities linked to Iran or other Muslim countries, and those connected to Israel, reflects the UK government's geopolitical stance - hostile to one, favourable to the other.
This apparent political influence undermines public trust and risks complicity. The Charity Commission cannot claim to uphold charitable integrity while selectively applying its principles, particularly where Muslim charities are involved.
In response to questions from Middle East Eye, the Charity Commission stated: 'The Commission rejects any allegation of bias. All concerns are assessed fairly and consistently against the legal framework,' and reiterated that 'we are independent of Government'. The Charity Commission did not address why Muslim charities were disproportionately subjected to its statutory investigations, as highlighted in the ReOrient study.
The commission added that it does not 'fetter the freedom of expression...Charities may express views publicly about matters of conscience or religion, including in relation to the conflict in the Middle East, so long as these views advance the charity's purposes and are demonstrably in the charity's best interests.' It noted that speeches, sermons or other communications should not be inflammatory or divisive.
With regards to the two charities linked to Israeli settlements, the commission said: 'There is a possibility that, in remitting funds to such organisations, UK Toremet is at risk of committing a criminal offence in England and Wales by breaching the Geneva Convention Act 1957. We issued the charity's trustees with statutory guidance and an action plan, which included specific reference to the importance of compliance with the Geneva Conventions Act 1957.'
But if the Charity Commission is to rebuild trust with British Muslim communities and demonstrate that it upholds fairness for all, it must urgently commission an independent review of its practices to ensure genuine equality and impartiality across all faith-based charities.
The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Eye.
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Gulf Today
36 minutes ago
- Gulf Today
Turned back from Gaza by Israel, aid shipments languish in warehouses, on roadsides
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Reuters could not independently verify why the trucks were not allowed to enter Gaza and the Israeli military authority in charge of coordinating aid did not respond to a question about why they were not let into the enclave. Reuters visited Egypt's border with Gaza on Monday on a trip organised by the Elders, a group of former world leaders set up by late South African President Nelson Mandela that backs a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. People stand in front of a warehouse for aid deliveries, waiting to be delivered to Gaza, at a logistics site outside Arish, Egypt. Reuters Some Elders members have been highly critical of Israel's conduct in Gaza, including former Irish President Mary Robinson and former New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark, who joined the border trip. Responding to international outrage sparked by images of starving Gazans, Israel on July 27 announced measures to let more aid into Gaza. But aid agencies say only a fraction of what they send is getting in. Israel strongly denies limiting aid supplies. Speaking to reporters at the Rafah crossing, Clark expressed shock at the amount of aid turned back at the border. "To see this crossing, which should be a place where people interact with each other, where people can come and go, where people aren't under blockade, where people who are ill can leave to come out - to see it just silent for the people, it's absolutely shocking for us," Clark said. Approvals and clearance procedures that got a shipment through the Rafah border crossing "within a few days" of arrival in Egypt during a ceasefire earlier in the war now took "minimum one month," according to the WHO employee at the border. On Monday, the Hamas-run Gaza government media office said at least 1,334 trucks had entered Gaza through all land crossings, including from Egypt, since the Israeli measures announced on July 27, but this was far short of the 9,000 that would have gone in if 600 trucks had entered per day. The United States has said a minimum of 600 trucks per day are needed to feed Gaza's population. Palestinian woman Nozha Awad flees Al Shifa hospital following an Israeli raid with her triplet children in Gaza Strip. File/Reuters Reuters could not independently confirm the reasons for the delays described in this article or the specific figures supplied by those interviewed. Asked for its response to allegations of curbs on aid flows, the Israeli military agency that coordinates aid, COGAT, said Israel invests "considerable efforts" in aid distribution. It said about 300 trucks had been transferred daily in "recent weeks," mostly carrying food, via all land crossings. "Despite the claims made, the State of Israel allows and facilitates the provision of humanitarian assistance to the Gaza Strip without any quantitative limit on the number of aid trucks entering the Gaza Strip," COGAT said. The agency did not address specific questions about aid shipment volumes. In mid-July, Israel introduced a requirement that shipments of humanitarian aid arriving from Egypt undergo customs clearance. According to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, Israel's move led to "additional bureaucratic hurdles, delays, and costs for humanitarian organisations." UN agencies were exempted from customs clearance from Egypt from July 27 to Aug. 3, OCHA said in a report on August 6. While not officially extended, the exemption still appeared to be in place, it said. Other international NGOs could be exempted only on a case-by-case basis and only for health items. More than 200 Gazans have died of malnutrition or starvation in the war, according to Palestinian health authorities, adding to the over 61,000 dead they say have been killed by military action. The UN human rights office and several expert studies have said the number is probably an undercount. Israel has disputed the Gaza health ministry figures, which do not distinguish between fighters and civilians, and says at least a third of the fatalities are militants. On Monday, COGAT said a review by its medical experts found the number of deaths reported by the Gaza health ministry due to malnutrition was inflated and most of those "allegedly dying from malnutrition" had pre-existing conditions. Palestinians look at aid packages that are airdropped over Gaza. Reuters Drivers coming from Egypt cannot go directly to the Gaza side of the Rafah crossing, which had been operated by the Hamas-run border authority but is now closed. Instead, they route to the Israeli crossing of Kerem Shalom, about three km (two miles) to the south, where shipments undergo checks. Kamel Atteiya Mohamed, an Egyptian truck driver, estimated that of the 200 or 300 trucks trying to get through this route every day, only 30 to 50 make it. "They tell you, for example, that the pallet doesn't have a sticker, the pallet is tilted, or the pallet is open from the top. This is no reason for us to return it," he told Reuters. He said that while the Egyptian crossing was open day and night, drivers often arrived at Kerem Shalom only to find it closed, as it does not normally operate beyond weekday business hours. "Every day it's like this," he said. "Honestly, we're fed up." While COGAT did not address specific questions about the driver's remarks and allegations of inflexible working hours, it said that "hundreds of truckloads of aid still await collection by the UN and international organizations" on the Palestinian side of the border crossings. A logistics site set up by the Egyptian Red Crescent near El Arish town, 40 km (25 miles) from the border, where shipments coming from Egypt to Gaza are loaded, has a tarp tent warehouse devoted to goods turned back from the border. A Reuters reporter saw rows of white oxygen tanks, as well as wheelchairs, car tires and cartons labelled as containing generators and first-aid kits and with logos of aid groups from countries such as Luxembourg and Kuwait, among others. Reuters was not able to verify when the items at the Red Crescent site were turned back or on what grounds. Aid workers describe such rejections as routine. Speaking at the meeting with the Elders that Reuters attended, one World Food Programme worker said that only 73 of the 400 trucks the agency had sent since July 27 had made it in. UN Palestinian refugee agency UNRWA has not been allowed to send aid into Gaza since March. The OCHA August 6 report said no shelter materials had been allowed to enter Gaza since March 2 and those available on the local market were "prohibitively expensive and limited in quantity." The WHO employee who works on the border said the truck and trailer seen by Reuters were among three trucks that had been turned back on Sunday. A manifest given for their cargo, seen by Reuters, included urine drainage bags, iodine, plasters and sutures. Reuters


Middle East Eye
44 minutes ago
- Middle East Eye
British MPs urge Starmer to 'immediately expel' Israeli ambassador
A cross-party group of MPs have sent a letter to British Prime Minister Keir Starmer urging him to "immediately expel" Israel's ambassador to the UK, Tzipi Hotovely. The letter, sent to Starmer on Thursday, describes Israel's actions in Gaza as genocidal. Lead signatory Adnan Hussain, an independent MP, said the letter requested that the government "act urgently in the face of genocide in Gaza". It has been signed by every member of the parliamentary Independent Alliance, as well as some Green Party and Scottish National Party MPs. The letter is also signed by Labour MP Abtisam Mohamed, who sits on parliament's Foreign Affairs Committee, which scrutinises foreign policy. Those behind the letter say that since Britain is a signatory to the Genocide Convention, it "has a clear and binding legal obligation to prevent genocide wherever it occurs". New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters The letter calls on the government to "immediately expel the Israeli Ambassador to the United Kingdom as a signal that the UK will not tolerate the continued defiance of international law and the perpetuation of mass atrocities". Hotovely once called the Nakba, the ethnic cleansing of Palestine in 1948, an "Arab lie" and is an avowed opponent of the creation of a Palestinian state. Israeli ambassador met with key UK Labour donors and lobbyists throughout Gaza genocide Read More » The ambassador is also a prominent figure in the UK and regularly intervenes in domestic British politics. In recent months, she has attacked the BBC and the mayor of London. It emerged this week that Hotovely has met with key Labour Party donors and British pro-Israel lobbyists throughout Israel's genocide in Gaza. Her diary was obtained and reported on by Declassified UK, after being released following a Freedom of Information request by lawyer Elad Man at Hatzlacha, an NGO promoting social justice in Israel. Last year, she twice met Stuart Roden, a chairman of Israeli venture capital firm Hetz Ventures, who donated over half a million pounds to Labour ahead of the 2024 general election that brought the party to power. Hotovely also met Jonathan Goldstein, a property tycoon and former chair of the Jewish Leadership Council, an umbrella body that represents major British Jewish organisations. Goldstein financially backed Foreign Secretary David Lammy's failed campaign to become London mayor in 2014. Horror at genocide in Gaza The signatories to Thursday's letter further urge the government to "enforce and support international sanctions on Israel", lead an international effort "to deliver immediate and unhindered humanitarian aid to Gaza" and support the International Criminal Court's investigations. The letter expresses "horror'" at the Israeli government's "intentions to carry out a full military occupation of the Gaza Strip". Updated letter requesting the government act urgently in the face of genocide in Gaza. Thank you to all my Parliamentary colleagues for signing. — Adnan Hussain MP (@AdnanHussainMP) August 14, 2025 'This declaration is the latest escalation in a campaign that has already led to the near-total destruction of Gaza," it says. "The government cannot continue to provide political cover or military support, directly and indirectly, to actions that amount to genocide. "We make this statement not only as members of Parliament but as human beings. Our silence or inaction in the face of genocide is not neutrality, it is complicity."


Middle East Eye
44 minutes ago
- Middle East Eye
Israel's war on Gaza: Why do legal experts say it's genocide?
Is Israel committing genocide in Gaza? It's a question that has been asked repeatedly since Israel declared war on the Palestinian enclave on 7 October 2023 after Hamas-led attacks on southern Israel killed around 1,200 people. To date, more than 60,000 Palestinians have been killed, and the population of 2.2 million displaced repeatedly. The territory's infrastructure and services have been reduced to rubble. Israel has blocked aid, including food, water and medical supplies. There has been international condemnation amid scenes of starvation. The word 'genocide' is frequently used in discussions about Gaza. But it's important to understand that it is defined in international law, that it is recognised by courts globally, and that perpetrators can be held accountable. For academics and experts, whose life's work is the study of genocide, the consensus has grown that Israel has passed the point of committing genocide in Gaza. But there is division as to when. New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters Some, such as academic Raz Segal, identified it as starting in October 2023, describing Israel's military campaign as a 'textbook case of genocide'. Others put the date later: Holocaust scholar Omer Bartov reached the same conclusion in May 2024, when the scale and intensity of the destruction became impossible to ignore. And for Martin Shaw, genocide began in 1948 and the Nakba, the mass displacement and killing of Palestinians that established the state of Israel. People flee after an Israeli strike hits camp for displaced Palestinians in northern Khan Yunis, southern Gaza Strip, in April 2025 (AFP) This divergence has sparked academic tensions. Nimer Sultany says that the evidence was 'overwhelming from the start' and has criticised academics who reached the conclusion months into the war. His views echo broader frustration among Palestinian scholars, who say that the slow pace of recognition reflects a double standard in how genocide is identified. Middle East Eye has interviewed legal experts throughout the war and at length (much of the content can be found at the international law section or the Expert Witness podcast series). Below, we look at what experts have said about Israel and genocide, and how they reached their conclusions. First, some essentials. What is the definition of genocide? Genocide is widely recognised as 'the crime of crimes'. It is legally defined in the Genocide Convention (1948), as well as the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court (1998). Article I says that genocide is a crime under international law, which the states parties to the convention "undertake to prevent and to punish.' Article II states that "genocide means any of the following acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group'. There then follows a list: - Killing members of the group - Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group - Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part - Imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group - Forcibly transferring children of the group to another group Nor does the perpetrator need to be directly involved: the convention also prohibits: - Conspiracy to commit genocide - Direct and public incitement to commit genocide - Any attempt to commit genocide - Complicity in genocide How do you prove genocide? There are three criteria: - The targeted group must have a shared characteristic as identified in the Genocide Convention. It could be national, ethnic, racial and/or religious - At least one of the acts mentioned in Article II must have been committed - There must have been a specific intention to commit the act or acts, through evidence such as statements or a pattern of conduct All the experts MEE has spoken to identified Israel as committing genocide. Francesca Albanese: Totality of genocidal violence Francesca Albanese is an Italian jurist and the UN's special rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the Palestinian territory occupied since 1967. She is also an affiliate scholar at the Institute for the Study of International Migration at Georgetown University. On 9 July 2025, Albanese became the first UN expert to be sanctioned by the US for her work investigating human rights violations in occupied Palestine. When does Albanese think genocide began? Albanese was among the first scholars to warn of genocide in Gaza and to outline the legal case against Israel. She was also one of more than 30 UN experts since November 2023 who sounded the alarm about genocide. A month later, South Africa accused Israel of genocide before the International Court of Justice (ICJ). 'This genocide case is particular because it's the first settler-colonial genocide that gets litigated before an international court,' she told MEE in November. Her analyses concluded that genocidal intent and acts were in place from the early days of the conflict. How did Albanese reach her conclusion? In the UN report Anatomy of Genocide, published in March 2024, Albanese stated that the threshold for genocide had been met. During the first five months of the military campaign in Gaza in 2023, she said that Israel had committed at least three of the underlying acts in the Genocide Convention against Palestinians as a protected group. Evidence of this Israeli intent came from statements made by Israeli officials, who dehumanised Palestinians or advocated their erasure as a group, including forced displacement. The patterns, scale and nature of the attacks also implied indirect objectives, Albanese said. In October 2024, she published Genocide As Colonial Erasure, which identified a 'totality triple lens' approach by Israel as evidence of its demonstrated genocidal intent. International law explained: What are genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity? Read More » 'While the scale and nature of the ongoing Israeli assault against the Palestinians vary by area, the totality of the Israeli acts of destruction directed against the totality of the Palestinian people, with the aim of conquering the totality of the land of Palestine, is clearly identifiable,' she wrote. 'That gives the broader picture, which inscribes itself in the long trajectory of colonial erasure that Israel has practised on the Palestinians,' Albanese told MEE following the publication. She said Palestinians were subjected to a 'settler-colonial genocide', a decades-long process aimed at displacing and replacing Palestinians as a group. In settler-colonial contexts, Albanese argued, control over land is central to both the colonisers' aims and Indigenous peoples' survival, identity, and self-determination. The forced displacement of Palestinians and the destruction of their cultural, economic and social ties to the land can signal genocidal intent, especially when aimed at preventing the group's reconstitution, she said. The patterns of violence against Palestinians as a group required the application of the Genocide Convention to prevent and punish genocide, Albanese concluded. Martin Shaw: This was not accidental Martin Shaw is a British sociologist and scholar. He is a research professor of international relations at the Institut Barcelona d'Estudis Internacionals, and emeritus professor of international relations and politics at Sussex University. When does Shaw think genocide began? Shaw told MEE that genocide was apparent from the outset of the current war, if not far earlier. 'It was evident not only in the provocative and genocidal rhetoric of Israeli leaders but also in the scale of destruction launched against Gaza following the Hamas attacks,' he told MEE. Shaw also argued that the Nakba of 1948 should be understood in the context of genocide (15 years ago, he was also one of the first scholars to describe the Nakba as a form of genocide). 'The Zionist project at that time sought to eliminate Palestinian society within the territory that would become Israel,' he said. 'This was not accidental; it was deliberate.' Palestinian populations, he said, were forced to flee and were unable to return - evidence of Israeli intent to destroy Palestinians as a group. How did Shaw reach his conclusion? Shaw believed Israel is committing genocide with 'the intent to destroy Gaza comprehensively, not only through the mass killing of Palestinians but also by dismantling the societal fabric'. Israel's actions, he said, have been deliberate. 'Even within the first few weeks of the assault, it was evident that this was not merely a military campaign against Hamas, but an effort to destroy the Palestinian society in Gaza.' Nimer Sultany: Israel acted in defiance Nimer Sultany is a Palestinian human rights lawyer, international law scholar, and the editor-in-chief of the Palestine Yearbook of International Law. He teaches law at Soas, University of London. When does Sultany think genocide began? Sultany told MEE in May 2025 that the war amounted to genocide from the start, and counters the idea that it only began after the ceasefire collapse in March 2025. 'This revisionism is merely an attempt to justify the prolonged silence of so many,' he said, 'and the reluctance, delay, and avoidance of different political, media, and academic elements in Western countries, who did not want to recognise the genocide, who did not have the courage to recognise and call it out earlier.' Instead, Sultany said, Israel's conduct after March 2025 was almost identical to that in October 2023, including the use of siege and the weaponisation of starvation. How did Sultany reach his conclusion? Sultany cited genocidal intent, the attempt to eliminate the Palestinian population, and the actions that fit the criteria for genocidal acts in the Genocide Convention. Since January 2024, the ICJ has issued three legally binding orders for Israel to prevent and punish acts of genocide, including preventing unimpeded access to humanitarian aid. But Sultany said that Israel's violation of the orders was itself an indictment of its actions and 'shows that what was initially a risk of genocide became an actual genocide over time.' 'Israel acted in defiance of the provisional measures, with full knowledge of the effects of its actions on Palestinians.' Raz Segal: Comprehensive destruction Raz Segal is associate professor of Holocaust and genocide studies at Stockton University in New Jersey. He is a historian specialising in Jewish history and modern Europe, with research focusing on southeast Europe, particularly borderlands, and on Palestine and Israel. When does Segal think the genocide began? Segal was the first Holocaust and genocide studies scholar to warn about Israel's current assault on Gaza as genocide. In Jewish Currents on 13 October 2023, he described the attack as a 'textbook case of genocide'. He told MEE: 'As an Israeli-American scholar of Jewish history and the Holocaust, I take seriously the moral imperative of 'never again'. In Holocaust and genocide studies, we teach students to identify early warning signs of genocide: processes that escalate, red flags that demand intervention.' 'Critics asked why I used the term 'genocide' so early. My answer: because we were already seeing key indicators. Ethically and legally, the obligation to prevent genocide arises in the presence of significant risk, not just once mass killing is fully evident.' How did Segal reach his conclusion? Segal said that Israel's order on 13 October 2023, for more than a million Palestinians to go to southern Gaza within 24 hours, was an indicator of a clear risk of genocide. 'I argued then, and continue to argue, that this marked a transition into the realm of genocide, or at the very least a significant risk of genocide, which, under the Genocide Convention, is sufficient to activate the duty to prevent.' Segal also cited the total siege on Gaza declared by then-defence minister Yoav Gallant on 9 October 2023, which failed to distinguish civilians and combatants, and President Isaac Herzog's statement blaming the population of Gaza for Hamas' attack. Such comments, coupled with policies that targeted the civilian population indiscriminately, pointed to genocidal intent, he said. Israel's use of its most destructive munitions, including two-tonne US-made bombs, from the very start of the war was, he said, 'typical of genocidal campaigns'. And Segal also highlighted how targeting of children was also significant and related it to the ongoing ICJ case against Myanmar, which is accused of genocide intent through its targeting of the young. 'Israel's figures far exceed those in the Rohingya case, further strengthening the argument,' Segal said. Barry Trachtenberg: Call this what it is Barry Trachtenberg is a professor of Jewish history and Holocaust studies at Wake Forest University in North Carolina. When does Trachtenberg think the genocide began? 'It has been clear to me since mid-October 2023 that Israel's response to the attacks of 7 October fits squarely within the UN Convention's definition of genocide,' Trachtenberg told MEE. How did Trachtenberg reach his conclusion? 'From the very beginning, we saw genocidal statements made by Israeli leaders, which were soon followed by actions that aligned with those declarations of intent," Trachtenberg said. 'In most cases of genocidal violence, we don't have explicit statements from political and military leaders saying they will target civilians, refuse to distinguish between combatants and non-combatants, or hold an entire population responsible. But we've seen exactly that in this case.' He said that as a Holocaust and genocide studies scholar, it was important for him and his colleagues to speak out and 'call this violence what it is". Melanie O'Brien: Patterns of conduct Melanie O'Brien is an associate professor of international aaw at the University of Western Australia Law School, and the president of the International Association of Genocide Scholars. Her case studies include the Armenian Genocide, the Holocaust, the Cambodian Genocide, the Srebrenica Genocide, and the Rohingya Genocide. When does O'Brien think the genocide began? O'Brien told MEE she cannot pinpoint a specific date. 'In genocide studies, we refer to genocide as a process, not an event. We examine patterns of genocide over months or even years.' In the case of Gaza, there were 'years of persecution, discrimination, apartheid, and conflict' that predated the start of the current war. How did O'Brien reach her conclusion? 'Applying the legal definitions of genocide as found in the Genocide Convention and the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court, I would determine that what is happening in Gaza constitutes genocide,' she said. Often, the most difficult element of genocide to prove is that of 'special intent,' she explained. But since early October 2023, Israeli leaders have made statements about destroying Gaza and starving its population - and for O'Brien, these are clear expressions of intent. 'We also see intent through patterns of conduct, including indiscriminate bombings, mass casualties, the destruction of healthcare and essential infrastructure, and the denial of humanitarian aid, all of which are acts listed under the Genocide Convention,' she said. This deliberate denial of essentials for life, including water and food, medicine, shelter, and healthcare, all pointed to genocidal intent. Iva Vukusic: Meets the criteria of genocide Iva Vukusic is an assistant professor in international history at Utrecht University in the Netherlands. She is a legal historian and has spent two decades working on investigations and prosecutions of international crimes, including war crimes, crimes against humanity, and genocide in the former Yugoslavia, particularly Bosnia. When does Vuvusic think the genocide began? 'For several months, I struggled with what I was seeing,' she told MEE. 'I discussed it with colleagues, unsure whether it was my place to speak definitively. I typically wait for judicial rulings - courts that review evidence independently. 'But I came to realise those processes will take years, and civilians are dying now, under bombs and from starvation. So I felt increasingly that what we are witnessing likely constitutes genocide.' How did Vuvusic reach her conclusion? For Vukusic, her conclusion is based on the pattern of attacks on civilian targets such as hospitals and schools, destruction of water facilities, and the systematic deprivation of basic needs. These actions have been accompanied by statements from Israeli officials indicating an intent to drive out the population of Gaza, she added. 'That combination, the violence itself and the expressed intent, meets the criteria of genocide in my view.' Omer Bartov: Making Gaza uninhabitable Omer Bartov is a professor of Holocaust and genocide studies at Brown University. He has been working and writing on war crimes, genocide, the Holocaust, and, most recently, Israel-Palestine, since the 1980s. He was born and raised in Israel, in what he described as 'a Zionist family', and served for four years in the Israeli army during the early 1970s. When does Bartov think the genocide began? Bartov says that Israel's war on Gaza passed the threshold of genocidal intent by May 2024. 'My view has become that the war goals that Israel declared -which were to destroy Hamas and to free the hostages, by the spring of 2024, turned out not to be the actual war goals,' he told MEE. 'The IDF was not actually trying to destroy Hamas and free the hostages. What it was trying to do was to make Gaza uninhabitable for its population.' How did Bartov reach his conclusion? Bartov cites evidence, including statements by Israeli leaders, as well as the 'pattern of operations that indicated both intent and the implementation of that intent'. He also believes that Israel's destruction of homes, educational buildings, hospitals, museums and places of worship fits the definition, since these are 'the places that could make for the existence of a group: for its health, for its education, for its collective memory'. The course of events after May 2024 has also reinforced Bartov's opinion that genocide was occurring, including the forcible removal of the population of northern Gaza to the south and starving whoever is left, as part of the controversial General's Plan. The total siege imposed in March 2025 and the food distribution system run by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation provided further evidence of genocidal intent. This was compounded, he said, by how the Israeli army then threatened the safe zones to which the civilians fled, before forcing them to leave again. 'The goal is to force a population through hunger, violence, forcible removal, to leave the Gaza Strip and to destroy it in a way that would make it impossible to ever reconstitute it as a place for Palestinians.' Amos Goldberg: Legally, it's genocide Amos Goldberg is an Israeli professor of Holocaust history at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. He teaches Holocaust and genocide history. When does Goldberg think the genocide began? In April 2024, Goldberg concluded that Israel was committing genocide in an article that he wrote in Hebrew. 'At first, I supported self-defence, even some retaliation. But by 10 October, with mass aerial bombardment, I said: this is unjustified,' he told MEE in May 2025. 'Still, I hesitated to call it genocide. I thought it was a criminal overreaction. Because I didn't want to believe it. I wanted to believe that we were capable of many things, but not genocide.' How did he Goldberg his conclusion? For Goldberg, Israel is committing at least three of the underlying acts in the Genocide Convention: killing members of the group; causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group; and deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part. He cited the killing of Palestinians, with the intent of destroying them as a group. 'Destruction doesn't have to be of every individual, it can be of a substantial part of the group,' he said, referencing the convention. 'Even if Israel says it does not intend to kill every Palestinian, legally, it's still genocide.' He also cited imposing conditions aimed at the total destruction of Palestinians in Gaza, including the destruction of homes, infrastructure and hospitals, and the deliberate starvation of civilians before and after the ceasefire. 'The Genocide Convention says creating conditions to destroy the group is an act of genocide - and that's happening. Yes, it is a genocide, a very cruel and heinous genocide.'