
Meridor, a senior Likud politician who has also served as minister of judiciary affairs, is set to speak at Cambridge University as a guest of the student union which has been criticized by dozens of campus organizations for inviting him.
In a letter sent to the Met’s War Crime Unit on Tuesday, the UK-based International Centre of Justice for Palestinians and Al-Haq in Ramallah say Meridor, in various leadership roles he has held since the 1980s, has overseen the commission of serious international crimes.
The unit, they say, should investigate Meridor’s role in the suspected crimes under the principle of universal jurisdiction, which gives British police the power to examine crimes against international law even if they have not taken place in UK territory.
“We are aware that you already have significant evidence pertaining to Mr. Meridor at your disposal. We are willing to supplement this evidence, if required,” they wrote. “It is imperative that Mr. Meridor does not evade arrest.”
The organizations say that the crimes that should be investigated include the massacre of Palestinian refugees at the Sabra and Shatila camps in Beirut in 1982 and the willful killing of over 100 Palestinian civilians during the Zionist military’s eight-day bombardment of the Gaza Strip in 2012.
Meridor held multiple positions within cabinets headed by Benjamin Netanyahu’s right-wing Likud party. Most recently, he served as the regime’s espionage minister, a post that gave him power over spy services active in the occupied West Bank.
In that role, the groups say Meridor had responsibility over the regime’s so-called security agencies which routinely engage in the torture of Palestinian prisoners, including women and children, another crime which they say the police should investigate.
In 2010, Meridor reportedly cancelled an appearance at a Bicom fundraiser held in London over concerns he could be arrested under universal jurisdiction legislation.
No comments:
Post a Comment