- 30 Apr 2024 - 16:04(16:04 GMT)
UN Secretary-General Guterres ‘strongly encourages’ Israel, Hamas to agree to deal
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres says after seven months of the war on Gaza, the situation for Palestinians in the enclave is “worsening by the day”.
“I have called consistently for a humanitarian ceasefire, the immediate and unconditional release of all hostages and a massive surge in humanitarian aid. Unfortunately, that has not happened – yet. But negotiations are once again underway,” Guterres said.
“For the sake of the people of Gaza, for the sake of the hostages and their families in Israel, and for the sake of the region and the wider world, I strongly encourage the government of Israel and the Hamas leadership to reach an agreement.
“Without that, I fear the war, with all its consequences, both in Gaza and across the region, will worsen exponentially.”
- 30 Apr 2024 - 14:20(14:20 GMT)
Thanks for joining us
You can stay updated with all our coverage of Israel’s war on Gaza here.
- 30 Apr 2024 - 14:15(14:15 GMT)
Here’s what happened today
We’re closing this live page soon. Here are some of today’s main developments.
- The International Court of Justice (ICJ) rejected a request by Nicaragua to order Germany to halt military and other aid to Israel and renew funding to UNRWA.
- The International Court of Justice says that legal conditions for making such an order weren’t met and ruled against the request in a 15-1 vote.
- Presiding Judge Salam said the court was “deeply concerned about the catastrophic living conditions of the Palestinians in the Gaza Strip“.
- The ICJ reminded all parties that they are under obligation to “respect and ensure respect” to Article 1 of the Geneva Convention.
Advertisement - 30 Apr 2024 - 14:10(14:10 GMT)
Germany argued that vast majority of transfers to Israel were ‘non-military’
Germany’s argument was that 98 percent of their military transfers to Israel after October 7 were non-military in nature, that three out of four of their export licences related to non-lethal material, and the justices looking at those facts as presented by the German legal team have accepted them.
The other crucial argument that has wider implications is that they are not found to be in violation of the Genocide Convention because Israel itself … have not been found to be in violation of the genocide convention and that will be key to other countries that may face similar cases relating to their arms transfers to Israel.
- 30 Apr 2024 - 13:51(13:51 GMT)
ICJ reminded parties of obligation under Geneva Convention
Moataz El Fegiery, head of the human rights programme at Doha Institute for Graduate Studies, says the International Court of Justice (ICJ) reminded the international community of its obligation under the Geneva Convention.
“It’s not the end of the story. There is a legal battle that will continue and many other issues that the court will deal with, with regards to jurisdiction to examine the case or the merit,” El Fegiery told Al Jazeera.
“There is also South Africa versus Israel, and actually Nicaragua intervened in this case as well … of course we hoped that today there would be some measures because this would be an important legal message to many other countries that are right now supporting Israel with weapons and arms.
“But I think even if the court today dismissed the measures, there is also some kind of political message in the whole process.”
- 30 Apr 2024 - 13:39(13:39 GMT)
Judges rule 15-1
“The court by 15 votes to one finds that the circumstances as they now present themselves to the court are not such as to require [the] exercise of its power under Article 41 of the statute to indicate provisional measures,” Salam said.
Against
- President Nawaf Salam – Lebanon
- Vice-President Julia Sebutinde – Uganda
- Judge Peter Tomka – Slovakia
- Judge Ronny Abraham – France
- Judge Abdulqawi Ahmed Yusuf – Somalia
- Judge Xue Hanqin – China
- Judge Dalveer Bhandari – India
- Judge Iwasawa Yuji – Japan
- Judge Georg Nolte – Germany
- Judge Hilary Charlesworth – Australia
- Judge Leonardo Nemer Caldeira Brant – Brazil
- Judge Juan Manuel Gomez Robledo – Mexico
- Judge Sarah H Cleveland – United States
- Judge Bogdan-Lucian Aurescu – Romania
- Judge Dire Tladi – South Africa
For
- Ad-hoc Judge Mohsen Aghahosseini – Iran

(Al Jazeera) - 30 Apr 2024 - 13:26(13:26 GMT)
ICJ ‘deeply concerned’ with situation in Gaza
The ICJ says in its ruling that it remains “deeply concerned about the catastrophic living conditions of the Palestinians in the Gaza Strip, in particular in view of the prolonged and widespread deprivation of food and other basic necessities to which they have been subjected”.
“The Court recalls that pursuant to Article 1 of the Geneva Conventions, all States parties are under an obligation ‘to respect and to ensure respect’ for the Conventions ‘in all circumstances’.
“It follows from that provision that every State party to these Conventions, ‘whether or not it is a party to a specific conflict, is under an obligation to ensure that the requirements of the instruments in question are complied with’.”

- 30 Apr 2024 - 13:18(13:18 GMT)
ICJ rules against provisional measures
“The circumstances are not such as to require the exercise of its power under Article 41 of the statute to indicate provisional measures,” Salam says.
- 30 Apr 2024 - 13:10(13:10 GMT)
ICJ judge presents Nicaragua’s case
Presiding Judge Nawaf Salam is currently laying out Nicaragua’s case against Germany ahead of the ruling.
Representatives from both Nicaragua and Germany are in attendance.
Advertisement - 30 Apr 2024 - 13:00(13:00 GMT)
The ICJ is in session
Presiding Judge Nawaf Salam will shortly begin reading its ruling.
We’ll bring you the latest developments as they come.
- 30 Apr 2024 - 12:45(12:45 GMT)
Who are the judges at the World Court?

(Al Jazeera) - 30 Apr 2024 - 12:30(12:30 GMT)
Fear, grief, anguish on Berlin’s ‘Arab Street’ as Israel levels Gaza
It was a grey and drizzly mid-morning on Sonnenallee, commonly known as Berlin’s “Arab Street”.
Since late last year, large-scale protests have erupted here, in the German capital’s borough of Neukoelln, and they have allegedly been followed by police crackdowns described by pro-Palestinian demonstrators as shocking and violent.
Locals Francesca Leone, 31, and 27-year-old Lea* have been joining the thousands across Germany taking to the streets regularly since October 7, when the latest escalation of the Israel-Palestine conflict began, to call for Palestinian rights and urge Germany to reconsider its unflinching support of Israel.
Lea, who arrived in Germany in 2015 seeking refuge from Syria, said she was arrested at a demonstration recently. She asked Al Jazeera to withhold her real name out of fears her employer might take action against her.
Read more here.

German police gather at a pro-Palestinian demonstration on Berlin’s Neukoelln district [File: Fabrizio Bensch/Reuters] - 30 Apr 2024 - 12:15(12:15 GMT)
ICJ case of ‘grave concern’ to Germany
Salman Shaikh, a former Middle East peace envoy with the UN, says the upcoming ICJ ruling is of “grave concern” to Germany as the Global South, including Nicaragua and South Africa, leading “genocide” cases are part of a wider geopolitical pattern.
“The reason why I think European capitals and Washington need to think really hard about their actions, including the supply of weaponry to the Israeli army, offensive weaponry, which is now also reflected in campuses of universities, that I myself have seen, in Paris and Washington,” Shaikh told Al Jazeera.
Over the past few weeks, pro-Palestine protests at university campuses have spread across the globe, with students calling for their institutions to divest from Israeli companies that enable Israel’s war efforts.
- 30 Apr 2024 - 12:00(12:00 GMT)
Berlin police clear pro-Palestine camp in front of parliament
On Friday, police in Berlin began clearing a pro-Palestinian camp set up in front of the German parliament, demanding the government stop arms exports to Israel.
The Berlin camp “Besetzung Gegen Besatzung” (Occupy Against Occupation), began on April 8, coinciding with the start of Nicaragua’s ICJ hearings.
“The idea was to draw attention to that and … to the German complicity and active enabling of the Israeli genocide in Gaza,” the camp organiser, Jara Nassar, told the Reuters news agency.
But police said the prohibition order for the camp, which was granted authorisation at the start, was due to repeated violations, including the use of unconstitutional symbols and forbidden slogans.

Scenes from the Berlin protest for Gaza as police break up demonstrations [Al Jazeera] - 30 Apr 2024 - 11:45(11:45 GMT)
States resume funding to UNRWA following Colonna report
An independent review group on the UN Agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA) found some “neutrality-related issues,” in its report last week.
The UNRWA remains “irreplaceable and indispensable to Palestinians’ human and economic development,” according to a 54-page report led by French diplomat Catherine Colonna.
The review group was created following allegations made by Israel that some UNRWA staff may have participated in the October 7 Hamas attacks.
Due to the allegation, numerous donor states suspended or paused about $450m in funding to the UNRWA.
But Colonna’s team said “Israel has yet to provide supporting evidence” for its claim that the UNRWA employs more than 400 “terrorists”.
Since then, many have announced they will resume funding, including Germany, Sweden, Canada, Japan, the EU, and France.
- 30 Apr 2024 - 11:30(11:30 GMT)
WATCH: Is Germany complicit in Israel’s war on Gaza?
Nicaragua has urged the ICJ to order Germany to stop supplying Israel with weapons.
The case draws on the Genocide Convention and Geneva Conventions and is notable for being the first to involve two countries not directly involved in the alleged atrocities.
Experts talk on Al Jazeera’s Inside Story what the case means for other countries that contribute to Israel.
Watch the discussion below:
- 30 Apr 2024 - 11:15(11:15 GMT)
South Africa’s case against Israel at the ICJ
As we wait for the ruling, it’s important to note that Nicaragua’s case is not the only “genocide” case involving the war currently being decided on at the ICJ.
In January, South Africa took Israel to the court accusing it of committing “genocide” in Gaza.
South Africa’s representatives argued that the high death toll, the destruction of homes and the blockade of food and water meant Israel was in breach of the Genocide Convention.
While a ruling in the case is not expected any time soon and could take years, the court issued preliminary measures ordering Israel not to commit acts that could fall under the convention.
However, Israel has denied all allegations and reiterated it had a right to defend itself against Hamas.
Advertisement - 30 Apr 2024 - 11:00(11:00 GMT)
Nicaragua’s five requests to the ICJ
During the court hearing earlier this month, Nicaragua requested five provisional measures.
They include:
- Germany shall immediately suspend its aid to Israel.
- Germany must immediately ensure that weapons already delivered to Israel are “not used to commit genocide, contribute to acts of genocide or are used in such a way as to violate international humanitarian law”.
- Germany must immediately do everything possible to comply with humanitarian law.
- Germany must reverse its decision to suspend the funding of UNRWA*.
- Germany must “cooperate to bring to an end the serious breaches of peremptory norms of international law by ceasing its support, including its supply of military equipment to Israel”.
*Last week, the German government announced it plans to resume cooperation with UNRWA following a report into the agency’s ability to ensure neutrality.

Members of the Nicaraguan delegation attend the second day of hearings at the ICJ in The Hague, April 9, 2024 [Mouneb Taim/Anadolu Agency] - 30 Apr 2024 - 10:45(10:45 GMT)
Germany denies claims of aiding ‘genocide’
At the ICJ earlier this month, Germany denied that it was aiding “genocide” in Gaza by giving military aid to Israel.
Tania von Uslar-Gleichen, a legal adviser for the German Foreign Ministry, was one of the representatives who laid out Berlin’s case at the World Court. She said Nicaragua’s case was rushed and based on flimsy evidence.
“Germany only supplies arms based on a meticulous scrutiny that far exceeds the demands of international law,” said von Uslar-Gleichen.
Those supplies are “subject to a continuous evaluation of the situation on the ground”.
“Germany is doing its utmost to live up to its responsibility vis-a-vis both the Israeli and the Palestinian people,” she said, adding that Israel’s security was a priority for Germany due to what the Nazis did during World War II.
“Germany has learned from its past, a past that includes the responsibility for one of the most horrific crimes in human history, the Shoah,” she said, using the Hebrew word.
- 30 Apr 2024 - 10:30(10:30 GMT)
Germany ‘well aware’ of risk of ‘genocide’, says Nicaragua
Earlier this month, Nicaragua took Germany to the ICJ and argued that it was violating the 1948 Genocide Convention and the 1949 Geneva Conventions by providing Israel with military aid to use during its war on Gaza.
“There can be no question that Germany … was well aware, and is well aware, of at least the serious risk of genocide being committed” in the Gaza Strip, Nicaragua’s agent ambassador Carlos Jose Arguello Gomez told the World Court.
He told the judges that Berlin was ignoring its obligations under international law by continuing to provide military assistance to Israel.
“This has got to stop,” Arguello Gomez said.
The representatives for Nicaragua also called for Germany to resume its support and financing of the UN agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA).
Updates: ICJ rules against imposing measures on Germany over Israel aid
These were the updates for the ICJ ruling on Nicaragua’s Gaza ‘genocide’ case against Germany for Tuesday, April 30, 2024.

Is Germany complicit in Israel's war on Gaza?
Published On 30 Apr 2024
This live page is now closed.
- Judges at the International Court of Justice (ICJ) have ruled against issuing emergency orders to stop German arms exports to Israel, adding they remain deeply concerned about conditions in Gaza.
- Nicaragua had argued during two days of hearings this month that Berlin violated the 1948 Genocide Convention and international law by supplying Israel with arms, accusing it of being well aware there was a risk of “genocide”.
- Germany had denied the accusations, with its lawyer arguing that Nicaragua’s case was rushed, based on flimsy evidence and should be thrown out for lack of jurisdiction.
- Germany is one of Israel’s biggest military suppliers, sending it 326.5 million euros ($353.7m) in equipment and weapons in 2023, according to Economy Ministry data.


