UN cites 'growing body of evidence' of Hamas's sexual violence during Oct. 7 attacks
Experts demand accountability amid 'particularly harrowing' evidence
UN experts on Monday demanded accountability for sexual violence against Israeli civilians during the Oct. 7 Hamas attacks, saying that mounting evidence of rapes and genital mutilation point to possible crimes against humanity.
Israeli authorities have opened an investigation into possible sexual crimes during the most deadly attack on Israel in its history. Hamas denies the abuses.
"The growing body of evidence about reported sexual violence is particularly harrowing," two UN-appointed independent experts said in a statement on Monday. The statement referred to allegations of sexual torture including rape and gang rape as well as mutilations and gunshots to genital areas.
"These acts constitute gross violations of international law, amounting to war crimes which, given the number of victims and the extensive premeditation and planning of the attacks, may also qualify as crimes against humanity," the experts said.
"Each and every victim deserves to be recognized, regardless of their ethnicity, religion or sex, and our role is to be their voice," they added.
Israel has previously criticized the global body for not doing enough to address the issue as part of a bid to get greater recognition for the alleged crimes.
In November, the group Physicians for Human Rights Israel published a report on the sexual violence that occurred on Oct. 7 based on open-source photos, video, information and its own interviews. The group documented such incidents at the Nova music festival near Israel's southern border, homes around the Gaza Strip and an Israeli military base.
"It is becoming more apparent that the violence perpetrated against women, men and children also included widespread sexual and gender-based crimes," the report said.
The government of Israel also presented evidence to the United Nations in early December, drawing on eyewitness testimony from volunteers and police about the brutalities they'd seen.
The two experts on torture and on executions — Alice Jill Edwards and Morris Tidball-Binz — have raised the issue with Hamas authorities, they said.
Edwards is the UN's special rapporteur on torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment. Tidball-Binz is a special rapporteur on extra-judicial or arbitrary executions.
Both experts have also written to Israel's government and called for co-operation with their investigators.