The Spanish prosecutor's office will investigate Israel's "crimes" in Gaza.
The findings will be submitted to the international courts that already have open cases against the Jewish state.


BarcelonaThe Attorney General of Spain, Álvaro García Ortiz, has ordered the opening of an investigation in Spain into Israel's "crimes" in Gaza. According to SER (Spanish National News Service) and confirmed by the Prosecutor's Office, the investigation had been requested by Dolores Delgado, the Prosecutor for Human Rights and Democratic Memory, to determine whether the Jewish state's actions could constitute "serious violations of international human rights law and international humanitarian law, constituting crimes." These include the crimes of genocide and crimes against humanity against persons and property protected in the event of armed conflict. Delgado, former Minister of Justice under Pedro Sánchez, requested the investigation after receiving a report from the National Police last June, which included witnesses and evidence pointing to Israel committing actions contrary to international law in Gaza. She herself, along with the head of the Prosecutor's Office at the National Court, Jesús Alonso, will lead the proceedings, as decreed by the Attorney General. The conclusions of the investigation, similar to the one launched by the Spanish Prosecutor's Office to investigate Russian war crimes in Ukraine, will be submitted to the international bodies that already have open cases against Israel.
Ortiz's decree, in fact, recalls the existence of two procedures in international courts: one in the International Court of Justice, which investigates the commission of genocide in Gaza, and another in the International Criminal Court (ICC), which issued one almost a year ago Arrest warrant issued for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his former Defense Minister, Yoav Gallant. The Attorney General, who recalls that these are international organizations with which Spain has the "obligation" to cooperate, also refers to the report published this week by the UN in which calls what is happening in Gaza genocide and calls on Member States to act.
In his writing, which comes in full Tension between Spain and Israel over the actions of the Spanish government against the Jewish state, García Ortiz argues that "the legal grounds are met" to open an investigation into the extermination in the Strip given the "special significance" and "gravity" of the events, as well as the "number of victims so far." Since October 7, 2023, nearly 65,000 people have been killed by Israeli bombs in Gaza, many of them women and children. "The events that occurred would constitute serious violations of international human rights law, making an effective investigation particularly unique and complex, which also has international implications," the attorney general states in his brief.
Delgado: "We cannot accuse Netanyahu"
Now, beyond the Spanish prosecutor's office's collaboration with international proceedings, could the Spanish justice system investigate and prosecute the Israeli government for its crimes? Organic Law of the Judiciary It establishes that Spanish courts may only investigate events outside Spanish territory that could constitute the crimes of genocide or crimes against humanity when the case is directed against a Spaniard, a foreign citizen who habitually resides in Spain, or who is in Spain and whose extradition has been denied.
The same rule prevents proceedings from being opened for these and other crimes if there is already a case pending in an international court, as is the case with Netanyahu. The Prosecutor's Office of the National Court, as reported this Thursday by the Efe news agency, has used this argument to reject the admission of a complaint by members of the Gaza Flotilla against the Prime Minister and Israeli military commanders for the assault on the Madleen ship on June 8, as it was heading to the Strip.
"We could never pursue or accuse Netanyahu," said Prosecutor Delgado herself in statements to SER (Spanish radio station). "However, we must gather evidence and consolidate the proof of this possible commission of genocide [...] We must preserve the evidence, cooperate with the ICC, and provide it with this evidence in order to later determine any potential responsibilities," he added. In this regard, he emphasized that this court "does not have its own police force" and, therefore, "requires the States to conduct its investigations and enforce its orders."