U.S. Congress Gets Bill To Review Relations With South Africa Following ‘Politically Motivated’ ICJ Genocide Case Against Israel

  • U.S. Congress accuses President Cyril Ramaphosa of making anti-semitic statements accusing Israel of genocide. 

A bill has been submitted to the United States (U.S.) Congress calling for a full review of the country’s bilateral relationship with South Africa following the International Court of Justice (ICJ) ruling that found it plausible that Israel has committed acts of genocide in Gaza in its war against Hamas.

The bipartisan bill which was introduced by U.S. Republican Congressman John James and Democratic Party Congressman Jared Moskowitz this week could threaten South Africa’s prospects to benefit from the African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA). 

The bill, which is yet to be discussed and passed by Congress, states that not later than 30 days after the date of enactment of this Act, U.S. President Joe Biden, in consultation with the Secretary of State and the Secretary of Defence, shall certify to the appropriate Congressional Committees and release publicly an unclassified determination explicitly stating whether South Africa has engaged in activities that undermine United States national security or foreign policy interests.

It further states that the U.S. government must provide an unclassified report submitted to the appropriate Congressional Committees justifying the determination upon its certificate.

South African U.S. Embassy Mission Spokesperson, David Feldmann, declined to comment.

The bill accuses the South Africa’s ruling African Congress (ANC) of acting inconsistent with its publicly stated policy of non-alignment in international affairs, stating that the South African Government has a history of siding with malign actors, including Hamas and the Russian Federation.

The ANC and the South African government have however been known to have ties with the Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO) dating back to fight against apartheid regime in Pretoria and the ascension of late President Nelson Mandela in office in 1994.

The U.S. Congress bill argues that the South African government’s support of Hamas dates back to 1994, when the ANC first came into power, taking a hardline stance of consistently accusing Israel of practising apartheid.

“Following Hamas’ unprovoked and unprecedented horrendous attack on Israel on October 7, 2023, where Hamas terrorists killed and kidnapped hundreds of Israelis, members of the South African Government and leaders of the ANC have delivered a variety of anti-semitic and anti-Israel-related statements and actions,” it reads. 

The U.S. Congress states that some of the anti-semitic remarks include President Cyril Ramaphosa’s statements accusing Israel of genocide. 

It said that the anti-semitic statements also include International Relations and Cooperations Minister Naledi Pandor’s statement expressing concern about escalating violence, urging Israel’s restraint in response.

It adds that Pandor implicitly blamed Israel for provoking the attack through “continued illegal occupation of Palestine land, continued settlement expansion, desecration of the Al Aqsa Mosque and Christian holy sites, and ongoing oppression of the Palestinian people. 

It accused the ANC National Spokesperson Mahlengi Bhengu-Motsiri of anti-semitic remarks after stating that the decision by Palestinians to respond to the brutality of the settler Israeli apartheid regime is unsurprising. 

“On December 29, 2023, South Africa filed a politically motivated suit in the International Court of Justice wrongfully accusing Israel of committing genocide. The South African Government has pursued increasingly close relations with the Russian Federation, which has been accused of perpetrating war crimes in Ukraine and indiscriminately undermines human rights. South Africa’s robust relationship with Russia spans the military and political space, including allowing a United States-sanctioned Russian cargo ship, the Lady R, to dock and transfer arms at a South African naval base in December 2022,” the bill stated. 

It also cites that South Africa dispatched multiple high-level official delegations to Russia to further political, intelligence, and military cooperation.

The congress bill states that South Africa and the ANC’s relationship with the Chinese government and its ruling Chinese Communist Party(CCP) – which is committing gross violations of human rights in the Xinjiang province and implementing economically coercive tactics around the globe – undermine South Africa’s democratic constitutional system of governance. 

These acts include what it says are ongoing ANC and CCP inter-party cooperation; recruitment of former United States and NATO fighter pilots to train Chinese People’s Liberation Army pilots at the Test Flying Academy of South Africa; South Africa’s hosting of 6 Chinese government-backed and CCP-linked Confucius Institutes; South Africa’s participation in a political training school in Tanzania funded by the Chinese Communist Party, cooperation with the Chinese global Belt and Road Initiative; and the widespread presence in South Africa’s media and technology sectors of PRC state linked firms. 

“The ANC-led South African Government has a history of substantially mismanaging a range of state resources and has often proven incapable of effectively delivering public services, threatening the South African people and the South African economy,” the bill stated. 

The bill accuses Ramaphosa of having declared the national state of disaster over the worsening energy crisis, “the worsening, multi-year power crisis caused by the ANC’s chronic mismanagement of the state owned power company Eskom, resulting from endemic, high-level corruption.”

It states that the persistence of Transnet’s insufficient capacity, an on-going outbreak of cholera, a failure to provide clean water to households and rampant state capture are part of ANC governments mismanagement of the State.

@The Mail & Guardian, South Africa

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