States and international organizations In support South Africa's case has been supported by the following states and international organizations: On 10 January 2024, Brazilian President
Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva expressed support for the lawsuit, with the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs stating, "The president expressed his support for South Africa's initiative to call on the International Court of Justice to order Israel to immediately cease all acts and measures that may constitute genocide". On 9 January 2024, Belgian Deputy Prime Minister
Petra de Sutter stated she was encouraging her government to support the suit, stating, "Belgium cannot stand by and watch the immense human suffering in Gaza. We must act against the threat of genocide". Belgium's Development Minister
Caroline Gennez questioned Germany's stance, saying: "German friends: are you really going to be on the wrong side of history twice? Are we going to continue to stand by if ethnic cleansing were to take place? Surely that was
nie wieder? So I hope Germans will want to look deep into their own hearts, unburdened by their own historical traumas." Belgian PM
Alexander De Croo and foreign minister
Hadja Lahbib expressed disapproval with Gennez's comments, with the latter saying: "If we want to play a role, it should be that of mediator and not prosecutor." On 12 January 2024, Turkish President
Recep Tayyip Erdoğan expressed support for the lawsuit. On 12 January, the Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman
Maria Zakharova said that the "massive civilian casualties during the current escalation of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict are outrageous and deeply regrettable ... And in this regard, we understand the motives of South Africa's appeal to the International Court of Justice." On 21 January, Zakharova criticised Germany for its "unfettered support [...] to Israel while dismissing any possible consequences." Russia's Special Envoy for Syria, Alexander Lavrentiev, said on 25 January that the ICJ should legally classify Israel's actions in the Gaza Strip as genocide. On 14 January 2024,
Spanish Minister of Social Rights Pablo Bustinduy stated that they were working on making the Spanish government support the suit, by stating "full support for the lawsuit that South Africa has filed against Israel to stop the genocide of the Palestinian people. We will continue to demand that Spain joins this lawsuit and ask for the immediate recognition of the Palestinian state". On 26 January 2024, the
Spanish government issued a statement celebrating the International Court of Justice's decision, calling on all parties "to respect and comply with these measures in their entirety". The Irish government initially announced it will not join South Africa's case against Israel. Taoiseach
Leo Varadkar said: "I would be a little bit uncomfortable about accusing Israel, a Jewish state, of genocide given the fact that six million Jews – over half the population of Jews in Europe – were killed." On 24 January 2024, the Irish parliament voted not to support South Africa's case and instead voted to "strongly consider" intervening once the ICJ has made its order on preliminary measures. On 27 March, Ireland announced that it will intervene in the case. Following Ugandan judge Julia Sebutinde's vote to reject South Africa's request for provisional measures, the
Ugandan Ministry of Foreign Affairs released a statement that it supported South Africa's position and that Sebutinde's vote "does not in any way, reflect the position of the Government of the Republic of Uganda". In response to the court's interim ruling on the provisional measures,
African Union Commission chair
Moussa Faki Mahamat stated, "The ruling upholds the respect of international law and the need for Israel to imperatively comply with its obligations". The Arab League held an extraordinary session on 28 January to reach a "unified Arab stance" on how to ensure Israel's compliance with the interim ruling and how to hold it "accountable for incitement to genocide in Gaza". Palestinian Foreign Minister Riyad al-Maliki welcomed the ICJ's interim ruling, saying it "recognised the gravity of the situation on the ground". On 30 January 2024, the deputy Palestinian representative to the UN, stated, "Invoking the genocide convention... is part of an important and decisive shift that has been in the making for a long time." In March 2024, New Zealand's Minister of Foreign Affairs
Winston Peters stated, "New Zealand notes and welcomes the new additional measures issued by the International Court of Justice in its ongoing case on Gaza. We call on Israel to adhere to the new measures".
In opposition The following states have stated their support of Israel in opposition to the case: South Africa's case has been opposed by the
United States; U.S.
National Security Council spokesperson
John Kirby said the U.S. found the "submission meritless, counterproductive, completely without any basis in fact whatsoever". U.S. Secretary of State
Antony Blinken called the genocide accusation against Israel "meritless". The Guatemalan government issued a statement saying that the filing was regrettable and that Israel was making a "legitimate defense against the attacks of the terrorist group Hamas". The British government was accused of double standards and hypocrisy as the UK, as well as Canada, Germany, Denmark, France and the Netherlands, joined The Gambia's ICJ case against Myanmar in November 2023 for committing the Rohingya genocide. Foreign Secretary
David Cameron dismissed South Africa's ICJ genocide case as "nonsense", saying that Israel is "a democracy, a country with the rule of law, a country with armed forces that are committed to obeying the rule of law". The German government announced its opposition to South Africa's application and its intention to intervene before the ICJ on Israel's behalf. Germany's Vice Chancellor
Robert Habeck said Israel was not committing genocide in Gaza; German support for Israel was criticized by Namibian President
Hage Geingob who said Germany had failed to draw lessons after having perpetrated the 1904
Herero and Namaqua genocide (in present-day Namibia): "Germany cannot morally express commitment to the United Nations Convention against genocide, including atonement for the genocide in Namibia, whilst supporting the equivalent of a holocaust and genocide in Gaza." In March 2026 Germany withdrew from the case and announced it would no longer be making submissions on Israel's behalf, citing the need to prepare for
its own ICJ case.
Neutrality Canada's Prime Minister,
Justin Trudeau, said he did not accept the premise of South Africa's genocide motion, although Global Affairs Canada has stated that Canada will abide by the ICJ ruling in the case. Canada's unclear position caused confusion, and it was initially widely misreported that Canada opposed the application. Israel's Consul-General in Toronto, Idit Shamir, claimed that "Canada is siding with Israel in its defence against allegations of genocide." On 18 January 2024, Israel's ambassador to Canada called on the Canadian government to clarify its position. Australian Prime Minister
Anthony Albanese declared that the Australian government will not participate in South Africa's genocide case against Israel. Australian Foreign Minister
Penny Wong said that "Our support for the ICJ and respect for its independence does not mean we accept the premise of South Africa's case". Leader of the Opposition,
Peter Dutton, has criticised the Australian government's stance in failing to oppose the case against Israel, for voting to grant additional rights to the Palestinian delegation at the UN, for granting visas to Palestinians fleeing the conflict and for failing to vote against a UN vote that called for Israel to end the occupation of the Palestinian territories. The
European Commission's spokesperson on foreign affairs, Peter Stano, stated that "The European Union is not part of this lawsuit...This is not for us to comment at all." Later, after the ICJ made the provisional measures ruling, the Commission stated "Orders of the International Court of Justice are binding on the parties and they must comply with them. The EU expects their full, immediate and effective implementation." Nicaragua initially intervened in the case against Israel, but withdrew its intervention on April 3, 2025.
Movements, parties, and unions The lawsuit has also been supported by hundreds of activist groups, NGOs, political parties, unions, and other organizations, with (as of mid-January 2024) over 1,400 showing support in the form of a letter organized by the newly-formed International Coalition to Stop Genocide in Palestine. Some of that letter's signatories, and other supportive organizations, include:
Individuals and other groups Public opinion A poll in August 2025 by The Economist and YouGov showed an increase in the percentage of Americans who believe Israel is committing genocide against Palestinian civilians. In this poll, 43% responded "yes," compared to 28% who said "no," while 29% remained unsure. This marks a rise from a January 2024 poll by the same organizations, where 35% answered "yes," 36% said "no," and 29% were unsure. A June 2024 poll by
Léger and commissioned by the
National Post found that 45% of Canadians believe that Israel is committing genocide in the Gaza Strip, with 23% saying that it isn't, and 32% saying that they don't know. In June 2025, a YouGov poll commissioned by
Action for Humanity and the
International Centre of Justice for Palestinians found that 45% of adults in the UK believe that Israel’s actions in Gaza "amount to the crime of genocide".
Academics Raz Segal, an Israeli historian of genocide, stated the case was notable due to the "mountain of evidence on genocidal intent that's been expressed by people with command authority". Responding to the court's ruling on the provisional measures, Ilias Bantekas, a professor at
Hamad Bin Khalifa University, stated, "Reading between the lines, this is a clear call that there is evidence that Israel has committed genocide." Professor
Diana Buttu criticized Canada's response to the interim ruling for including "racist Israeli talking points". A group of New Zealand's legal experts, led by
David Williams and
Jane Kelsey, signed an open-letter urging Prime Minister
Christopher Luxon to support South Africa's petition. Marco Sassoli, a professor of international law at the
University of Geneva, said that not "everyone in the West is in favour of Israel and [not] everyone in the Global South is opposed to Israel," adding that "Both Western States and the Global South have double standards. Double standards are a poison for the credibility of international law." Professor
Alan Dershowitz argued that Israel made a mistake in submitting to the jurisdiction of the ICJ court, because "...it is not a real court...it reflects foreign policy, not rule of law, not judiciary". He further asserted that "[the accusation of genocide against Israel] ...is one of the most absurd abuses of the judicial process in modern history".
Officials Rosalie Silberman Abella, a former
puisne justice of the
Supreme Court of Canada, called the ICJ proceedings an "abuse of the principles of the international legal order." Pierre Poilievre, leader of Canada's
official opposition, the
Conservative Party, called the accusation "a shameless and dishonest attack on Jewish people and the Jewish state."
Ofer Cassif, an Israeli politician representing the left-wing party
Hadash, signed South Africa's petition and accused Israel of genocide. In response, lawmakers began proceedings to expel him from the Knesset. The motion ultimately failed to obtain the required
super-majority in the
Knesset and Cassif retained his seat. However, other Israeli officials rejected the ruling and two ministers in the coalition government accused the court of having an antisemitic bias.
Volker Türk, the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, said: "It is not a blood libel to deplore the failure to hold to account Israeli soldiers and armed settlers who have killed hundreds of Palestinians in the West Bank since October 7, or the prolongation of a war whose conduct has raised grave international humanitarian and human rights law concerns." UK Shadow Foreign Secretary
David Lammy stated the ICJ interim ruling "sets out urgent provisional measures that must be followed. Israel must now comply with the orders in this ruling in full".
Religious groups The
National Council of Canadian Muslims said it was "beyond disappointed" by the Canadian government's response.
Christian Zionist groups throughout South Africa, including Christian View Network, Bridges for Peace and International Christian Embassy in Jerusalem, condemned their government's decision to take Israel to the ICJ.
Other On 9 January 2024, an open letter to the ICJ signed by over 600 Israelis stated their support for South Africa's case. On 18 January, a group of survivors of the
Bosnian genocide wrote an open-letter to the ICJ, urging the court to "implement necessary provisional measures swiftly to protect Palestinians in Gaza" and avoid repeating the "grievous mistake" of failing to protect civilians from genocide. Writing for
Foreign Policy,
Sasha Polakow-Suransky criticized the South African government for hypocrisy and double standards, recalling that South Africa failed to arrest Sudanese President
Omar al-Bashir during his visit to South Africa, despite Bashir being accused of
genocide and wanted by the
International Criminal Court (ICC), and did not condemn Russia's
invasion of Ukraine and was reluctant to comply with the International Criminal Court's arrest warrant for Russian President
Vladimir Putin. Likewise, the analyist Stephan Pechdimaldji, in
Foreign Policy, said Turkey's request to join the case "highlights the unfettered hypocrisy that characterizes genocide allegations made by many governments", writing that Turkey's
continued denial of the
Armenian genocide gives it "little credibility being an arbiter of what constitutes genocide". == Impact ==