New Delhi, India – In 2020, the Indian authorities transferred Srinivasan Muralidhar, a choose in New Delhi, to a different court docket in the course of the evening in an alleged transfer to cease him from appearing in opposition to a politician from the governing get together.
Six years later, the 64-year-old retired choose finds himself behind the most far-reaching United Nations investigation but into Israel’s killing of Palestinian youngsters in Gaza.
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Revealed on June 23, the 94-page report by the UN Unbiased Worldwide Fee of Inquiry on the Occupied Palestinian Territory, together with East Jerusalem, and Israel examined alleged Israeli violations in opposition to Palestinian youngsters from the start of Israel’s genocidal warfare on Gaza in October 2023 to October 2025.
The fee, at present chaired by Muralidhar, was established by the UN Human Rights Council in Might 2021. It’s mandated to research alleged violations of worldwide legislation and look at the “root causes” of the Israel-Palestine battle.
Muralidhar joined the fee in November.
The fee discovered that Israel killed not less than 20,179 Palestinian children in two years of the warfare, accounting for almost 30 % of all Palestinian deaths.
The report additionally documented greater than 44,000 youngsters injured and an estimated 58,000 youngsters orphaned throughout the warfare.
It outlined a sample of snipers and precision drone strikes concentrating on youngsters, a blockade of humanitarian support that fuelled hunger and illness as immunisation charges fell and a scientific concentrating on of maternity and neonatal services that endangered Gaza’s newborns.
The report additionally documented allegations of sexual violence, arbitrary detentions and torture of Palestinian youngsters, significantly within the occupied West Financial institution.
‘Intentionally focused and killed’
The fee advisable that UN member states halt arms transfers to Israel that “have concerned or may contain the fee of genocide” and arrest Israeli officers wished by the Worldwide Legal Court docket (ICC), who embody Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
“The proof reveals that Palestinian youngsters have been intentionally focused and killed by the Israeli safety forces,” Muralidhar mentioned.
Israel’s Ministry of Overseas Affairs rejected the report in its entirety, calling it a “libellous sham” and describing the UN fee as a mechanism designed to “vilify” the nation. The report, it mentioned, “utterly erases Israeli youngsters who have been brutally murdered, kidnapped and focused by Hamas whereas ignoring Hamas’s cynical use of Palestinian youngsters as human shields and pawns of warfare”.
In the meantime, inflammatory rhetoric concentrating on Palestinian youngsters has come from high Israeli leaders because the October 7, 2023, Hamas-led assaults on southern Israel, together with Knesset Deputy Speaker Nissim Vaturi, who mentioned days after these assaults: “Don’t depart a single baby there. Expel all of the remaining ones, … so that they haven’t any likelihood of restoration.”
In a report launched in September, the UN fee discovered affordable grounds to conclude that Israeli authorities have been committing genocidal acts in opposition to Palestinians in Gaza. A “ceasefire” agreed a month later has not stopped the killings.
“The air strikes are persevering with, the killings are persevering with and the state of affairs is dire. It’s actually precarious,” Muralidhar instructed Al Jazeera on Monday.
He dismissed Israel’s declare that Hamas used Palestinian youngsters as human shields, calling it a fantasy and as an alternative noting that lots of the youngsters within the UN report have been killed whereas going about on a regular basis routines, not engaged in hostilities.
Muralidhar mentioned the report’s actual weight lies within the accountability it may set in movement.
He additionally pointed to 1000’s of overseas nationals serving within the Israeli navy whose house nations, as Geneva Conference signatories, are obligated to prosecute them for violations upon their return.
Muralidhar mentioned he personally has not been threatened because the report’s launch. However a fellow commissioner, Chris Sidoti, has confronted trolling and harassment since its publication.
Officers concerned in worldwide accountability work extra broadly have confronted rising strain, together with US sanctions on ICC judges and Palestinian rights teams linked to the court docket’s investigations into Israeli crimes.
“There are dangers, however you be taught to take these dangers,” Muralidhar instructed Al Jazeera.
After 4 many years in legislation, he mentioned, this was not a chance to cross up. “Everyone is what’s taking place in Palestine. They need to know why worldwide legislation and techniques aren’t working right here.”
Nonetheless, the UN report lands awkwardly for Muralidhar’s personal nation.
Since Prime Minister Narendra Modi got here to energy in 2014, India has turn into Israel’s most dependable arms purchaser, buying 37 % of its exports.
India’s Adani Group, led by Gautam Adani, a billionaire allied with Modi, sits on the centre of this relationship. In 2016, the group fashioned a three way partnership with Israel’s Elbit Methods to fabricate Hermes 900 drones, certainly one of Israel’s most well-liked instruments of warfare, at a facility within the southern Indian metropolis of Hyderabad. Different Indian companies, together with Tonbo Imaging, Bharat Forge and Tech Mahindra, have adopted swimsuit. In January 2023, Adani additionally acquired Israel’s largest port in Haifa together with Israeli group Gadot.
When requested about such enterprise partnerships between India and Israel, Muralidhar mentioned the legal responsibility just isn’t India’s alone.
“It may be any nation or firm, by way of arms or by way of logistics,” he mentioned.
Battle legal responsibility, in Muralidhar’s view, doesn’t cease at borders: It falls on any state or firm whose commerce or expertise finally ends up sustaining a warfare, wherever that warfare is being fought.
India and Israel weren’t all the time this shut.
For many years after its independence in 1947, India backed the Palestinian trigger, changing into the primary non-Arab nation to establish a Palestine.
Issues drastically modified in 2017 when Modi turned the primary Indian chief to go to Israel – a go to adopted by an unprecedented political and security alliance between the 2 right-wing governments.
Days earlier than Israel and america collectively attacked Iran in February, Modi again visited Israel, the place he was the recipient of an award from the Israeli parliament created proper earlier than his journey.
‘Solely choose with braveness to behave’
Muralidhar started his legislation apply within the southern metropolis of Chennai in 1984. He moved in 1987 to practise within the Supreme Court docket of India and the Delhi Excessive Court docket and counselled for India’s Nationwide Human Rights Fee and the Election Fee of India.
His professional bono work as a lawyer included representing victims of the Bhopal fuel catastrophe, the world’s deadliest industrial accident, which killed greater than 25,000 folks in 1984. Muralidhar additionally labored for communities displaced by dams on the Narmada River, a challenge that led to years of protests by tribal teams and activists.
He additionally earned a doctorate in legislation from the College of Delhi in 2003.
Appointed as a choose on the Delhi Excessive Court docket in 2006, Muralidhar constructed a popularity for defending civil liberties. In 2018, his bench convicted Sajjan Kumar, a former parliamentarian from the Indian Nationwide Congress get together, for inciting mobs within the 1984 anti-Sikh riots that killed greater than 3,000 folks, and sentenced him to life imprisonment, overturning a decrease court docket acquittal.
The identical 12 months, his bench heard the case of Najeeb Ahmad, a scholar at New Delhi’s Jawaharlal Nehru College who had been lacking since 2016 after a scuffle with members of a campus scholar group affiliated with the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, the Hindu far-right organisation that mentors Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Occasion (BJP).
Rebuking India’s premier investigating company, the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI), for its “full lack of curiosity” in Ahmad’s case, Muralidhar’s bench in its order mentioned protests over his disappearance have been a “democratic expression of the anxiousness of the folks”.
Ahmad stays lacking. A New Delhi court docket final 12 months accepted the CBI’s closure report within the case.
In 2018, Muralidhar was behind the conviction of 16 police personnel for the focused killing of greater than 40 Muslim males in 1987, three many years after a trial court docket acquitted them regardless of admissions that the custodial killings occurred.
In February 2020, as lethal spiritual riots tore by way of New Delhi, distinguished activist and author Harsh Mander and filmmaker Rahul Roy have been operating a residents’ management room to take cellphone calls the police had allegedly ignored, together with from a clinic the place males with bullet wounds would have died with out hospital entry.
Roy’s lawyer approached Muralidhar, who convened a midnight listening to at his residence to safe secure passage for the wounded. “I can say very clearly that he really saved this metropolis,” Roy mentioned. “It may have been a lot worse.”
The riots, which erupted within the aftermath of protests over a citizenship legislation, killed 53 folks, most of them Muslims.
The subsequent day, Colin Gonsalves, a Supreme Court docket lawyer and rights activist representing Mander, petitioned the court docket for pressing police motion in opposition to politicians accused of hate speech. Muralidhar’s bench ordered that movies of BJP chief Kapil Mishra’s speech inciting a crowd be performed in court docket. He later directed the police to file a case in opposition to Mishra inside 24 hours.
“Muralidhar was the one choose with the braveness to behave,” Gonsalves instructed Al Jazeera.
‘You’ve just one life’
However in what was extensively seen as punishment for his sturdy stand over the New Delhi riots, the federal government issued a midnight switch order for Muralidhar, packing him off to the Punjab and Haryana Excessive Court docket 240km (150 miles) away.
Six years on, no police report has been filed in opposition to Mishra, who now serves as a minister within the BJP-led Delhi state authorities.
Muralidhar’s switch sparked outrage. The Delhi Excessive Court docket Bar Affiliation held a strike to sentence it whereas the Congress get together accused Modi’s authorities of defending the BJP chief from prosecution.
However the switch didn’t soften Muralidhar’s strategy. Throughout his stint on the Punjab and Haryana Excessive Court docket, he rejected parole for Sanji Ram, convicted of masterminding the 2018 gang rape and homicide of an eight-year-old woman from a Muslim nomadic tribe in Indian-administered Kashmir.
In January 2021, Muralidhar was elevated to the chief justice of the Orissa Excessive Court docket, a put up he held till his retirement in August 2023. He was given an uncommon farewell in Odisha, the place tons of of attorneys lined up alongside the corridors and stairs on the court docket, throwing flowers at him as he walked out of the court docket for the final time.
Regardless of his credentials and {qualifications}, Muralidhar by no means reached the Supreme Court docket of India.
Years after the 2020 midnight switch, Roy met him once more. “I’m actually sorry that due to our petition, you have been transferred,” he remembered telling him. Muralidhar smiled. “Fortunately so. I’m glad,” he replied to Roy.
Each Gonsalves and Mander suppose Muralidhar’s determination to carry the federal government accountable for the New Delhi riots price him a Supreme Court docket seat.
“Judges who rule in opposition to the state within the excessive courts hardly ever make it to the Supreme Court docket, nonetheless competent,” Gonsalves mentioned.
“In a super world,” Mander added, “what Muralidhar did ought to have been the rule, not the exception.”
It was the UN, Mander added, that “in the end recognised his calibre, entrusting him with the Gaza inquiry that India’s personal judiciary wouldn’t reward with a Supreme Court docket seat”.
In his public lectures as properly, Muralidhar has spoken for the marginalised, as soon as arguing that India’s legal guidelines are structured to favour the wealthy and pointing to the disproportionate share of Muslims, Dalits and members of different marginalised teams amongst these arrested and prosecuted.
“You’ve just one life. It’s an enormous privilege being a lawyer,” Muralidhar mentioned. “Each time certainly one of us withdraws, there’s one individual much less to struggle injustice.”
