
Justice Minister Advances Tribunal That Could Impose Death Penalty for October 7 Atrocities
Justice Minister Yariv Levin announced plans on Thursday, October 16, 2025, to establish a special tribunal to try Gazan suspects accused of participating in the October 7, 2023 massacres. Drafted jointly with MKs Simcha Rothman and Yulia Malinovsky, the bill would allow prosecutors to bring cases under Israel’s 1950 Law for the Prevention of Genocide—legislation rooted in the 1948 Genocide Convention—which can carry a death sentence in extreme cases. Levin said extensive investigations by police, the Shin Bet, and the State Attorney’s Office have yielded “unprecedented” volumes of evidence, including body-camera footage and thousands of hours of testimony.
Under the proposal, fifteen judges—Israeli or qualified international jurists—would staff the tribunal. Individual cases would be heard by three-judge panels, with proceedings involving multiple defendants handled by five-judge panels; appeals would go to the full bench. The Justice Ministry emphasized that any decision to seek capital punishment would require the prime minister’s approval in consultation with senior security officials. Officials argue the framework is necessary to process dozens of complex cases efficiently and transparently after living hostages were returned under the truce.
The measure has stirred legal and ethical debate, but supporters say it reflects the gravity of the crimes and the need to deter future atrocities. Preparations for indictments—covering genocide, crimes against humanity, murder, rape, and hostage-taking—are said to be underway, with lawmakers signaling an intent to move the bill quickly to a first reading.
(TOI/VFI News)
“Learn to do good; seek justice, correct oppression.” – Isaiah 1:17