Canadian legal expert and human rights activist Prof. Irwin Cotler advises Israel’s new government not to pass judicial reforms that would significantly weaken the Supreme Court.

“Israel’s judiciary is a crown jewel, so if the reforms go through, the judiciary will be undermined,” Cotler said in an interview with The Jerusalem Report. “With judicial review prejudiced and protection of fundamental rights diminished,  it does not end democracy but it may be invoked to challenge the application of the ‘complementarity principle’ (which precludes the intervention of international tribunals when there is an independent judiciary exercising judicial review in the country over which jurisdiction is sought) to Israel and make it more subject to ICC jurisdiction.”

“Israel’s judiciary is a crown jewel, so if the reforms go through, the judiciary will be undermined. With judicial review prejudiced and protection of fundamental rights diminished,  it does not end democracy but it may be invoked to challenge the application of the ‘complementarity principle’ (which precludes the intervention of international tribunals when there is an independent judiciary exercising judicial review in the country over which jurisdiction is sought) to Israel and make it more subject to ICC jurisdiction.”Irwin Cotler

Cotler, who served as a member of the Canadian parliament from 1999 to 2015 and as minister of justice and attorney-general from 2003 until the Liberal government of Paul Martin lost power in the 2006 federal election, is widely considered one of the foremost constitutional law experts in the world. His career spans over 50 years in government and academia, including being a law professor specializing in constitutional and international human rights law.

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