The Jerusalem Post

West holds de facto boycott of UNHRC’s Agenda Item 7 debate

- • By TOVAH LAZAROFF

Western nations held a de facto boycott of the Agenda Item 7 debate against Israel at the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva on Monday.

Only 22%, 43 nations out of the 193 UN countries who could have taken the floor, stood up to condemn Israel.

France, which had initially signed up to speak, changed its mind at the last moment and was not present in the room when its name was called.

The silence marked a slim sign of continued success for the Israeli and US campaign to abolish the UNRHC mandate that requires a debate on Israeli actions against the Palestinia­ns at every council session under Agenda Item 7.

All other alleged human rights abuses around the globe are dealt with under Agenda Item 4, save for Israel, which is the only country with a permanent dedicated agenda item.

This spring the US had unsuccessf­ully pushed for a UN General Assembly resolution to eliminate Agenda Item 7 before deciding to quit the UNHRC last month.

But in the last five years, European and Western countries, even those among Israel’s harshest critics such as Ireland, have increasing­ly refrained from speaking under Agenda Item 7.

Israel’s Foreign Ministry had no comment about the small showing of speakers for Monday’s debate during the UNHRC’s 38th session, which ends this week.

Strategic Affairs Minister Gilad Erdan, however, tweeted a comment during the debate.

“Shame on every country that takes part in this #WorldCup of hate! Every country that cares about HR [human rights] must leave the #UNHRC until #item 7 is history.”

Israel and the US were absent from the room altogether, but a number of Western countries remained in the room.

Palestinia­n Authority Ambassador Ibrahim Khraishi thanked those states who engaged with the “general debate of Item 7 [against] the will and wish of the occupying power to not participat­e in the debate on this item which deals with the illegal practices of the occupation and the refusal to comply

with internatio­nal humanitari­an law.”

Those who support Israeli violations against the Palestinia­n people “should withdraw from the council and not come back until they change this approach that is destructiv­e of law and morality and principles, and adds more radicalism and promotes terrorism,” Khraishi said.

The US, he said, participat­es in Israeli “violations,” including the relocation of its embassy to Jerusalem from Tel Aviv in May.

He also called on the UNHRC to finish its database of companies doing business with firms in the West Bank, east Jerusalem and the Golan Heights.

Later in the day, under Agenda Item 9, Hungary delivered a strong statement against antisemiti­sm, stating that like other forms of discrimina­tion, it “poses a threat to the peaceful enjoyment of human rights of all peoples but also contribute­s to the evolution of a hostile climate feeding on extremism, terrorism and criminalit­y.”

“The worrying rise of antisemiti­c hatred and violence, however, is not a problem for Jewish communitie­s alone but an affront against humanity that affects the societies in which it rises and which needs to be countered by the internatio­nal community as a whole.” •

 ?? (Screenshot/UN) ?? ISRAEL’S EMPTY SEAT at the UNHRC in Geneva.
(Screenshot/UN) ISRAEL’S EMPTY SEAT at the UNHRC in Geneva.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel