Los Angeles Times

U.S. decries ‘bias’ at U.N.

Decision to focus on Israel at human rights meeting is unfair, Trump envoy says.

- By Tracy Wilkinson tracy.wilkinson@latimes.com Twitter: @TracyKWilk­inson

WASHINGTON — Tensions between the Trump administra­tion and the United Nations flared again Monday when both the State Department and the U.S. ambassador to the U.N. accused the world body of siding against Israel in its conflict with the Palestinia­ns.

The administra­tion sharply attacked an agenda item in a U.N. meeting in Geneva that would have focused on alleged human rights abuse by Israel against Palestinia­ns.

Ambassador Nikki Haley, speaking from U.N. headquarte­rs in New York, said the decision to focus on Israel at the regular meeting of the U.N. Human Rights Council reflected long-standing “anti-Israel bias.”

“The United States will not participat­e” in the discussion­s “other than to vote against the outrageous, one-sided, anti-Israel resolution­s that so diminish what the Human Rights Council should be,” Haley said.

She said the constant focus on Israel allowed other countries to distract from their own, often-egregious human rights records.

State Department spokesman Mark Toner said the United States will vote against any resolution that emerges from the debate.

“It does not serve the interests of the council to single out one country in an unbalanced matter,” he said in Washington.

Last week, the United States denounced a report from a U.N. body that accused Israel of imposing an “apartheid regime” on Palestinia­n territorie­s.

The predominan­tly Arab group — the Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia — was forced to withdraw the report amid the controvers­y, and its leader, Rima Khalaf, resigned.

The United States and Israel had said the report was inflammato­ry and anti-Semitic, and praised U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres’ decision to accept Khalaf ’s resignatio­n.

U.N. spokesman Stephane Dujarric said that the problem was not the report’s content but that it had been published without going through proper secretaria­t channels.

The disputes come at a time when the new Trump administra­tion is proposing a drastic cutback in U.S. aid to U.N. programs and other multilater­al internatio­nal organizati­ons. Instead, the administra­tion wants to boost “hard power” defense spending by $54 billion annually.

The United States pays roughly one-fifth of the United Nations’ regular budget, and cuts of the size President Trump is proposing would dramatical­ly curtail peacekeepi­ng, health and educationa­l projects, advocates say.

 ?? Seth Wenig Associated Press ?? U.S. AMBASSADOR Nikki Haley said the constant focus on Israel allowed other nations to distract from their own, often-egregious human rights records.
Seth Wenig Associated Press U.S. AMBASSADOR Nikki Haley said the constant focus on Israel allowed other nations to distract from their own, often-egregious human rights records.

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