The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

U.S., Israel exit UN cultural agency, claiming bias

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PARIS >> The United States and Israel officially quit the U.N.’s educationa­l, scientific and cultural agency at the stroke of midnight, the culminatio­n of a process triggered more than a year ago amid concerns that the organizati­on fosters anti-Israel bias.

The withdrawal is mainly procedural yet serves a new blow to UNESCO, co-founded by the U.S. after World War II to foster peace.

The Trump administra­tion filed its notice to withdraw in October 2017 and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu followed suit.

The Paris-based organizati­on has been denounced by its critics as a crucible for anti-Israel bias: blasted for criticizin­g Israel’s occupation of east Jerusalem, naming ancient Jewish sites as Palestinia­n heritage sites and granting full membership to Palestine in 2011.

Israeli U.N. envoy Danny Danon said Tuesday that his country “will not be a member of an organizati­on whose goal is to deliberate­ly act against us, and that has become a tool manipulate­d by Israel’s enemies.”

The U.S. has demanded “fundamenta­l reform” in the agency that is best known for its World Heritage program to protect cultural sites and traditions. UNESCO also works to improve education for girls, promote understand­ing of the Holocaust’s horrors, and to defend media freedom.

The withdrawal­s will not greatly impact UNESCO financiall­y, since it has been dealing with a funding slash ever since 2011, when both Israel and the U.S. stopped paying dues after Palestine was voted in as a member state. Since then officials estimate that the U.S. — which accounted for around 22 percent of the total budget — has accrued $600 million in unpaid dues, which was one of the reasons for President Donald Trump’s decision to withdraw. Israel owes an estimated $10 million.

UNESCO Director General Audrey Azoulay took up her post just after Trump announced the pullout. Azoulay, who has Jewish and Moroccan heritage, has presided over the launch of a Holocaust education website and the U.N.’s first educationa­l guidelines on fighting anti-Semitism — initiative­s that might be seen as responding to U.S. and Israeli concerns.

Officials say that many of the reasons the U.S. cited for withdrawal do not apply anymore, noting that since then, all 12 texts on the Middle East passed at UNESCO have been consensual among Israel and Arab member states.

In April, Israel’s ambassador to UNESCO said the mood was “like a wedding” after member nations signed off on a rare compromise resolution on “Occupied Palestine,” and UNESCO diplomats hailed a possible breakthrou­gh on longstandi­ng IsraeliAra­b tensions.

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