The Jerusalem Post

UN doesn’t blacklist Hamas for rape

Israel ‘disgusted’ by omission, the US was silent

- • By TOVAH LAZAROFF

The United Nations omitted Hamas from its blacklist of state and non-state parties guilty of sexual violence in 2023, due to a lack of what it deemed to be credible evidence.

The blacklist was part of a larger annual report on sexual violence authored by UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, which was completed this month and debated Tuesday at the UN Security Council.

Guterres’s April report described sexual violence in 18 conflict settings or situations of concern, including the Hamas-led October invasion of Israel and Russia’s war against Ukraine.

But it found that credible evidence meeting UN criteria was strong enough in only 11 of those situations such that it could blacklist the responsibl­e parties. Neither Hamas nor Russia were among those parties meeting that criteria and so they were not included on the list.

Israel’s Foreign Minister Israel Katz said he was “disgusted” by the report in a statement released to the media, while the UNSC debate took place on what would have been the first day of Passover in the US.

Katz called it a “failure in a long series of failures” by the UN and its institutio­ns, which had not once condemned Hamas for the October 7 attack in which over 1,200 people were killed and 253 hostages were seized.

“Guterres has turned the UN into an extremely antisemiti­c and anti-Israel institutio­n during his tenure, which will be remembered as the darkest in the organizati­on’s history,” Katz said.

He added that he was convinced that if the UN had existed during the Holocaust and in the lead-up to it, and “if the crimes of the Nazis had come up for debate, he would have refused to denounce them if it suited his political interests.”

US Ambassador to the UN Linda Thomas-Greenfield welcomed the report and mentioned its inclusion of the Hamas-led October 7 attack when she addressed the Security Council on Tuesday.

“From Nigeria to Israel, Myanmar to Sudan, Haiti to the Democratic Republic of the Congo, we have seen terrorist groups, criminal gangs, and non-state armed groups abducting and sexually exploiting women and girls. We’ve seen

rape being used as a tool of war,” she said.

“And I’ll note that the report calls for the release of the nearly 3,000 Yazidis who are still missing, as well as hostages kidnapped by Hamas and other terrorist groups from Israel on October 7. We know from UN reporting that many of these hostages have experience­d sexual violence while in captivity,” Thomas-Greenfield said.

But the ambassador did not mention Hamas’s omission from the blacklist of perpetrato­rs attached to the report.

In describing the October 7 attack, Guterres’ April report drew on informatio­n from a report published earlier this year that he had commission­ed by Pramila Patten, who is his special representa­tive on Sexual Violence in Conflict.

Patten’s report “found reasonable grounds to believe” that sexual-related violence occurred during the October 7 attack, including rape and gang rape.”

She also received clear and convincing informatio­n that the hostages held in Gaza were subject to sexual violence.

Guterres’ April report referenced those points but noted that Patten’s research was limited and could not be considered a fullfledge­d investigat­ion.

His April sexual violence report called for a full-fledged investigat­ion to be held into the October 7 attack and the treatment of the hostages. The April report also addressed allegation­s of Israeli sexual violence against Palestinia­n detainees

and prisoners, stating that the UN had confirmed acts of sexual assault, including threats of rape, kicking of genitals and stripping male detainees naked.

Guterres’ spokespers­on Stephane Dujarric underscore­d for that the list of credible parties responsibl­e for sexual violence attached to the report, dubbed the blacklist, was “based on UN verified informatio­n.”

“This is why we are saying that such a determinat­ion would require a fully-fledged investigat­ion, which the report calls for,” he said.

“It’s also important to remember that the report is produced based on a very specific Security Council mandate and that the informatio­n contained has to meet certain criteria,” Dujarric explained.

“That being said, the secretary-general has been very clear calling out Hamas and condemning the acts of terror, including the sexual violence that occurred on 7 October.”

The 18 countries Guterres referenced in his report in which sexual violence had occurred were: Afghanista­n, the Central African Republic, Columbia, the Congo, Ethiopia, Haiti, Iraq, Israel, Libya, Mali, Myanmar, Nigeria, Somalia, South Sudan, Sudan, Syrian Arab Republic, Ukraine, and Yemen.

Those situations where responsibl­e parties were omitted from the blacklist included: Afghanista­n, Columbia, Ethiopia, Israel, Libya, Ukraine, and Yemen.

 ?? (Eduardo Munoz/Reuters) ?? UNITED NATIONS Secretary General Antonio Guterres speaks to members of Security Council last week.
(Eduardo Munoz/Reuters) UNITED NATIONS Secretary General Antonio Guterres speaks to members of Security Council last week.

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