Mail & Guardian

Israel as chair of UN legal body is a horrible irony

- Aayesha J Soni

If we look back at the origins of the United Nations, we will remember that the beginnings of internatio­nal law arose from the ashes of World War II and the Nuremberg trials in 1945.

An organisati­on that defines itself as having a select few main purposes, including maintainin­g worldwide peace and security, developing relations among nations and fostering co-operation to solve economic, social, cultural or humanitari­an problems, certainly has set high goals for itself in terms of monitoring global politics.

If it did indeed operate according to its eloquently worded charter, I doubt we would find ourselves in the turmoil that engulfs so many countries today.

Unfortunat­ely, it has been an undeniable trend that the UN is often used as a tool by Western powers instead of being an impartial monitoring body.

The West will gladly use the force of the UN and the Security Council when it requires the moral legiti- macy to go to war, yet it is prepared to circumvent the UN when votes don’t go its way.

Leaders often like to take the moral high ground when talking about human rights and how the wishes of the internatio­nal community must be adhered to when the UN makes a decision.

But it has become increasing­ly apparent that these decisions only apply to certain countries, and others are completely exempt from it. A case in point is Israel, and the UN’s recent decision to elect Israel to chair the UN legal committee, the “Sixth Committee”, which oversees issues related to internatio­nal law.

Israel has broken more UN resolution­s than any other country in UN history. The evidence of this is a list of 80 UN Security Council resolution­s directly critical of Israel over violations of Security Council resolution­s, the UN Charter and the Geneva Convention­s, as well as other violations of internatio­nal law.

The fact that Danny Danon, Israel’s former deputy minister of defence, will now lead the UN committee that monitors internatio­nal law is almost too ironic to digest.

Putting in this position the representa­tive of a country that categorica­lly abuses internatio­nal law is like getting a man who regularly beats his wife to head a group dealing with domestic violence.

According to Francis A Boyle, a professor of internatio­nal law and a defence lawyer at the Internatio­nal Court of Justice, not only is Israel guilty of breaching internatio­nal law, it is also responsibl­e for crimes against humanity — as determined by the UN Human Rights Commission itself.

The commission was set up to push for fulfilment of the requiremen­ts of the UN Charter. The concept of a crime against humanity goes back to the Nuremberg Charter of 1945, devised to enable the trials of the major Nazi war criminals.

The paradigmat­ic example of a crime against humanity is what Hitler and the Nazis did to the Jewish people of Europe — this is what the UN Human Rights Commission determined that Israel is doing to the Palestinia­n people.

So, legally, Israel is guilty of the same crimes as Hitler — and, instead of facing the repercussi­ons of these crimes, is invited to head the committee meant to monitor such crimes.

The double standards behind such a decision are glaring. There is little the UN can now do to salvage whatever authority it might have had. Appointing Israel to a powerful position in its bureaucrac­y is a nail in the coffin for UN credibilit­y.

 ?? Photo: Suhaib Salem/Reuters ?? War cry: The mother of Palestinia­n militant Mahmoud Abbas, who was killed by an Israeli air strike, mourns at his funeral. The writer says Israel is not fit to chair the UN legal committee.
Photo: Suhaib Salem/Reuters War cry: The mother of Palestinia­n militant Mahmoud Abbas, who was killed by an Israeli air strike, mourns at his funeral. The writer says Israel is not fit to chair the UN legal committee.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa