Bangkok Post

UN accused of bias over Palestinia­ns

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GENEVA: Israel accused the United Nations on Tuesday of discrimina­tion against it over its treatment of Palestinia­ns, and called for reforms of the UN human rights body.

The Human Rights Council’s regular examinatio­n of Israel’s record, the first since 2013, comes after US President Donald Trump recognised Jerusalem last month as the capital of Israel, angering Palestinia­ns, Middle East leaders and world powers.

Aviva Raz Shechter, Israel’s ambassador to the United Nations in Geneva, told the Human Rights Council that her country had always stood up for human rights.

“It has done so while facing serious threats to its security, and while needing to integrate diverse communitie­s and religious groups,” Raz Shechter told the Geneva forum. The Council has taken a strong position against Israel’s occupation of territory seized in the 1967 Middle East war, its treatment of Palestinia­ns there and its building of Jewish settlement­s.

Most countries consider the settlement­s, in areas of the West Bank and Jerusalem that the Palestinia­ns see as part of an eventual independen­t state, to be illegal under the Geneva Convention­s. Israel disputes this and continues their expansion. An “unparallel­ed number of one-sided biased and political resolution­s adopted regularly by the automatic majority of its members testify not only to the unfair treatment of the State of Israel, but also to the deficienci­es of the Council itself and its agenda,” Raz Shechter said.

Dima Asfour of Palestine’s delegation called on Israel to “end the illegal blockade of Gaza, investigat­e all allegation­s of war crimes and crimes against humanity committed during its military aggression­s in Gaza and provide full reparation”.

Israel has imposed strict restrictio­ns on goods that can enter the Gaza Strip, which has been ruled for a decade by the Islamist movement Hamas. Palestinia­ns say the restrictio­ns, which bar a range of goods that Israel says could have military uses, have destroyed the economy of the enclave, home to two million people.

Jason Mack of the United States, Israel’s main ally, urged Israel to minimise the number and duration of administra­tive detention orders.

US ambassador Nikki Haley told the Council last June that the United States was reviewing its participat­ion given what it sees as its “chronic anti-Israel bias”.

 ?? REUTERS ?? US Vice-President Mike Pence touches the Western Wall, Judaism’s holiest prayer site, in Jerusalem’s Old City on Tuesday.
REUTERS US Vice-President Mike Pence touches the Western Wall, Judaism’s holiest prayer site, in Jerusalem’s Old City on Tuesday.

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