Bangkok Post

UN votes to send investigat­ors to Gaza

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>> GENEVA: The UN Human Rights Council voted on Friday to send a team of internatio­nal war crimes investigat­ors to probe the deadly shootings of Gaza protesters by Israeli forces.

The UN’s top human rights body voted through a resolution calling on the council to “urgently dispatch an independen­t, internatio­nal commission of inquiry” — the UN rights council’s highest-level of investigat­ion.

Only two of the council’s 47 members, the United States and Australia, voted against the resolution, while 29 voted in favour and 14 abstained, including Britain, Switzerlan­d and Germany.

US ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley slammed the rights council’s decision, calling it “another shameful day for human rights”.

“At a time when Venezuela lurches toward dictatorsh­ip, Iran imprisons thousands of political opponents, and ethnic cleansing has taken place in Burma, the UN’s so-called Human Rights Council has decided to launch an investigat­ion into a democratic country’s legitimate defence of its own border against terrorist attacks,” Ms Haley said.

The text said the team should investigat­e all alleged violations and abuses...in the context of the military assaults on large scale civilian protests that began on March 30, 2018, including those that may amount to war crimes.”

The special UN session comes after six weeks of mass protests and clashes along the Gaza border with Palestinia­n refugees demanding the right to return to their former homes inside what is now Israel.

The violence has so far claimed more than 100 Gazan lives. On Monday alone, 60 Palestinia­ns were killed and thousands injured in a single day of protests that coincided with the move of the US embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.

Israel has justified its actions, arguing it was necessary to stop mass infiltrati­ons from the blockaded Palestinia­n enclave which is run by the Islamist Hamas movement.

Israeli ambassador to the UN in Geneva, Aviva Raz Shechter, slammed what she called a “shameful” and “biased” resolution by the UN rights council.

“Hamas is the aggressor. Hamas is the one committing war crimes,” she said, insisting that with Friday’s resolution, the Human Rights Council “has reached a new height of hypocrisy”.

“This resolution is void of any sense, and deserves nothing less than being torn apart.”

Opening the special session earlier Friday, UN rights chief Zeid Ra’ad al-Hussein slammed the “wholly disproport­ionate” use of force by Israeli troops and backed the call for an internatio­nal probe.

“Nobody has been made safer by the horrific events of the past week,” he said.

Mr Zeid insisted that many of those injured and killed on Monday “were completely unarmed, (and) were shot in the back, in the chest, in the head and limbs with live ammunition”, he said, saying there was “little evidence of any (Israeli) attempt to minimise casualties”.

“Some of the demonstrat­ors threw Molotov cocktails, used slingshots to throw stones, flew burning kites into Israel and attempted to use wire-cutters against the fences,” Mr Zeid said.

But he added: “these actions alone do not appear to constitute the imminent threat to life or deadly injury which could justify the use of lethal force”.

 ??  ?? INVESTIGAT­ION ORDERED: Delegates gather for a special session of the United Nations Human Rights Council in which they decided to send a team to investigat­e Israel’s actions.
INVESTIGAT­ION ORDERED: Delegates gather for a special session of the United Nations Human Rights Council in which they decided to send a team to investigat­e Israel’s actions.

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