Israeli authorities have barred on Tuesday a UN human rights committee from visiting Palestinian Territories on a fact-finding mission, the leader of the group said on Tuesday.
Head of the UN panel Prasad Kariyawasam said that Israeli authorities did not allow us to visit the Palestinian territories, adding that 'no reasons were given by Israel because they do not recognize our mandate'.
Kariyawasam told a news conference in the Jordanian capital Amman that despite the ban by the Jewish state, the committee has interviewed Palestinians from the Gaza Strip(GS), the occupied West Bank(WB) and East Jerusalem.
Some were interviewed by telephone as several witnesses were prevented from travelling to Amman or Cairo, he said.
'The international community has a moral and legal obligation to ensure that all international human rights and humanitarian law standards are fully implement at all times,' Kariyawasam said.
The three-member panel, which has already visited Egypt and plans to go to Syria later on Tuesday, expressed serious concern about the conditions of Palestinians in the occupied areas.
They warned against 'the deteriorating human rights and humanitarian situation in the occupied Palestinian territory, the grave situation in the Gaza strip, the impact of the separation wall on the human rights of Palestinian people, and the continuing settlements policy,' according to Kariyawasam.
The United Nations and other international organisations say Israeli-imposed sanctions on Gaza and have increased poverty and destroyed the economy in the densely populated area.
'Such policies and practices affecting Palestinian people are a serious threat to self-determination of the Palestinian people and must be halted immediately,' Kariyawasam said.
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