Showing posts with label United Nations. Show all posts
Showing posts with label United Nations. Show all posts

with Really No power To hold Isreal to Account - U.N rights council launches probe into Israel's latest Gaza invasion

U.N rights council launches probe into Israel's Gaza offensive


GENEVA (AFP) - The UN Human Rights Council on Wednesday launched a probe into the Gaza offensive, backing calls by the Palestinians to hold Israel to account despite fierce opposition from Israel.

The decision came after a marathon seven-hour emergency session of the top UN human rights body, where Israelis and Palestinians traded accusations over war crimes.

The 47-member council backed a Palestinian-drafted resolution by 29 votes, with Arab and fellow Muslim countries joined by China and Russia, plus Latin American and African nations.

The United States was the sole member to vote against. The 17 abstentions were by the council's European members, plus Japan and South Korea.

The probe team, yet to be appointed, is tasked with reporting back to the council by March.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's media office slammed it as a "travesty" that ignored violations by Palestinian Hamas Islamists.

"This investigation by a kangaroo court is a foregone conclusion," his office said.

US ambassador Keith Harper warned the vote would undermine ceasefire efforts.

"This resolution is not constructive, it is destructive," Harper said, noting it lacked "any semblance of balance" because it made no mention of Hamas' attacks.

Speaking for the European Union, Italian ambassador Maurizio Serra also criticized the failure to mention Hamas or recognize Israel's right to self-defense, despite last-ditch efforts by his team to have such language included.

The session was called by Arab nations and fellow members of the Organization of the Islamic Conference.

The council's membership rotates, and Israel is not currently part of the UN body. Non-members cannot vote but are entitled to speak.

Israeli ambassador Eviator Manor lashed out at countries that piloted the vote.

"Their Pavlovian instinct demands they react against Israel, in order to divert attention from their own human rights violations," he said.

"Hamas is committing war crimes when it fires rockets indiscriminately at Israel towns and villages. Hamas is protecting its launching sites with the civilian residents of Gaza. Another war crime," he said.

"And this council sits in judgement of Israel? There can be no moral symmetry between a terrorist aggressor and a democracy defending itself," he added.

Blame over 'war crimes'

Palestinian Foreign Minister Riyad al-Maliki hit back.

"What Israel is doing is a crime against humanity," he said.

UN human rights chief Navi Pillay also said Israel's military actions could amount to war crimes, while at the same time condemning indiscriminate rocket attacks by Hamas.

"There seems to be a strong possibility that international law has been violated, in a manner that could amount to war crimes," Pillay told the council, citing attacks that have killed Palestinian civilians, including children.

She said Israelis also had a right to live without constant fear of rocket attacks.

"Once again, the principles of distinction and precaution are clearly not being observed during such indiscriminate attacks on civilian areas by Hamas and other armed Palestinian groups," she said.

The resolution condemned "the widespread, systematic, and gross violations of human rights and fundamental freedoms" since Israel launched its offensive last month and called for the urgent deployment of an "independent, international commission of inquiry."

The Gaza offensive marks the worst violence since two spikes in conflict in 2009 and 2012, and has already claimed the lives of more than 685 Palestinians, most of them civilians, and 34 Israelis, 32 of them soldiers.

"Twenty-five Palestinians have been killed for every single Israeli. How far is this going to go?" Palestinian ambassador Ibrahim Khraishi asked.

"When we ask for a commission of inquiry, what we want to do is identify those responsible so they can be held accountable, so that we can shed light on the truth," he said.

Manor vowed that Israel would "destroy" Hamas' military infrastructure.

"However, the Gaza residents are not our enemies. Israel is fully committed to international law," he said.

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Even The U.N Can't Control Israel As Their Property Is Getting Destroyed

UN school sheltering Gaza displaced hit by Israel shells

GAZA CITY (AFP)- A United Nations school sheltering displaced Palestinians in central Gaza came under Israeli fire on Tuesday as a team was inspecting damage from a day earlier, a UN official said.

The official said a team, with Israeli clearance, was at the school run by the UN agency for Palestinian refugees UNRWA in Al-Maghazi when Israeli tank shelling resumed, hitting the building on Tuesday afternoon.

"Yesterday we got reports that it was shelled and so today we sent our guys down to investigate and see which side the fire came from," the official said, speaking to AFP on condition of anonymity.

"They went down there with Israeli clearance, and while they were there, they came under Israeli shelling," he added.

He said that there were holes blown through the walls of the school compound and that the gates had been blown off but no one was injured in the shelling.

The school has been evacuated and UNRWA has submitted a formal letter about the shelling to Israel, he added.

UNRWA is sheltering more than 100,000 people at more than 60 of its schools throughout the Gaza Strip.

Many Palestinians living in border areas of Gaza have been warned by Israel to flee their homes, but they say they feel nowhere in the coastal enclave is safe for them.

On Thursday, UNRWA said it was investigating after finding 20 rockets hidden in one of its vacant schools.

It condemned the incident as a "flagrant violation" of international law and said the rockets had been removed and the "relative parties" informed.

It said the incident was the first of its kind.
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Four out of every five Palestinians killed in Gaza have been civilians

Four out of every five Palestinians killed during Israel’s ongoing military offensive in Gaza have been civilians, including dozens of women and children, the United Nations said Monday.
The statistic was disclosed by the UN Office for the Co-ordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) amid mounting international concern over non-combatant casualties during an operation Israeli officials have said is aimed solely at rooting out militants and stopping rockets being fired into Israel.
Pressure intensified for a ceasefire as the latest death toll climbed to 172.
Of 160 deaths that had occurred by Sunday, 133 — 80 per cent — had been among Gaza’s civilian population, OCHA said, including 35 children and 27 women. Only 26 were established to have belonged to “armed groups” while the status of another nine men was unverified. Some 296 children and 233 women have been among the 1,140 wounded, according to Gaza health ministry figures.
OCHA said its statistics had been checked and verified through a variety of sources.
The figures appeared to show a higher non-combatant casualty rate than that recorded in Israel’s eight-day offensive against Gaza in November 2012, when 108 civilians were said to be among the 167 Palestinians killed.
Maria Jose Torres, the deputy head of OCHA’s office for the Palestinian territories, said: “The high toll for civilians is a big concern for the humanitarian community. As humanitarians we are appealing to the parties to refrain from killing and injuring civilians as well a from putting civilians at risk.”
Human rights groups have partly attributed the Palestinian death toll to Israel’s targeting of houses and buildings it says are being used by Hamas and other groups but that are also dwelling places for relations with no known militant links. Some 940 homes have been destroyed or severely damaged in missile or bomb strikes.
In one particularly graphic case, two severely handicapped women were killed on Saturday when a missile struck their disabled care home. Two suspected militants who lived in flats upstairs were away at the time.
The women’s disabilities prevented them from responding to warnings.
Israel says it is responding to missile attacks launched by Hamas and other groups that it accuses of firing indiscriminately at its civilian population. No Israelis have been killed so far by Hamas’ rocket attacks, although nearly 1,000 have been launched in the past week, according to the Israeli military.
Benjamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister, has also accused Hamas of using Gaza’s civilian population as human shields by stationing missile sites in built-up areas of the densely populated territory.
However, Israel’s tactic of hitting domestic residences came under further scrutiny after three missiles destroyed the home of the director general of Gaza City’s main medical facility, Shiffa Hospital. Dr Nasser al-Tater, 59, a specialist cardiologist, said he had spent days working and sleeping at the hospital to oversee its emergency response to the conflict before returning home on Sunday evening.
Within minutes, his son received a phone call from an Israeli military officer telling the family to evacuate within 10 minutes. Three rockets subsequently destroyed the house — along with Dr al-Tatar’s private practice clinic — in Gaza City’s Beach Refugee camp. “I have no idea why they did this,” said Dr al-Tatar.
The White House last night said it did not want to see an Israeli ground invasion of the Gaza Strip “because that would put even more civilians at risk”.
Hamas drone shot down
Israel shot down a drone that flew out of Gaza yesterday (Monday) as Hamas, the Islamist group that runs the territory, claimed it had developed three versions of the unmanned craft to carry out special missions.
The drone was intercepted by US-made Patriot missiles as it hovered above the coastline of the southern Israeli city of Ashdod, about 15 miles north of Gaza, in what represented a new development in the latest bloody clash between the two sides. The Izzedine al-Qassam Brigades, Hamas’s military wing, later said its engineers had developed three variants of a drone known as the Ababil 1 to conduct surveillance, military and “suicide” missions.
“The drones executed specific missions over the Israeli war ministry [an apparent reference to the Israeli defence ministry headquarters in Tel Aviv, known as the Kirya],” the group said in a statement. “The drones executed three missions over Israeli military bases.” The claims were impossible to verify but appeared to be part of a package of “surprises” Hamas had promised in its latest military confrontation with Israel. It may also have been part of a psychological tussle between the two sides as the Islamist movement attempts to counter Israel’s overwhelming technical superiority. Israeli drones have been an ever-present part of the present conflict, which entered its seventh day yesterday.
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The UN's repetitive chronicle

Ramona Wadi
 As the repercussions of "Operation Protective Edge" become evident; the displacement of civilians, damaged and demolished homes, injured Palestinians and death toll in Gaza escalate, the United Nations is exhausting itself to maintain the fabrications of an equal "conflict".
In a statement issued on July 11, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay expressed a parody of sentiment in the form of "alarm" and "deep concern", alongside statistics and rhetoric reminiscent of the organisation's bias towards Israel, thus cementing the settler-colonial state's impunity.
As of July 10, over 800 Israeli air strikes contrasted with the precise total of 809 rockets and 61 mortars fired by the Palestinian resistance. This sets the scene for another depiction of conflict that fails to take into account the imperialist-supported violence and the expression of Palestinian unity characterised by widespread resistance.
Pillay stated: "Israel, Hamas and Palestinian armed groups in Gaza have been down this road before, and it has led only to death, destruction, distrust and a painful prolongation of the conflict. This time around, once again, civilians are bearing the brunt of the conflict. I urge all sides to steadfastly respect their obligations under international human rights law and international humanitarian law to protect civilians."
The published statement constitutes a failure through various omissions of reality. Primarily, Palestinian resistance is unacknowledged and fragmented through the description of "armed groups", ostensibly to avoid dealing with the legitimacy of resistance against colonial violence under international law.
Taken within the wider context, the lack of discernment is extended to the generalising of the "civilian population" within the diverse geographical locations. The term "civilian population" should explicitly refer to Palestinians – Israel's settler population is complicit in the Zionist colonisation of Palestine. It is also Palestinians who have suffered the callously termed "collateral damage" as a result of the carnage inflicted by Israel's precision strikes on Gaza. On the other hand, when taking a break from applauding Israel's bombardment of Gaza, Israel's settler-population in the fabricated state is portrayed as allegedly psychologically traumatised by the harmless wailing of sirens.
Not only does Pillay disregard the definition of unified resistance – a far more resonating reality than the unity government's compromised existence. The statement implies the adamant oblivion which has sustained both Israel and the UN in their quest for absolute impunity. The widespread mellowing of Israel's brutality on behalf of world leaders, countered by activist outrage and constant dissemination of material depicting the macabre bloodshed, has resulted in an urgent need for the UN's distorted statements to be accepted as legitimate. Hence Pillay's statement is little more than a propaganda tool in Israel's hands, to be manipulated in the hope of reclaiming the past political acquiescence.
There is no "painful prolongation of conflict" – Israel is the perpetrator of a continuous massacre that is justified by the UN through its refusal to embark upon actions that would lead to the eradication of the settler-colonial state. The peaceful resolution which the UN is so fond of articulating remains an impossible achievement if Israel is still granted its existential impunity to the detriment of historic Palestine.
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UN agency says Gaza destruction 'immense'

GENEVA (AFP) -- The UN aid agency for Palestinians on Tuesday described the damage wrought by Israel's air offensive on Gaza as "immense", with more than 500 homes razed.

"The level of human losses and destruction in Gaza is really immense," said UNWRA spokesman Sami Mshasha.

"According to our latest figure, we are talking about 174 killed and well over 1,100 injured. This number will increase. The numbers are increasing by hours," he told reporters.

"A good number of those killed and injured are women and children. That is a cause of concern for UNRWA," he added.

The death toll on Tuesday had risen to 192, according to local officials in Gaza.

Mshasha said that 560 homes had been totally destroyed, while thousands of buildings had suffered damage.

Mshasha said that 47 UNRWA facilities had also been damaged by bombing.

A total of 17,000 people had found refuge in 20 schools run by the UN agency, which has sent their GPS coordinates to Israeli authorities.

He called on the warring sides to respect UN buildings.

Israel on Tuesday announced it had accepted an Egyptian ceasefire plan after a week of bombing, but the move was rejected by the Palestinian Islamist movement Hamas which controls the territory and has fired a hail of rockets at Israel.

Without a halt to the fighting, Mshasha said, the risk of an Israeli ground assault on the enclave remains, raising the specter of even greater death and destruction.

In a separate statement, the International Committee of the Red Cross said the bombing had devastated Gaza's water supply.

"Hundreds of thousands of people in Gaza are now without water. Within days, the entire population of the Strip may be desperately short of water," said Jacques de Maio, who heads ICRC operations in Israel and the Palestinian territories.

"Water and electrical services are also affected as a result of the current hostilities. If they do not stop, the question is not if but when an already beleaguered population will face an acute water crisis," he said in a statement.

Fighting is also preventing technicians from carrying out essential repairs. 

Following the deaths of several municipal water technicians, Gaza's water service provider has suspended all field operations until the safety of its staff can be guaranteed, the ICRC said.

"Gaza's water system has been deteriorating for years. The latest attacks are the last straw. Safe drinking water is becoming increasingly scarce in the Strip, just as temperatures are soaring," said ICRC water and sanitation expert Guillaume Pierrehumbert.

"Water is becoming contaminated and sewage is overflowing, bringing a serious risk of disease."
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More than 10,000 Palestinians take shelter in UN schools

Thousands of Palestinians from northern Gaza left their homes after Israel dropped leaflets warning them to evacuate on Sunday 

Anne Paq

#GazaUnderAttack

After the Israeli army dropped leaflets on Sunday, telling residents in northern Gaza to evacuate, many left for five UN Relief and Works Agency schools-turned-shelters with no belongings, hoping to return promptly to their homes after the end of the military operation.
Some of the families were also uprooted during the last two Israeli military operations in 2008 and 2012. While offering shelter to refugees, UNRWA schools lack basic facilities, such as drinkable water or mattresses, to accommodate the high number of displaced Palestinians. 
An estimated 17,000 Gazans have been displaced during the current offensive, with more than 10,000 seeking shelter in UN schools, according to UNRWA.









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UN questions legality of Israel’s Gaza offensive, Netanyahu dismisses intl pressure

The legality of Israel’s Operation Protective Edge, which entered its fifth day on Saturday, has been questioned by the UN's humanitarian chief. But Israel's prime minister has said that no international pressure will stop the offensive.
Under international law, Israel must make sure its attacks are proportional, avoid civilian deaths, and identify military versus civilian objects on the ground, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay said on Friday.
"We have received deeply disturbing reports that many of the civilian casualties, including of children, occurred as a result of strikes on homes. Such reports raise serious doubt about whether the Israeli strikes have been in accordance with international humanitarian law and international human rights law," Pillay said in a statement.
The Palestinian death toll rose to at least 106 people early Saturday, as Israel continued its airstrikes for the fourth consecutive day, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry. At least 75 of those killed are civilians, including 23 children, Reuters quoted medical officials in Gaza as saying.
Meanwhile, there haven’t been any casualties in Israel, with only nine civilians injured, Pillay’s office said, citing media reports. Earlier, Israeli officials reported that two soldiers had been wounded.
United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay (AFP Photo / Fadel Senna)
United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay (AFP Photo / Fadel Senna)

Israel says that Operation Protective Edge does not target Gaza civilians. “This is not an operation in any capacity against the people of Gaza. This is an operation against Hamas, against an organization that purposefully and specifically uses the civilian population of Gaza as human shields,” Libi Vice, spokeswoman for the Israel Defense Forces (IFD) told RT on Thursday.
“We made unbounded efforts to protect the civilian population in the Gaza Strip before any attack against Hamas. We take measures that no other military or no other country takes in the world, which include text messages to people in civil areas, phone calls to their homes.”
According to Pillay, airstrikes that target the homes of civilians violate international law unless the homes are used as military bases – a stipulation that Vice says Israel is fully abiding by.
"In case of doubt, buildings ordinarily used for civilian purposes, such as homes, are presumed not to be legitimate military targets. Even where a home is identified as being used for military purposes, any attack must be proportionate, offer a definite military advantage in the prevailing circumstances at the time, and precautions must be taken," Vice said.
The spokesman for the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) described the destruction in Gaza: "More than 340 housing units in Gaza have been severely damaged or completely destroyed. As a result, more than 2,000 people have been displaced.”
A Palestinian woman is brought into an hospital on a stretcher after she was injured in an Israeli air strike on July 11, 2014 in Gaza City. (AFP Photo / Mohammed Abed)
A Palestinian woman is brought into an hospital on a stretcher after she was injured in an Israeli air strike on July 11, 2014 in Gaza City. (AFP Photo / Mohammed Abed)

Israel defiant in face of international concerns

Israel made clear on Friday that it would not be bowing to international pressure, instead continuing its airstrikes and ignoring US President Barack Obama’s offer to help negotiate a ceasefire.
"No international pressure will prevent us from acting with all power," Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told reporters in Tel Aviv.
Israel's operation “will continue until we are certain that quiet returns to Israeli citizens,” Netanyahu said. Israel has so far targeted more than 1,000 objects in Gaza and there are "more to go."
Netanyahu also did not rule out a ground attack on Gaza, stating: "We are weighing all possibilities and preparing for all possibilities.”
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu gestures as he speaks during a press conference at the defense ministry in the Israeli coastal city of Tel Aviv on July 11, 2014. (AFP Photo / Gali Tibbon)
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu gestures as he speaks during a press conference at the defense ministry in the Israeli coastal city of Tel Aviv on July 11, 2014. (AFP Photo / Gali Tibbon)

Israel's military commander, Lieutenant-General Benny Gantz, added that the national army is ready to expand the operation. "We are in the midst of an assault and we are prepared to expand it as much as is required, to wherever is required, with whatever force will be required and for as long as will be required,"Gantz told reporters on Friday.
On Thursday, US President Barack Obama told Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that Washington is willing to negotiate a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, the White House said.
"The United States remains prepared to facilitate a cessation of hostilities, including a return to the November 2012 ceasefire agreement," said the statement.
Russian President Vladimir Putin urged Netanyahu to end the bloodshed immediately in a telephone conversation on Thursday, expressing concern over civilian casualties. UN chief Ban Ki-moon also called for an immediate ceasefire at an emergency meeting of the Security Council.
French President Francois Hollande has also expressed concern over the worsening crisis in Israel and Gaza, and called for an end to the violence.
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Abbas tells the U.N to Put Palestine under international protection..will they listen

RAMALLAH (AFP) -- President Mahmoud Abbas is to ask the United Nations to put the state of Palestine under "international protection" due to the worsening violence in Gaza, the PLO said Sunday.

Abbas would present a letter to this effect to the UN Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process, Robert Serry, addressed to UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, it said in a statement.

Abbas also wants a commission of inquiry into Israel's relentless air bombardment of the Gaza Strip aimed at halting militant rocket fire.

Abbas is "undertaking several steps and measures to deal with the horrific situation in Gaza," senior Palestine Liberation Organisation member Hanan Ashrawi said in a statement after a meeting of the PLO executive.

Abbas has asked Switzerland, the depository of the fourth Geneva Convention on the protection of civilians in wartime, to ask signatories to place sanctions on Israel which, as the occupying power, is responsible for the safety of civilians.

Its recognition by the UN as a non-member state has allowed Palestine to sign several international conventions, including the Geneva Conventions.

Israel launched "Operation Protective Edge" before dawn on Tuesday in an attempt to halt cross-border rocket fire by militant groups in Gaza, with the overall Palestinian death toll rising to 166 by Sunday with more than 1,000 wounded.

Ashrawi said that when Arab League foreign ministers meet in Cairo on Monday to discuss the Gaza crisis Palestine would ask them to "adopt a draft resolution at the ministerial level" to be presented to the UN Security Council.

The Palestinians would also seek an emergency meeting of the UN Human Rights Council "to deal with the grave conditions in Gaza and hold Israel to account for its violations of international law and international humanitarian law."

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The Illusions of equality and accountability at the UN

Ramona Wadi 
PA President Mahmoud Abbas' answer to the rhetorical imploration for international protection of Palestinians against Israel's latest extermination attempt of both people and resistance may be read in the misrepresentation uttered by UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon.
In a brief statement published on the UN's website, the term "unsustainable situation" as opposed to murder and calls for "maximum restraint" should be read as blatant indicators of support for Israel's swift annihilation of Palestinian civilians. Rockets, according to Ban, are the primary concern.
"The Secretary-General condemns the recent multiple rocket attacks on Israel from Gaza. These indiscriminate attacks on civilian areas must stop."
On the other hand, "The Secretary-General is extremely concerned at the dangerous escalation of violence... The unsustainable situation in Gaza will also need to be addressed in its political, security, humanitarian and development dimensions as part of a comprehensive solution."
UN statements are compatible with the drivel spouted by Abbas, who is capable of almost simultaneously hailing security coordination and accusing Israel of genocide in order to placate any imagined audience. The sequence has, so far, been predictable. The constant fluctuations in Abbas' comments are reflected in the unyielding oblivion enforced internationally by the UN, which is presented with no formidable challenge denouncing the simplification of genocidal intent into a normalised "conflict between Israel and Hamas".
While acknowledging "Palestinian deaths", Ban fails to reference the atrocities which, according to the imperialist organisation, are of a lesser magnitude than the sirens announcing the imminence of Palestinian resistance to the settler population. The omission is imperative, primarily in order to uphold Israel's myth of defence and hence safeguard the continuation of the settler-colonial project endorsed by the UN. The resulting impunity provides the foundations upon which the UN can continue to release isolated and simple declarations with the intent of marginalising Palestinians' legitimate right to armed resistance.
The UN Security Council meeting, which is to be held today, has already been diluted by a statement from the Kuwaiti ambassador to the UN, as quoted by Maan News Agency. "I think it is about time the council issue a statement or resolution," indicating the certainty of yet another futile congregation of world leaders feigning concern and limiting support, if indeed any is offered, to vague declarations. Meanwhile, the precision strikes lauded by Israel and the international community have regaled the world with horrific images of exploded, mutilated bodies.
However, mainstream and Israeli media have ensured a blackout of such images in order to allow the propaganda consistency built upon images of rockets fired by the Palestinian resistance. The conveyed imagery upholds the international, verbal manipulation which now has an additional aim, that of isolating Gaza not only from the rest of Palestine, but also from the magnitude of Palestinian resistance that has shattered its geographical confines.
As reported by Maan, an unnamed Western diplomat expects the UN Security Council "to adopt a declaration condemning the rocket attacks on Israel while also asking restraint on both sides." Undoubtedly, the false premise will fester within the untouchable chambers hosting the epitomes of imperialist violence. Palestinian resistance, on the other hand constitutes a force which, fortunately, does not await legitimacy from the select audience attempting to invent yet another chapter within the illusion of equality and accountability that should be solely reserved for the settler-colonial, violent state.
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When Will Ban Ki-moon and the U.N member nationa have some balls and stand up to Israel

Ban Ki-moon Addresses Security Council, Appeals for Ceasefire


Hamdallah calls on Council in obliging Israel to cease genocide
Addressing the UN Security Council, Ban Ki-moon appealed, on Thursday, for a ceasefire between Israelis and Palestinians. He additionally called on the aid of the international community in halting the escalating violence in the Gaza Strip.

According to AFP, the UN chief said at an emergency meeting of the Council, in New York: "It is now more urgent than ever to try to find common ground for a return to calm and a ceasefire understanding... Today we face the risk of an all-out escalation in Israel and Gaza with the threat of a ground offensive sill palpable and preventable only if Hamas stops rocket firing."

According to Ban, Hamas and Islamic Jihad have fired more than 550 rockets and mortars into Israel from Gaza, in the last few days, and Israel has launched more than 500 air strikes on Gaza.

He said that eighty-eight Palestinians, many of them civilians, have so far been killed, according to Ma'an's report. Hundreds have been injured, and over 100 homes destroyed or severely damaged, with nearly 900 people displaced:

"Israel has legitimate security concerns but I am also concerned at the many Palestinian deaths and injuries as a result of Israeli operations."

Ban Ki-moon told reporters, at the UN headquarters in New York, that the risk of violence further expanding is still "very real" and that the situation is on a "downward spiral which could quickly get beyond anyone’s control", describing Gaza as being on "on a knife-edge" after the new wave of violence which has also hit southern Israel and the West Bank.

Ki-moon also said that he had been in contact with Israel and President Mahmoud Abbas, regarding the crisis, as well with as Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Egypt, the Arab League, the US and the EU.

Both European Union and United States officials have publicly expressed interest in working with a new Palestinian unity government, but Israel hasboycotted the administration.

Ban praised Abbas for "courageously upholding his commitment to security coordination" and urged Netanyahu "to exercise maximum restraint and to respect international obligations to protect civilians".

Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu reportedly told a parliamentary committee, earlier on Thursday, that a ceasefire with Hamas was "not even on the agenda."

Palestinian ambassador Riyad Mansour has pointed to Israel for the increased violence in Gaza and for working to dismantle the Palestinian consensus government, which took office last month.

According to a WAFA report, Premier Rami Hamdallah called on the UN Security Council to provide immediate protection for the Palestinian people and oblige Israel to stop its genocide against defenseless Palestinian civilians in Gaza Strip:

"We have directed an urgent appeal to all international medical relief organizations that operate in Palestine, such as World Health Organization, Red Cross and Médecins sans Frontières, to consolidate their efforts to provide relief and medical supplies for Palestinians in Gaza," he said during a press conference held at his Ramallah headquarters.

The premier expressed his gratitude for all official efforts, especially those exerted by Egypt, aimed to support the Palestinian people.
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The U.N Is doing nothing but letting Palestinian Children Die

Despite UN calls, no justice for children living near Israeli settlements

Patrick O. Strickland


A Palestinian child stands across from an Israeli settlement and military base in Hebron's Old City. (DCIP/Dylan Collins)
Editor’s note: This article is part three of a three-part series by Patrick O. Strickland* based on a DCI-Palestine report, which investigates the devastating impact on Palestinian children of growing up near Israeli settlements. Read part 1: "Price-tag" attacks: High cost for Palestinian children living near settlers. Read part 2: Palestinian schoolchildren terrorized by settler vigilantes, soldiers. Read the DCI-Palestine report:Growing up between Israeli settlements and soldiers.
Ramallah, June 30, 2014—Urif Secondary School is located 13 kilometers (about 8 miles) south of the northern West Bank city of Nablus. It lies in close proximity to the Yitzhar settlement, and has become a frequent target of both settler and military attacks.
Nabil al-Najjar, the principal at Urif Secondary School, says the Israeli military has attacked the school six times since September 2013.
One of the most recent attacks took place on Jan. 12, 2014, on a day when students at the school were sitting exams. It started when settlers threw rocks at the school and Israeli forces arrived a short time later.
Al-Najjar says that the soldiers cut the cables to the school’s security cameras and waited at the front gate. At 9 am, a group of students finished their exam and left the school grounds. Shortly after, confrontations broke out between the students and soldiers.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
• Beatings and bullets
• "Policy of impunity"
• Read part 1 in the series
• Read part 2 in the series
• Read the full report

Al-Najjar recalls that one group of soldiers entered classrooms while exams were still in session, but that teachers intervened and prevented them from arresting any students. Another group of soldiers surrounded the campus, firing rubber-coated metal bullets and launching stun grenades and tear gas canisters into the school grounds. The wind blew tear gas into the classrooms while students were still inside.
After al-Najjar negotiated with the army the soldiers retreated, but dozens of children were injured by rubber-coated metal bullets and tear gas inhalation. A handful needed hospitalization.
The Israeli military uses what it calls "non-lethal riot dispersal" methods – including stun grenades, tear gas and rubber-coated metal bullets – against Palestinian protests or clashes. In spite of their name, these methods can inflict serious, sometimes fatal, injuries, particularly on children.
According to a February 2014 Amnesty International report, two Palestinians were killed by weapons other than live ammunition between January 2011 and December 2013. Amnesty estimates that another 8,000 Palestinians were injured by such weapons, 1,522 of whom were children.
One of those children is six-year-old Mus’ab Sarahneh. He lost an eye after being hit in the face with a rubber-coated metal bullet fired by an Israeli soldier in Fawwar refugee camp, near Hebron, in September 2013. Mus’ab’s mother, Heyam, told DCI-Palestine in a statement that despite his serious head injury, they waited four hours for approval from Israeli authorities to travel to East Jerusalem for medical treatment.
A few days later, on Oct. 1, 2013, an Israeli soldier shot 16-year-old Yazan Mahmoud Abed Zaid in the leg with a rubber-coated metal bullet as he stood outside the UNRWA Boys’ School in Jalazoun refugee camp near Ramallah. Following the injury, Yazan underwent a five-hour surgery to remove the bullet.
An Israeli military spokesperson did not reply to DCI-Palestine’s requests for a comment about Mus’ab Sarahneh or Yazan Mahmoud Abed Zaid.
For Jalazoun residents, the presence of Israel’s Beit El settlement has created an environment that fosters conflict between the camp’s youth and Israeli soldiers. Home to nearly 6,000 Israeli settlers, Beit El is predominantly built on privately-owned Palestinian land and is surrounded by several checkpoints, military watchtowers and bunkers.
A permanent military watchtower overlooks an olive orchard that separates the UNRWA school from the Beit El settlement. Due to its proximity to the school, soldiers and private security are often present near the school, or in the camp, causing tension in the area.
According to a faculty member at the UNRWA school, the military boarded up all the windows on the side of the school that faces the settlement and evidence of military activity is often found in the school grounds.
"Each morning, we walk around the school and pick up the tear gas canisters, sound bomb shells and rubber bullets," the faculty member said, speaking on the condition of anonymity.
Sources at the school say fear of military violence, as well as overcrowding and lack of resources, have contributed to a high dropout rate. This leaves many young people in the streets without work or studies and clashes with the military have become more frequent.
On May 21, 2013, 12-year-old Atta Sabah was shot with live ammunition by an Israeli soldier near the school grounds. The bullet entered Atta’s stomach and severed his spinal cord, leaving him paralyzed.
Mahmoud, 15, an eyewitness to the shooting, later told DCI-Palestine: "(Atta) walked for about one or two meters toward the soldier. Suddenly, he wanted to turn around and run away. At that moment, the second soldier fired one bullet and I saw Atta fall immediately."
Atta says that he was trying to retrieve his schoolbag from the soldier, who had taken it from him the day before. Eyewitnesses report that there were no clashes taking place in the area at the time.
The Israeli military later claimed that the shooting happened when "a violent and unlawful riot took place in the area, with the participation of dozens of Palestinians who threw rocks and Molotov cocktails toward the soldiers."
In another incident on Dec. 7, 2013, 15-year-old Wajih al-Ramahi was shot in the back and killed from a distance of about 200 meters (656 feet) at a playground near the UNRWA school by an Israeli soldier using live ammunition.
Eyewitnesses confirmed that Palestinian youth had been throwing stones at Israeli soldiers at the time, but Wajih’s father, Wajdi, insists that his son was "playing soccer. He wasn't throwing rocks or doing anything else."
It remains unclear whether Wajih was involved.
The Israeli military later announced that it had been engaged in clashes with stone-throwing youth at the time and said that it was investigating the matter, according to Haaretz and other news reports. To date, no further information has been released about the investigation.
Wajih’s father told DCI-Palestine that his brothers and sisters are finding it hard to cope with his death.
"My youngest son cannot sleep anymore," he said. "He wakes up crying and comes to sleep in our room. He doesn’t understand why his brother was killed. The others are always scared."
The al-Ramahi family’s tragedy is not unique. Four more Palestinian childrenwere killed by Israeli soldiers in 2013.
"Policy of impunity"
This is by no means an exhaustive account of the harm inflicted on Palestinian children as a result of the establishment, preservation and expansion of Israeli settlements. Yet these anecdotes of settler and military violence serve as a window into the innumerable injustices Palestinian children face due to the presence of Israeli settlements and the military infrastructure and personnel that guards them.
Almost more alarming than the fact that 1,405 Palestinian children have been killed by Israeli soldiers or settlers since 2000 is the climate of impunity that makes such violence possible.
Although the UN and other international legal institutions have consistently condemned Israel’s practices in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, little has been done to either put pressure on Israel or hold its government and institutions accountable.
In July 2004, the International Court of Justice (ICJ), while issuing an advisory opinion about Israel’s separation barrier in the West Bank, reaffirmed that Israeli settlements violate international humanitarian law and international legal standards.
The report from the 2013 United Nations International Fact-Finding Mission on Israeli Settlements in the Occupied Palestinian Territory concluded: "The identities of settlers who are responsible for violence and intimidation are known to the Israeli authorities, yet these acts continue with Israeli impunity."
The report also called on Israel "to ensure the full accountability for all violations, including for all acts of settler violence, in a non-discriminatory manner and to put an end to the policy of impunity."
Indeed, following incidents of settler violence, lack of justice is the norm and not the exception. In a report published in July 2013, the Israeli human rights group Yesh Din found that more than 90 percent of the investigations opened into settler violence between 2005 and 2013 "were closed without an indictment being served against suspects."
A recent Amnesty International report documented 41 Palestinians killed by live ammunition in the West Bank between January 2011 and December 2013. Another recent Yesh Din report, however, found that "only 16 investigation files opened from September 2000 through mid-2013 regarding incidents when Palestinians were killed led to indictments."
The rise in violence has also been accompanied by a pattern of dehumanization of Palestinian children by Israeli soldiers, particularly in social media. In February 2013, the international media reported on an Israeli soldier who had posted an Instagram photograph of a Palestinian child seen through the cross hairs of a rifle. Al Jazeera English had reported similar incidents prior to this, including an instance in 2010 in which an Israeli soldier posted photos posing next to a handcuffed Palestinian child on her Facebook account.
The lack of accountability for Israeli military and settler violence perpetuates an environment in which children are targets. Worse still, many Palestinians are resigned to a reality without safety and justice for their children.
"We’re used to death," concluded Wajdi al-Ramahi, whose 15-year-old son was shot and killed by an Israeli soldier last December. "I cannot protect my children here. We do everything we can to guarantee their protection, but in the end it’s all in God’s hands."
*Patrick O. Strickland is a freelance contributor to Defense for Children International Palestine.

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Abbas calls for UN committee on Israeli crimes against Palestinians - more talk while more Palestinians die

RAMALLAH (Ma'an) -- President Mahmoud Abbas on Sunday 

called on UN Chief Ban Ki-Moon to form an international 

committee to investigate Israeli crimes committed against 

Palestinians, media reported.

The official Palestinian Authority news agency Wafa said 


that Abbas gave Robert Serry, the UN special coordinator 

for Mideast peace, a letter to deliver to Ki-Moon on the 

subject.

"Mohammad Abu Khdeir was burnt alive. Sixteen 


Palestinians, including children and women were killed 

during the past two weeks, aside from the ongoing 

kidnapping attempts and assaults against children," Abbas 

said, according the Wafa report.

"We all saw through the media the face of Tarek Abu 


Khdeir distorted with injuries by" Israeli police, he added.

"We are preparing for a set of steps to deter the Israeli 


aggression and curb settlers' crimes and the ongoing 

attacks against our people in the besieged Gaza Strip."

The President's remarks come as tensions soar amid riots 


by Palestinians in protest over the killing of 16-year-old 

Muhammad Abu Khdeir on Wednesday.

Abu Khdeir's murder is assumed to have been perpetrated 


by Jewish extremists angry about the recent killing of three 

Israelis in the West Bank.
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Just when it appeared that the United Nations could not be more ineffective in protecting Palestinian rights

Israel elected to leadership of UN committee on “Decolonization” 

Just when it appeared that the United Nations could not be more ineffective in protecting Palestinian rights and holding Israel accountable for violating them, here comes the news that Israel has been elected as vice-chair of the UN Special Political and Decolonization Committee – which deals among other things with matters related to Palestinian refugees.
According to UN minutes, the representative of Israel, the world’s last settler-colonial power, received 74 votes for the post, despite strong opposition from the Arab Group of UN member states.
Qatar, speaking on behalf of the Arab states, described Israel as a “State that violated the United Nations Charter and international law. Because its track record was rife with murder and its occupation had lasted more than 66 years, Israel was not qualified to preside over questions pertaining to Palestinian refugees, peacekeeping and the investigation of its own illegal practices.”
The Arab states had demanded a recorded vote, an unusual step, prompting objections from the ambassador of the United Kingdom which is a member of the Group of Western European and Other States that nominated Israel.
Canada took the opportunity to express its “unflinching support for Israel” and the United States said it “unequivocally supported Israel’s election.”
Saudi Arabia – whose own membership of the UN Human Rights Council has drawn much criticism – said that Israel’s election was “the moral equivalent of placing the apartheid regime of South Africa in charge of a committee to end racism.”

Theater of the absurd

Israel thanked its supporters, but perhaps its actions spoke louder than words. While this theater of the absurd was playing out in New York, Israeli occupation forces stepped up demolitions of Palestinian homes to make way for colonial settlements.
Its election comes just weeks after Israel announced yet another massive expansion of illegal colonies in the occupied West Bank.
On Wednesday alone, Israeli demolitions left seven Palestinian families homeless in the West Bank.
And take a look at the photostory by Silvia Boarini documenting Israel’s ongoing ethnic cleansing of Palestinian Bedouins in the southern Naqab (“Negev”) region of present-day Israel.
These latest measures of ethnic cleansing come amid Israel’s assault on West Bank cities over the past week, allegedly in search of three missing colonial settlers. Israel has so far abducted more than 300 Palestinians, raided 750 homes as well as dozens of charities and the Birzeit University campus.
If there were a UN Committee on How to Occupy and Colonize, Israel would indeed be the best candidate to lead it.
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