The above fourteen Israeli and Palestinian human rights organisations warned on Tuiesday of the far-reaching consequences of Israel’s refusal to fully cooperate with the United Nations (UN). On the morning of Israel’s second Universal Periodic Review (UPR), scheduled for Tuesday 29 January, it remains unclear whether it intends to participate.
This lack of transparency will not
only mean that Israel avoids rigorous criticism of its violations of
international law, but that the entire UPR system will be undermined by
the loss of its two fundamental principles: equality and universality.
In May 2012, Israel formally announced
its decision to “suspend its contact with the Office of the High
Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR), the Human Rights Council (the
Council) and its subsequent mechanisms”. (...)
Israel’s move to
suspend cooperation with the Council and the OHCHR must be viewed within
the context of its ongoing refusal to respect the decisions,
resolutions and mechanisms of the UN. Consecutive Israeli governments
have refused to recognise the State’s obligations under international
human rights law with regard to the Palestinian population of the
occupied Palestinian territory (oPt), obligations repeatedly reaffirmed
in statements by UN treaty bodies.
Israel also rejects the de jure applicability
of the Fourth Geneva Convention, incumbent upon it as the Occupying
Power, in defiance of numerous UN resolutions, the 2004 International
Court of Justice Advisory Opinion on the Legal Consequences of the
Construction of a Wall in the oPt, and countless statements issued by
governments worldwide.
In 2009, Israel declined to cooperate
with the UN Fact-finding Mission on the Gaza Conflict, headed by Justice
Richard Goldstone. Justice Goldstone repeatedly called on Israel to
engage, to no avail. More recently, in 2012, the UN Fact-finding Mission
on Israeli Settlements in the oPt was denied entry into the territory
to collect testimonies. The Mission joined a long list of UN Special
Rapporteurs and the Deputy High Commissioner for Human Rights, to whom
Israel has also refused entry. Furthermore, since his appointment
asSpecial Rapporteur on the situation of human rights on Palestinian
territories occupied since 1967, Mr. Richard Falk has not been allowed
to enter the oPt to carry out his work.
Within this context, 14 human rights
organisations call on the Council to take a firm stand consistent with
the seriousness of Israel’s obstructive actions to date.
1 opmerking:
Abu, ik hoop voor jou niet dat je het bezoek van 3 Palestijnse en 1 Israelische NGO hebt gezien . Deze NGO's waren op bezoek bij de buitenlandwoordvoerders van de tweede kamer. Tenenkrommend was het en de conclusie, palestijnen moeten niet zo zeuren, laat ze eens naar de buurlanden kijken en terug komen met een gebalanceerd verhaal. Schandelijk en een smet op de stad van vrede en recht,
Jose
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