05 May 2005:
NGOs TARGET ISRAEL AT UNCHR MEETING
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The 61st Session of the UN Commission on Human Rights, which took
place in Geneva from 14 March to 22 April 2005, was again characterized
by intense political attacks focused against Israel, despite the
warnings of UN
Secretary General Kofi Annan and UN
Human Rights High Commissioner Louise Arbour. The UNCHR, however,
continued the past practice of singling out "Israel and the Palestinian
territories" as a separate
agenda item ("Question of the violation of human rights in the
occupied Arab territories, including Palestine") in addition to
Agenda Item 5
- "The right of peoples to self-determination and its application
to peoples under colonial or alien domination or foreign occupation".
The UNCHR's failure
to condemn Palestinian terror and its assaults against Israel were
analyzed in detail by UN Watch.
In the process, the NGO network was particularly active, and its
biased reports and rhetoric was echoed in the Commission's discussions
and resolutions. The Palestinian NGO Al-Haq,
a participant at the 2001
Durban conference, joined with the International Federation
for Human Rights (FIDH) and the World
Organization Against Torture (OMCT) to condemn "numerous forms
of collective punishment", the "devastating system of checkpoints
and other movement restrictions", and the "construction of the Annexation
Wall". This submission criticizes
only Israel while failing to acknowledge Palestinian violence.
The
International Commission of Jurists (ICJ) also continued its
anti-Israel emphasis, criticizing "excessive use of force, indiscriminate
killing of civilians" and the security barrier. The ICJ, did, however,
condemn
Palestinian terror attacks against Israeli civilians, marking
a change for this NGO.
Save
the Children, while refraining from using intemperate language
to criticize Israel, failed to acknowledge Israeli security concerns
when referring to restrictions on movement and protection of children's
rights. Similarly, ignoring the context behind Israeli operations
in the Gaza Strip, the highly partisan Habitat
International Coalition and Al-Mezan
(a recipient of Swiss and Dutch governmental funding) condemned
"Israel's systematic and aggravated violations of Palestinian civilians'
right to adequate housing" while endorsing the standard Palestinian
political demand "for the immediate deployment of an international
protection force in the region". Israelis, in these reports, appear
to have no human rights.
Demonstrating an amoral equivalence between Palestinian terrorism
and Israeli self-defense operations, Medecins
du Monde called on both Israel and the PA to prevent attacks
against civilians. This NGO also referred to the "mental
and physical suffering of Palestinians" caused by Israel's security
barrier and checkpoints, while ignoring Israeli suffering in the
face of terrorist acts.
Employing the language of extremism and demonization, the International
Organization for the Elimination
of All Forms of Racial Discrimination (EAFORD) referred to Israel's
"war crimes", "ethnic cleansing policy", and "Jenin massacres",
while claiming that the "apartheid
practiced against the Palestinian people is worse than the former
South African one".
Major NGOs such as Amnesty
International and Human
Rights Watch did not participate in this session of the Commission's
activities, instead, questioning the credibility of the UNCHR as
a whole. Amnesty referred to "The
selectivity and double standards that characterize the Commission's
approach to addressing country situations", while HRW expressed
"the
need to scrap the Commission and replace it with something new and
better". HRW also called on the UNCHR to halt the neglect of
"abuses by Palestinian armed groups" (i.e., terrorists), to actively
condemn "deliberate and indiscriminant [sic] attacks on civilians"
and to demand that the Palestinian Authority "undertake all efforts
consistent with international human rights standards to curb these
attacks". However, HRW's
position was highly inconsistent, and included contentious language
used to describe Israeli anti-terror policy.
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