The United Nations Human Rights Council approved
four anti-Israel and pro-Palestinian resolutions, including a call
for a limited arms embargo against the Jewish state, as it wrapped up its 49th
session.
Israel was the only country the UNHRC censured multiple
times. Russia, which is a UNHRC member, was censured only once for its invasion
of Ukraine, with a resolution passed 32-2, with 13 abstentions.
Other countries – North Korea, Iran, Belarus, Myanmar,
Nicaragua, and Syria – were taken to task for human rights abuses with only one
resolution per country.
Israel is not a voting member of the UNHRC but spoke
multiple times about UNHRC bias during the voting process on Thursday and
Friday.
When it comes to Israel, Ambassador Meirav Eilon-Shahar said,
the council was an echo chamber of fantasy and hatred against Israel.
“The problem with this echo chamber is that no reality comes
in but certainly the hatred seeps out,” she said.
Out of the four resolution texts, the accountability
resolution which spoke of the arms embargo is considered to be the most
contentious. It was approved by the UNHRC in a 37-3 vote, with seven abstentions.
The three countries that stood with Israel were: Brazil,
Malawi, and the United States, which rejoined the council as a voting member
this year.
US Ambassador to the UN Michele Taylor said that the Biden
administration was disappointed that UNHRC member States continue to
disproportionately single out Israel and are dismayed by the many repetitive
and one-sided resolutions that run year after year.
The countries that abstained from the vote on accountability
were: Cameron, Honduras, India, the Marshall Islands, Nepal, Ukraine and the
United Kingdom.
All the European Union countries on the council supported
the text, including France and Germany.
It urged “all states to refrain from transferring arms
when... they assess that there is a clear risk that such arms might be used to
commit or facilitate serious violations or abuses of international human rights
law or serious violations of international humanitarian law.”
Last year, the resolution passed 32-6, with eight
abstentions. The shift in the voting pattern had to do with changes to the
rotating membership of the 47-member body and was not reflective of shifts in
the positions of individual countries.
The Palestinian Ambassador to the UN in Geneva Ibrahim
Khraishi said that it was important to hold Israel accountable for its actions
against his people.
“This draft resolution should ensure justice and should hold
to account all those who violate international humanitarian law and… to provide
reparation and compensation to the Palestinian loved one of the victims,”
The other three resolutions were voted on under Agenda Item
7. The UNHRC is mandated to debate alleged Israeli human rights violations at
each session. No such requirement is leveled against any other of the UN’s 193
members.
United Nations Human Rights Council approved four
anti-Israel and pro-Palestinian resolutions, condemning Israeli settlement
activity and calling for a boycott of settlement products and an Israeli
withdrawal to the pre-1967 lines was approved 38-4, with five abstentions.
Of the three Agenda Item 7 resolutions, the one condemning
Israeli settlement activity and calling for a boycott of settlement products
and an Israeli withdrawal to the pre-1967 lines was approved 38-4, with five
abstentions.
Those who stood with Israel were: Malawi, the Marshall
Islands, the United Kingdom and the United States. Those who abstained were:
Brazil, Cameron, Honduras, Lithuania and Ukraine. Last year the same text
passed 36-3, with eight abstentions.
The resolution on the rights of the Palestinian people to
self-determination was approved 41-3, with three abstentions.
Those who stood with Israel were: the Marshall Islands, the
United Kingdom and the United States. Those who abstained were: Cameron,
Honduras and Lithuania. Last year, it passed, 42-3, with two abstentions.
Those who opposed or abstained from the text were not making
a statement against Palestinian sovereignty, but wanted to take a stand against
the council’s anti-Israel bias.
The resolution with the least amount of support was the text
that asked Israel to withdraw from the Golan Heights, which was approved 29-15,
with three abstentions.
United Nations Human Rights Council approved
four anti-Israel and pro-Palestinian resolutions. Resolution that asked Israel
to withdraw from the Golan Heights, which was approved 29-15, with three
abstentions.
Those who stood with Israel were: Finland, France, Germany,
Japan, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malawi, the Marshall Islands, Montenegro,
Netherlands, Poland, Korea, Ukraine, the United Kingdom and the United States.
Those who abstained were: Brazil, Cameroon and Honduras.
Khraishi defended the continued presence of Agenda Item 7.
The focus should be on ending Israel’s “occupation” and not
the debate about it, Khraishi said, as he accused Israel of “colonialism and
apartheid.” Earlier in the session, the special investigator into alleged
Israeli human rights abuses submitted a report in which he accused Israel of
the crime of apartheid.
Taylor said that “the continued existence of this agenda
item calls into question the credibility of this body. None of the world’s
worst human rights violators, some of whom are the subject of resolutions at
this session, have their own stand-alone agenda item at this Council. Only
Israel receives such treatment.
“Further, we strongly reject the characterization voiced by
some that Israel’s actions constitute apartheid,” Taylor added.