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Geoffrey Alderman

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Geoffrey Alderman,

Geoffrey Alderman

Opinion

UN's Schabas: an open mind?

August 28, 2014 11:30
2 min read

While our attention has been focused on renewed conflict in the Middle East, a melodrama of truly farcical proportions has been played out at the Palace of Nations, Geneva. That theatre (for what else can it be called?) is home to the UN Human Rights Council, whose 47 members, all elected by the UN General Assembly, currently include nominees from Algeria, China, Cuba, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Venezuela and Iran. The governments of these countries are renowned for their systematic persecution of dissidents and minorities, their shameless resort to violence and torture to crush dissent, and their intuitive denial of religious liberty.

Multiple abuses of human rights on such a scale would in normal circumstances furnish the UNHRC with ample material for ongoing inquiries. But few have ever been forthcoming, and none has resulted in the slightest improvement in human rights in any of the Council's member states. The Council is an organised hypocrisy. From its establishment, eight years ago, its obsessive focus has been on Israel, for the simple reason that this is the easiest method by which the states aforementioned, and their many allies in the Council chamber, can move the focus well away from their own borders.

Last month a special session of the Council was convened to consider the Gaza conflict anew. A resolution, comprising 1,871 vitriolic words, was solemnly adopted condemning Israel in the harshest possible terms, with but two passing references to the murder of Israeli civilians - and I should add that whereas this venomous resolution naturally named Israel repeatedly as a guilty party, there was not one explicit reference to the guilt of Gaza's Hamas government, and not one acknowledgment of the fact that every one of the rockets launched from Gaza into Israel constituted a war crime.

Instead, the resolution announced that what was termed "an independent, international commission of inquiry" was to be "urgently" despatched "to investigate all violations of international humanitarian law and international human rights law in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem, particularly in the occupied Gaza Strip."

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