UN sanctions Goldstone report on Gaza war
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By Press TV
News Article
Friday, Nov 6, 2009
The United Nations General Assembly has
voted overwhelmingly in favor of a report, which accuses Israel of war
crimes as well as crimes against humanity during the weeks-long
onslaught on the Gaza Strip.
114 states endorsed a resolution supporting the report by a Human
Rights Council panel led by the South African judge Richard Goldstone
in Thursday's UN vote while only 18 states including the US objected to
the report's adoption. Forty-four countries also abstained including
France, Britain and Russia.
The assembly's resolution demands that both the Israelis and the
Palestinians carry out investigations within three months. It also
pushes for Security Council attention.
The resolution was passed with wide support from Muslim states as
well as the Non-Aligned Movement, NAM, of developing nations. There
were, however, concerns that the Arab states would tone down the
report's content in an effort to make it more amenable to European
Union support. Proponents of the resolution said such serious
accusations of war crimes deserved international attention.
Palestinian UN Ambassador Riyad Mansour applauded the vote, saying
the implementation of Goldstone's report would begin in stages.
"In three months, we will reconvene at the General Assembly to
consider the report of the Secretary General for further action. The
United Nations Security Council will also be in attendance,” he was
quoted as saying by Voice of America.
Tel Aviv's envoy to the world body Gabriela Shalev however said the
vote was conceived in hate and executed in sin. "Politics, rather than
protecting human rights, was the only reason the report was even being
discussed in New York," she alleged.
The 575-page UN-ordered report on Israel's offensive in Gaza
asserts seven incidents in which Palestinian civilians were shot while
leaving their homes, trying to run for safety or waving white flags.
The report says Israel targeted a mosque at prayer time, killing 15
people, and shelled a Gaza City house where soldiers had forced
Palestinian civilians to assemble. These attacks constituted war
crimes, the report says.
The probe also found Israel violated international humanitarian law
in several ways. Dozens of Palestinian policemen were killed at the
start of Gaza onslaught when Israel bombed their stations. The police
force was not involved in the hostilities and, as such, should have
been treated as civilians. Palestinians, in addition, were used as
human shields forced to walk ahead of Israeli soldiers searching
civilian neighborhoods.
More than 1,500 Palestinians were killed during Israel's three
week-long land, sea and air assault, 'Operation Cast Lead ', in the
impoverished coastal sliver. The offensive also inflicted $ 1.6 billion
of damage to the Gazan economy.
Press TV
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