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21 March 2017 - 23:42
News ID: 428318
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Rasa - The United States boycotted a Human Rights Council session focusing on Palestinian areas, citing what it called the council's "long-standing bias against Israel" that threatens the credibility of the UN-supported body.
United Nations, the Security Council

RNA - Israel is the only party that faces an examination of its rights record at every one of the council's three sessions each year under a standing agenda item, known as Item 7, on "Palestine and other occupied Arab territories." The current session, which lasts four weeks, ends Friday, ABC News reported.

 

US ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley, in a statement, denounced how Israel was the only party that is a permanent fixture on the 47-member body's calendar.

 

The boycott announced by the State Department comes as the Trump administration contemplates ending US participation at the council. A letter from US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson to advocacy groups, obtained by The Associated Press last week, said the US wouldn't continue participating unless the council undergoes "considerable reform."

 

"Today's actions in the council are yet another reminder of that body's long-standing bias against Israel," State Department spokesman Mark Toner said in a statement. "No other nation has an entire agenda item dedicated to it at the council. The continued existence of this agenda item is among the largest threats to the credibility of the council."

 

In New York, U.N. deputy spokesman Farhan Haq, defended the "important" work of the council.

 

"Obviously, different member states have their opinions about different topics before the council to which they're entitled, but at the same time we do hope that the overall work of the council will be supported by all members," he said, when asked about the US boycott.

 

In the more than 230 country-specific resolutions at the council since it was founded 11 years ago, more than a quarter of them have been focused on Israel, whose policies in Palestinian areas have raised rights concerns for decades

 

On Monday, the UN's special rapporteur on "rights in the Palestinian territories occupied by Israel," Michael Lynk, decried how "illegal settlement enterprise has moved at an alarming pace" this year.

 

Lynk pointed to announcements by Israel to build 6,000 new housing units in Palestinian areas, accompanied by "high rates of demolition of Palestinian homes in the West Bank, including East Jerusalem." He also cited a UN Security Council resolution in December that called the establishment of settlements in the West Bank a "flagrant violation" of international law.

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Tags: UN Israel
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