dinsdag 16 december 2008

Partijdige VN functionaris geweerd door Israel

 
Het is volkomen gerechtvaardigt dat iemand die de Joodse staat meermaals met de nazi's heeft vergeleken, en op geen enkele manier probeert om ook maar enigzins fair te zijn in zijn rapportages aan de VN, in Israel niet gewenst is. Voordat antizionisten weer beginnen over dat Israel niet tegen kritiek kan: geen land wordt zo veelvuldig bekritiseerd, zowel in de eigen kranten en door de eigen inwoners als door buitenlandse journalisten en allerhande (zogenaamde) vredes- en mensenrechtengroeperingen. Van een officiele VN functionaris mag echter verwacht worden dat hij zijn taak uitvoert, en Israel hoeft niet mee te werken aan een propagandacampagne tegen haarzelf. Als de VN dit in de toekomst wil vermijden kunnen ze misschien een iets minder extreme antizionist sturen, en zijn taak zo aanpassen dat ook mensenrechtenschendingen door de Palestijnen eronder vallen.
 
RP
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Last update - 15:45 15/12/2008       
Israel expels UN rights envoy who compared Israelis to Nazis
By Yoav Stern, Haaretz Correspondent
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1046838.html
 
 
Professor Richard Falk, a United Nations envoy who once sparked controversy by comparing Israelis to Nazis, has been barred entry to Israel and was put on a plane bound out of the country early on Monday.
 
In March, the Geneva-based UN Human Rights Council appointed Falk, a Jewish American and professor emeritus at Princeton University, to a six-year term monitoring the human rights situation as UN Special Rapporteur in the Palestinian territories.
 
Israel's Foreign Ministry said in September that it would not allow Falk to enter the country, after the BBC quoted Falk as defending statements he made last year equating Israel's treatment of Palestinians with Nazi treatment of Jews during the Holocaust. Falk told BBC that Israel had been unfairly shielded from international criticism.
 
 
Israel has also complained that Falk's mandate as an investigator was confined to human rights violations by Israel toward Palestinians and did not encompass violations by Palestinians toward Israelis.
 
Falk had been scheduled to hold meetings in Ramallah in the coming days with representatives of many human rights organizations.
 
The Adalah rights organization Monday sent an urgent letter to Interior Minister Meir Shitreet and Attorney General Menachem Mazuz, demanding that they lift the ban on Falk, which it called "a severe blow to the rights of the Palestinian civilian population living under Israeli occupation, a population which must be afforded protection by the occupier under international humanitarian law.
 
The letter said it was "Israel's obligation as a member of the UN and a signatory to various international human rights conventions to respect the work of UN representatives, to enable their human rights missions and to assist them in fulfilling their responsibilities without fear of
repercussions."
 
Prior to Falk's formal assumption of his duties, Israel had in the past allowed Falk to enter the country. This was the first time he had arrived in Israel in his role as Special Rapporteur.
 
The Foreign Ministry said that it has been made clear to Falk in advance that he would be denied entry into Israel, and that Israel would not cooperate with him.
 
"Falk was not invited by Israel, nor did he coordinate the visit, as UN regulations obligated him to do," said Simona Helprin, head of the Foreign Ministry's human rights department.
 
"It is indeed rare that Israel bars entry in this manner, but we cannot accept a situation in which an envoy arrives about whom it is known in advance that he will not carry out his role properly."
 
According to Helprin, the UN is under an obligation to see that its envoys are objective and fair, while Falk has compared the situation in the territories with that of the Nazi Holocaust. "From Israel's standpoint, he is not objective," she said.
 
The council's previous investigator, John Dugard from South Africa, compared Israeli treatment of Palestinians to apartheid, the discriminatory policy of the previous white regime in South Africa toward blacks.

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