Scottish Friends of Israel member, Nigel Goodrich, is in Geneva representing Scotland’s voice.
Members of UNHRC ‘don’t care about human rights,’ say protestors in Geneva
The report on last year’s Gaza incursion, which was being officially presented to the UNHRC only meters from the demonstrators, charges that both Israel and Hamas may have committed war crimes
“The commission was able to gather substantial information pointing to serious violations of international humanitarian law and international human rights law by Israel and by Palestinian armed groups,” the report said, adding that “in some cases, these violations may amount to war crimes.”
Israel has previously been excoriated by the UNHRC for its actions in Gaza, with South African judge Richard Goldstone issuing a scathing report stating that both sides had “possibly [committed] crimes against humanity.” Goldstone, who is Jewish, later recanted, stating that “if I had known then what I know now, [it] would have been a different document.”
Asserting that Israel was within its right to respond to rocket fire from the coastal enclave from which Israeli settlers and soldiers withdrew a decade ago but which is still blockaded by the Israeli Navy, Singer accused Hamas of being the real occupier of Gaza.
Many of those on the council “don’t care about human rights,” he asserted to cheers from the crowd. “What they care about is pointing fingers at Israel to deflect attention from their own disturbing human rights record back home.”
The council, he said, has passed more resolutions critical of Israel than on any other subject in its eight years of existence.
“Blaming Israel for every woe has become a sport. Not just here at the UN but here especially,” he said.
Tweeting from within the council’s deliberations, Hillel Neuer of the UN Watch NGO quoted EU officials stating that the investigation, with which Israel declined to participate, had "gathered info from a large amount of sources" and "must be taken seriously.”
Compared to those deliberating within the UNHRC “Israel is perfect,” asserted Col. Richard Kemp, the former commander of British forces in Afghanistan, one of several pro-Israel experts testifying before the commission.
Several military experts have been brought to Geneva by the Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs in order to fill in the gap left by Israel’s boycott of the proceedings.
“I have just been sitting in the human rights commission listening to countries lining up one after the other to condemn Israel for its war crimes,” he said. “These are beacons of human rights like Cuba, Pakistan, Iran and Venezuela that exercise the highest standards of human rights,” he said sarcastically.
“Hamas’s aim is to force Israel to kill Palestinian civilians” by firing from residential areas and this strategy can be “seen working in action today,” he said, accusing the UNHRC of being “a tool of Hamas’s terrorism.”
Speaking with the Jerusalem Post, Kemp recalled receiving “abusive comments” from diplomats on the commission when he testified against the conclusions of the Goldstone report, stating that he believes the body to be “hostile” to advocates for Israel.
Among those present at the protest was Sister Lebona, an American member of the Evangelical Sisterhood of Mary living in Germany, who said that she came to support the “chosen people.”
“It’s a constant lie that they spread. It’s stupid to blame Israel” for everything, said Jan Jaarsveld, a Belgian man who came in for the protest.
Teodora Virga, a young Hungarian woman, agreed, saying that she came to join groups from France, Italy and elsewhere because she feels “wants to tell the UN that we don’t agree to sanction Israel.”
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