GENERAL ASSEMBLY DEMANDS
IMMEDIATE END TO MILITARY INCURSIONS,
VIOLENCE AND TERROR
IN MIDDLE EAST Adopts Resolution by Vote
of 114 in Favour, 4 Against, 11 Abstentions
Taking note of the
Secretary-General's report on the events that
took place in Jenin and other Palestinian
cities in the period beginning in March to 7
May, the General Assembly this evening
demanded the immediate cessation of military
incursions and all acts of violence, terror,
provocation, incitement and destruction in
Israel and the occupied Palestinian
territories.
The Assembly took that
action by a vote of 114 in favour to 4
against (Federated States of Micronesia,
Israel, Marshall Islands, United States),
with 11 abstentions, as it resumed its
tenth emergency session to consider illegal
Israeli actions in occupied East Jerusalem
and the rest of the occupied Palestinian
territory, following the release of the
Secretary-General's report .
Also by the text, the
Assembly demanded the immediate withdrawal of
the Israeli occupying forces from Palestinian
population centres towards the return to the
positions held prior to September 2000.
Further, the Assembly
called for urgently needed assistance and
services to help in alleviating the current
dire humanitarian situation facing the
Palestinian people and to assist in
rebuilding and revitalizing the Palestinian
economy. It expressed support for
efforts in the reconstruction of the
Palestinian Authority, the reform of
Palestinian institutions and the holding of
democratic and free elections.
In addition, the Assembly
stressed the need for all concerned parties
to ensure the safety of civilians, and to
respect the universally accepted norms of
international humanitarian law. It also
emphasized the urgency of ensuring that
medical and humanitarian organizations were
granted unhindered access to the Palestinian
civilian population at all times.
The Assembly's action
followed a day-long discussion of the
Secretary-General's report, prepared on the
basis of Assembly resolution A/ES-10/10, adopted on 7 May, in which the
Secretary-General was requested to present a
report, drawing upon the available resources
and information, on events that took place in
Jenin and other Palestinian cities. The
Assembly requested the report following
the disbandment of the
United Nations fact-finding team that had
been convened by the Secretary-General in
response to Security Council resolution 1405 (2002).
18th and 19th
Meetings (AM & PM)
During the discussion,
Israel's representative stressed that the
report was explicitly clear: there had
been no massacre in Jenin. The shocking
and libelous accusations that had led to the
last emergency session, and the virtually
endless Security Council meetings had been
nothing more than propaganda. The
report confirmed what Israel had stated
throughout -- there had been a harsh battle
between terrorists seeking to continue a
bloody wave of terrorist attacks and Israeli
forces trying to prevent them from
succeeding.
The Observer for Palestine
said that despite the report's shortcomings,
it provided further confirmation of the fact
that the Israeli occupying forces had
committed war crimes, atrocities and other
serious violations of the Fourth Geneva
Convention against the Palestinian
people. In light of such crimes, direct
responsibility fell on the shoulders of the
international community to take measures
against the perpetrators. It must also
be borne in mind that the situation on the
ground had become even worse since the period
covered by the report.
Also speaking today, the
representative of the United States said the
Secretary-General's report put to rest the
central falsehood of a "massacre"
propagated by some Palestinian officials last
spring. The most important part of the
report was the call for a constructive look
to the future to prevent further bloodshed,
address real humanitarian needs and move
towards a negotiated political
settlement. By contrast, today's
resolution, purporting to reflect the
Secretary-General's report, made no effort to
provide a fair presentation of the context of
the current violence in the Middle East.
Speaking on behalf of the
European Union and associated States,
Denmark's representative said that, above
all, the Secretary-General's report painted a
picture of human suffering and clearly
illustrated that there was no military
solution to the conflict. The Union
shared fully the view that the events
described in the report, as well as the
ongoing cycle of violence and the continuing
deterioration of the situation, demonstrated
the urgent need for the parties to resume a
process that would lead back to the
negotiating table.
The representative of the
Russian Federation called on both sides to
stop the bloodletting, avoid using terrorist
actions and try to follow up on initiatives
taken. Both sides should do their
utmost to stop violence and bring about a
situation in which the peace process could
move forward. It was necessary to see
how a viable Palestine could be brought about
and how both societies could live in
peace. Progress in the field of reforms
and security in humanitarian areas should be
carried out together.
Speaking in his capacity
as Chair of the Committee on the Exercise of
the Inalienable Rights of the Palestinian
People, Senegal's representative said that,
if left to themselves, Israelis and
Palestinians would never be able to extricate
themselves from the cycle of violence.
He called on the international community to
shoulder its responsibility and intervene
more resolutely by, among other things,
creating a multinational presence in the
area.
Others speaking today
included the representatives of China, Libya,
Kuwait, Pakistan, Qatar, Bahrain, Sudan,
Syria, Norway, Cuba, Iraq, India, Jordan,
Indonesia, Malaysia, Japan, Democratic
People's Republic of Korea, Singapore, Iran,
Egypt, Republic of Korea, Bangladesh,
Thailand, Chile, South Africa (on behalf of
the Non-Aligned Movement), Morocco, Costa
Rica (on behalf of the Rio Group), Turkey,
Namibia and Mauritius.
The observers for the
League of Arab States and the Organization of
the Islamic Conference also spoke.
Speaking in explanations
of vote were the representatives of Canada,
Israel, Australia, Denmark (on behalf of the
European Union and associated States),
Guatemala, Peru and Paraguay.
The Observer for Palestine
also made a statement after the vote.
The next meeting of the
Assembly will be announced.
Background
The General Assembly
resumed its tenth emergency special session
this morning to consider illegal Israeli
actions in occupied East Jerusalem and the
rest of the occupied Palestinian
territory. The delegations of Oman (on
behalf of the Arab Group) and South Africa
requested the Assembly to take up the matter
again upon the release of the
Secretary-General's report on the town of
Jenin.
The tenth emergency
special session dates back to 1997 when
Israel began construction of a new settlement
south of East Jerusalem. The Security
Council met twice on the issue, but failed to
adopt two resolutions. Using the
"Uniting for Peace" formula, a
special emergency session of the General
Assembly was convened in April and again in
July and November of 1997. It also resumed in
1998, 1999, 2000 and 2001. On 20
December 2001, resolution A/RES/ES-10/8 on
the issue was adopted with 124 in favour, 6
against and 25 abstentions. Another
resolution on the applicability of the Geneva
Conventions was adopted with 133 in favour,
4 against and 16
abstentions.
Reconvening on 7 May 2002
following the disbandment of the Jenin team,
the tenth emergency session heard 35 speakers
and saw the adoption of General Assembly
resolution A/ES-10/10 which, among other
things, requested the Secretary-General to
present a report on the events that took
place in Jenin and other Palestinian
cities. That resolution was adopted
with 74 in favour, 4 against and
54 abstentions.
In commenting on the
release of the current report, the
Secretary-General noted that it had been
based on information in the public
domain. "While some of the facts
may be in dispute", he said, "I
think it is clear that the Palestinian
population have suffered, and are suffering,
the humanitarian consequences of which are
very severe." He expressed the
hope that both parties would "draw the
right lessons from this tragic episode and
take steps to end the cycle of violence,
which is killing innocent civilians on both
sides".
Security Council
Resolution 1405 (2002)
On 19 April 2002, the
Security Council unanimously adopted
resolution 1405 (2002), in which it welcomed
the Secretary-General's initiative to develop
accurate information regarding recent events
in the Jenin refugee camp through a
fact-finding team. That resolution was
tabled in the Council by the delegation of
the United States following telephone
conversations the Secretary-General had with
Israel's Foreign Affairs and Defence
Ministers at their initiative, during which
he was assured that Israel would cooperate
fully with the team that would be
designated. Pursuant to resolution 1405
(2002), the Secretary-General established a
fact-finding team on 22 April 2002.
In addition, the team was
provided with technical expertise in
military, security and counter-terrorism
issues, as well as forensic science and
general support staff. The team
gathered at Geneva and began to prepare a
work plan based on three elements: (a)
events in Jenin in the period immediately
prior to Israel's military operation; (b) the
battle in Jenin during Operation Defensive
Shield; and (c) efforts by humanitarian
workers to gain access to the civilian
population in Jenin after the end of
hostilities. After the appointment of
the team, the Government of Israel raised a
number of concerns regarding the work of the
team that made its timely deployment
impossible and led the Secretary-General to
disband the team.
Summary of Report
The report
(document A/ES-10/186) was prepared on the basis of
Assembly resolution A/ES-10/10 adopted on 7
May 2002, in which the Secretary-General was
requested, following the disbandment of the
fact-finding team, to present a report
drawing upon the available resources and
information on the recent events that took
place in Jenin and other Palestinian cities.
Written without a visit to
Jenin or the other Palestinian cities in
question, the report relies completely on
available resources and information,
including submissions from five United
Nations Member States and Observer Missions,
documents in the public domain and papers
submitted by non-governmental
organizations. The
Under-Secretary-General for Political Affairs
wrote to the Permanent Representative of
Israel and the Permanent Observer of
Palestine to the United Nations, requesting
them to submit information, but only the
latter did so. In the absence of a response
from Israel, the United Nations has relied on
public statements of Israeli officials and
publicly available documents of the
Government of Israel relevant to the request
in resolution ES-10/10.
Covering the period from
approximately the beginning of March to 7 May
2002, the report sets out the context and
background of the situation in Israel and the
occupied Palestinian territory, including the
security, humanitarian and human rights
responsibilities of both parties. It
briefly charts the rising violence since
September 2000, which by 7 May 2002 had
caused the deaths of 441 Israelis and 1,539
Palestinians.
The report describes the
pattern of attacks carried out by Palestinian
armed groups against Israel operating from
the West Bank and Israel's military action
during Operation Defensive Shield, which
began on 29 March with an incursion into
Ramallah, followed by entry into Tulkarm and
Qalqilya on 1 April, Bethlehem on
2 April, and Jenin and
Nablus on 3 April. By 3 April, six of
the largest cities in the West Bank, and
their surrounding towns, villages and refugee
camps, had been occupied by the Israeli
military. Operation Defensive Shield
was characterized by extensive curfews on
civilian populations and restrictions,
including occasional prohibitions on the
movement of international personnel,
humanitarian and medical personnel, as well
as human rights monitors and journalists.
In many instances, the
report notes, humanitarian workers were not
able to reach people in need.
Combatants on both sides conducted themselves
in ways that, at times, placed civilians in
harm's way. Much of the fighting during
Operation Defensive Shield occurred in areas
heavily populated by civilians and, in many
cases, heavy weaponry was used. As a
result of those practices, the populations of
the cities covered in the report suffered
severe hardships. The Israeli Defence
Forces (IDF) announced the official end of
the operation on 21 April, but its
consequences lasted until the end of the
period under review and beyond.
The report describes the
concerns of the Israeli Government that a
number of the cities served as bases for
Palestinian terrorists and their attacks
against Israel. It also points out that
Palestinian groups are alleged to have widely
booby-trapped civilian homes -- acts which
targeted IDF personnel, but also placed
civilians in danger. It quotes the
Palestinian Authority as acknowledging that a
number of Palestinian fighters resisted the
Israeli military assault.
On the other hand, the
report refers to allegations by the
Palestinian Authority and human rights
organizations that in the course of its
operations the IDF engaged in unlawful
killings, the use of human shields,
disproportionate use of force, arbitrary
arrests and torture and denial of medical
treatment and access. In part, it
points to the fact that more than 2,800
refugee housing units were damaged and 878
homes were destroyed, leaving more than
17,000 people homeless or in need of shelter
rehabilitation. It also cites cases in
which Israeli forces attacked ambulances or
otherwise failed to respect the neutrality of
medical and humanitarian workers.
As for the death toll, the
findings show that the IDF lost 30 soldiers
during Operation Defensive Shield.
During the reviewed period, Israel also
endured some 16 bombings, the majority of
them suicide attacks, resulting in the deaths
of 100 persons and injuries to scores of
others. On the Palestinian
side, 497 people were
killed and 1,447 wounded in the course of the
IDF reoccupation of Palestinian areas from 1
March through 7 May and in the
immediate aftermath.
Most accounts estimate
that between 70 and 80 Palestinians,
including about 50 civilians, were killed in
Nablus, where four IDF soldiers lost their
lives. In Jenin, by the time of the
IDF's withdrawal and the lifting of the
curfew on 18 April, at least 52 Palestinians,
possibly half of them civilians, and
23 Israeli soldiers were
dead. Allegations by a senior
Palestinian Authority official that some 500
were killed in Jenin have not been
substantiated in the light of the evidence
that has emerged.
As for the overall impact,
the report says, the events continue to have
tangible repercussions, resulting in the
sharp intensification of the hardships faced
by the civilian population in the occupied
Palestinian territory. There has been a
near complete cessation of all productive
activity in the main West Bank centres of
manufacturing, construction, commerce and
private and public services, exacerbating the
severe decline in living standards over the
last 18 months. Of particular concern
is the use, by combatants on both sides, of
violence that placed civilians in harm's way.
Much of the fighting
during Operation Defensive Shield occurred in
areas heavily populated by civilians, in
large part because the armed Palestinian
groups sought by IDF placed their combatants
and installations among civilians.
Palestinian groups are alleged to have widely
booby-trapped civilian homes, acts targeted
at IDF personnel, but also putting civilians
in danger. The IDF is reported to have
used bulldozers, tank shelling and rocket
firing, at times from helicopters, in
populated areas.
In his observations, the
Secretary-General shares the assessment of
former Finnish President Martti Ahtisaari and
his fact-finding team that a full and
comprehensive report on recent events in
Jenin, as well as in other Palestinian
cities, could not be made without the full
cooperation of both parties and a visit to
the area. He, therefore, would not wish to go
beyond the very limited findings of facts,
which are set out in the body of the
text. But he was, nevertheless,
confident that the picture painted in the
report is a fair representation of a complex
reality. He notes that the events
described in the report, the continuing
deterioration of the situation and the
ongoing cycle of violence demonstrate the
urgent need for the parties to resume a
process that would lead back to the
negotiating table.
According to the report,
there is very wide support in the
international community for a solution in
which two States, Israel and Palestine, live
side by side within secure and recognized
borders, as called for by the Security
Council in resolution 1397 (2002). The Secretary-General
believes that the international community has
a compelling responsibility to intensify its
efforts to find a peaceful and durable
solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict,
as a key element in the search for a just,
lasting and comprehensive settlement in the
Middle East based on Security Council
resolutions 242 (1967) and 338 (1973).
The Assembly also had
before today a draft resolution sponsored by
Egypt, Qatar, Sudan and Palestine, on Illegal
Israeli actions in occupied East Jerusalem
and the rest of the occupied Palestinian
territory (document A/ES-10/L.10). By that text, the
Assembly would express its deep concern at
the more recent occupation of Palestinian
cities and other populated centres by the
Israeli occupying forces and the destruction
of the institutions of the Palestinian
Authority.
Welcoming the recently
established international consensus on the
two-State solution and the need for the
establishment of the State of Palestine, the
text would have the Assembly condemn the
atrocities committed by the Israeli occupying
forces against Palestinian civilians in Jenin
and other Palestinian cities, including
unlawful killings, use of human shields,
disproportionate use of force and denial of
medical treatment, some of which constitute
grave breaches of the Fourth Geneva
Convention.
The text would have the
Assembly demand the withdrawal of the Israeli
forces from Palestinian cities and other
populated centres towards the return to the
positions held prior to September 2000, which
would open the way to meaningful political
dialogue. It would also demand the
complete cessation of violence, including
military actions, destruction and acts of
terror against civilians.
Further by the draft, the
Assembly would emphasize the importance of
the safety and well-being of all civilians in
the Middle-East region, as well as the
responsibilities under article 29 of the
Fourth Geneva Convention. It would also
have the Assembly stress the need for
necessary and appropriate action against the
violators of international humanitarian law,
in particular, perpetrators of war crimes.
Statements
NASSER AL-KIDWA, Observer
for Palestine, said the full facts had not
been revealed, including some specific
questions, about what happened in the Jenin
camp. A real, direct investigation
remained necessary in order to reveal the
whole truth. In addition, the report
only addressed the specific period from March
to 7 May. An accurate and
thorough understanding required the placing
of the situation in the context of everything
that the occupying Power had been doing
before and after that period.
Despite the report's
shortcomings, he said, it provided further
confirmation of the fact that the Israeli
occupying forces had committed war crimes,
atrocities and other serious violations of
the Fourth Geneva Convention against the
Palestinian people. In light of such
crimes, direct responsibility fell on the
shoulders of the international community to
take measures against the perpetrators.
It must also be borne in mind that the
situation on the ground had become even worse
since the period covered by the report.
The Israeli occupying
forces continued with yet another wave of
invasion
and reoccupation of most
Palestinian cities and population centres in
the occupied West Bank, he said.
As of today, since September 2000, more
than 1,710 Palestinians --
men, women and children -- had been killed in
military attacks. Thousands more had
been injured, disabled and rendered
homeless. Currently, nearly 50 per cent
of the Palestinian population lived below the
poverty line, and malnutrition among
Palestinian children was rapidly increasing.
He reiterated that the
situation was one of foreign occupation, in
which the occupying Power had actively sought
to colonize the land to serve its
expansionist designs. Any attempt to
even partially conceal that fact and to find
a pretext to absolve the Israeli side from
its responsibilities in that regard would
never succeed.
The Palestinian Authority
and the Palestinian leadership, he said, had
taken a clear position against suicide
bombings as undermining the national interest
of the Palestinian people. Acts of
resistance by Palestinians in the occupied
territory against the Israeli occupation were
legitimate under international law,
incomparable with acts targeting Israeli
civilians in Israel itself. Ending the
prevailing tragedy could most rapidly be
achieved by ending the occupation.
What was needed now, he
said, was a detailed road map and timeline
leading to the establishment of an
independent Palestine. The internal
Palestinian situation would always remain the
domain of the Palestinian people themselves
to deal with. Any initiatives or plans
that would exempt the Israeli side from
taking specific actions up front and from
adopting different policies than were
currently being pursued would only serve to
provide further cover for even more
destructive Israeli actions.
He reiterated that a
comprehensive approach to the situation meant
not only dealing with the political, economic
and security issues simultaneously, but also
an agreement on a final outcome from the
start. Clearly, an international
presence, such as observers or even a more
bold and appropriate proposal such as that
made by the Secretary-General for a credible
and robust multinational force, was needed
and could genuinely contribute to efforts to
stabilize the situation and work towards a
peaceful, final settlement.
ZHANG YISHAN (China)
said that in recent days, while the
international community had been extending
every effort to help relax the tensions in
the Middle East, the conflict was still
escalating. The Israeli side had
launched missiles on Palestinian sites, while
suicide bombings against Israeli sites had
persisted. Therefore, it was absolutely
necessary to call for a resumption of the
special session today. China had
carefully studied the Secretary-General's
report and regretted that the obstruction by
the Israeli authorities had forced him to
disband the fact-finding mission to
Jenin. The United Nations had,
therefore, lost the opportunity to review the
situation first-hand.
He emphasized that the
crux of the continuing Palestinian-Israeli
tensions was the continuing Israeli
reoccupation and military operations in
Palestinian areas, he said. Those
actions by the Israeli military authorities
had caused numerous casualties and loss of
property. Those were facts, whether in
Jenin or other cities, and China, therefore,
condemned those killings by the Israeli
authorities.
In order for peace to
materialize, he said, Israel must abide by
the resolutions of the Security Council and
General Assembly and withdraw fully from
Palestinian territories. China also
condemned the persistent suicide bombings and
other actions, which only undermined the
legitimate cause of the Palestinian
people. Both sides should work towards
the implementation of Security Council
resolution 1397 (2002).
JOHN D. NEGROPONTE (United
States) said there should not be a
discussion focused solely on Palestinians
when, yet again, there had been more
terrorist attacks in Israel. The events
of the last week showed that the focus of the
emergency session was out of step with the
reality of events on the ground. There
would not be peace in the Middle East while
one side persisted in its attacks on the
civilians of the other side. For too
long, the General Assembly and the Security
Council had been silent when Israelis were
victims of terrorism. Member States
must reject the rationale given by Hamas,
Palestinian Islamic Jihad and others that
their terrorist bombings were somehow
justified by the state of affairs in the
Middle East.
The Secretary-General's
report put to rest the central falsehood of a
"massacre" propagated by some
Palestinian officials last spring, he
said. The most important part of the
report was the call for a constructive look
to the future to prevent further bloodshed,
address real humanitarian needs, and move
towards a negotiated political
settlement. That was the essential task
at hand. In contrast, the draft
Palestinian resolution, purporting to reflect
the Secretary-General's report, made no
effort to provide a fair presentation of the
context of the current violence in the Middle
East. In fact, it appeared to be an
attempt to write an alternative report.
Neither the emergency
session nor another resolution that dodged
the central challenge that terrorism posed to
peacemaking in the Middle East would move the
peace process forward or ameliorate the
acknowledged dire humanitarian situation in
the West Bank and Gaza. But direct
diplomatic engagement and an effective
response by the international community held
out the real promise of doing both. The
United States would vote against today's
resolution, as it had voted against its
predecessor in May, because it was focused on
working directly with the parties to bring
results. Also, the condemnatory
rhetoric against Israel contained in the
resolution would not contribute to the
efforts of the international community to
urge both parties to take the decisions they
needed to make to end violence and return to
negotiations.
AARON JACOB (Israel)
noted that General Assembly resolution
ES-10/10 had been adopted on the same day
that 15 Israeli civilians were killed by a
suicide attack in Rishon Letzion and in the
face of objections by many States that had
argued that it was inappropriate and
unacceptable and blatantly one sided, failed
to condemn Palestinian terrorism, and sought
to pre-determine the facts on which the
Secretary-General's report would be based.
Today's debate occurred
barely 24 hours after a spate of five
Palestinian terrorist attacks that had
claimed at least 13 innocent Israeli lives
and wounded scores of others, he
continued. Those recent attacks had
included a Hamas suicide bombing in the
peaceful city of Safed, where the attacker's
assault ripped apart a commuter bus, killing
nine people and injuring some 45 others.
And yet a familiar
scenario was repeating itself in the Assembly
today, he said. A draft resolution had
been tabled which ignored the bloody
Palestinian terrorist campaign and suicide
bombings, which had been classified as crimes
against humanity. Palestinian
representatives and their supporters
continued to be wilfully blind to the
heartless acts of Palestinian terrorism and
their toll on the innocent. Indeed, at the
previous special session, Palestinian
representatives had been focused on
convincing the international community and
the media that a massacre had occurred in
Jenin. The Palestinian Authority had
spoken of 500 victims, while other
Palestinian spokesmen put the number
somewhere in the thousands.
While the Palestinian
Observer to the United Nations had made
repeated and malicious allegations describing
Israel's actions as a "wide-raging
massacre perpetrated against the camp's
inhabitants", the Secretary-General's
report was explicitly clear: there had
been no massacre in Jenin. The shocking
and libelous accusations that had led to that
last emergency session and the virtually
endless Security Council meetings had been
nothing more than propaganda. Had the
international community not been so misled,
it was doubtful that Member States would have
tolerated such time-consuming use of United
Nations bodies. The report confirmed
what Israel had stated throughout -- there
had been a harsh battle between terrorists
seeking to continue a bloody wave of
terrorist attacks and Israeli forces trying
to prevent them from succeeding.
Terrorism, he continued,
could not be used as a negotiating
tactic. It was morally wrong and would
never work. On that, the report was
clear: Palestinian hopes that a policy
of inducing violence and terrorism in order
to try to cause the Government and people of
Israel to "buckle", simple would
not work. On the contrary, in the face
of the cowardly terrorists who hid behind
civilians, the past two years had revealed an
impressive well of courage on the part of
ordinary Israeli men women and children who
refused to be intimidated by acts of terror,
instead continuing to travel on buses, go to
university and visit cafes and shopping
malls.
He said that a decade of
corruption and incitement by the Palestinian
leadership -- in school books, on children's
television and in local mosques -- had
created a generation, which had difficulty
dreaming of even the possibility of
peace. Indeed, the current Palestinian
leadership, which had signed peace agreements
with one hand, while signing terrorist
cheques with the other, had proven again and
again that it could not be a partner for
peace. It appeared that the notion that
the people of Israel also deserved a secure
and peaceful existence was too high a price
to pay for the current Palestinian
leadership, which had preferred the embrace
of extremists to the principles of peaceful
coexistence.
The repeated willingness
of international organizations and the
Assembly to play host to every Palestinian
allegation against Israel had not helped
advance the cause of the Palestinian people
one iota towards their dreams, he said.
The tolerance for Palestinian attempts to
politicize every possible agenda throughout
the United Nations had done nothing to
enhance the credibility and reputation of the
United Nations or to advance the prospects of
peace for peace and security for Israelis and
Palestinians. To return to the path of
peace, moderate Palestinians, neighbouring
Arab States and the international community
as a whole must broadcast an unequivocal
message: terrorism and the support for
it was intolerable and criminal, and would
not be rewarded by political concessions.
ABUZED OMAR DORDA (Libya)
said the Secretary-General's report
signified, if anything, the weakness and
dependency to which the United Nations had
succumbed. The report equated the
victim with the criminal, and was formulated
in a manner that did not express the facts
that had occurred in reality or what had been
reported by the media. The weakness of
the United Nations was a reflection of the
weakness of its membership. Also, some
of those working in the Department of
Political Affairs were no longer
"internationalists" in taking up
their tasks, but undertook their
responsibilities according to their own terms
of reference or according to what was
dictated to them.
When the Secretary-General
had returned from Baghdad a few years ago, he
recalled, he had been received by the staff
at Headquarters as a hero. Those in the
United Nations saw in that image the
liberation of the Organization from its
dependency. But since then, the
Secretary-General had been left alone in the
face of the strong. The United Nations
should be an umbrella for the weak and not an
instrument to be used by the powerful to beat
up on the weak.
As for the question of
Palestine, he reiterated that there had never
been a land called Israel before 1948.
No one was entitled to occupy the land of
others. The question of Palestine was
one of occupation, no more and no less.
The land now filled with settlements could
not be restored to its original owners.
What peace were they referring to and how
could it be achieved? What was the
sarcastic comedy that was being
witnessed? The United Nations should
return to truth.
MOHAMMAD ABULHASAN (Kuwait)
said the violent Israeli military actions
against unarmed innocent people in Jenin and
other Palestinian cities had been perpetrated
against civilians who were attempting to
establish their inalienable rights.
Those actions had caused the whole world to
tremble, prompting the Secretary-General to
deploy a high-level fact-finding mission to
the camp. And, as everyone had assumed
it would, the Israeli Government had refused
to allow that mission to carry out its
duties.
Today, he said, the
Assembly must recognize that the information
contained in the report was incomplete and
that Israel had not even complied with the
Secretary-General's request to provide a
written response. Why had Israel
refused to acknowledge its actions?
Further, the Israeli forces had continued
their violent practices with increasing
degrees of cruelty in recent months. No
one could deny the right of the Palestinian
people to self-determination or their right
to life. It could also not be denied
that the Palestinian leadership had been
attempting to initiate a dialogue with the
occupying Power. Those attempts had
been denied through a series of
obstructionist and even racist gestures.
Israel's actions
manifested themselves in the most heinous
breaches of humanitarian and international
law, he said. They also led to despair,
frustration and loss of hope on the part of
the Palestinian people. Israel felt
that it could do what it wanted with
impunity, and the Israeli Government appeared
to interpret the inertia of the Security
Council and other international bodies as
implicit support of its actions. It
believed that it was above international
humanitarian law. Kuwait urged all
international bodies, particularly the
Council, to carry out their duties to
maintain international peace and
security. It would further call on the
Council to ensure that all those that
continued to breach international law were
identified and brought to justice. That
call was more urgent than ever, now that the
International Criminal Call had entered into
force.
He said the only way to
ensure peace would be the full withdrawal of
all Israeli forces from the occupied
territories, based on the relevant Security
Council resolutions. Israel must halt
arbitrary arrest, siege and policies of
starvation. It must also dismantle its
settlements and cease creating new ones.
Those actions would be the only way to ensure
that the Palestinian people could have a
feeling of confidence and security.
Kuwait urged the Security Council to send a
disengagement and monitoring force to the
region to ensure safety and security on the
ground and aid in implementing the relevant
resolutions.
MUNIR AKRAM (Pakistan)
said the Secretary-General's report had been
issued under difficult circumstances and was,
at best, a second-hand account of what had
transpired. Beyond determining the
nature of the events of April and affixing
responsibility for them, there were larger
questions to be dealt with, the first being
the illegality of foreign occupation, which
was the root cause of the violence in the
occupied Palestinian territories. While
Israel was obligated to withdraw from those
areas, it had continued to occupy them, as
well as to reoccupy areas that had been
vacated. The Secretary-General had
rightly observed that self-defence was not a
blank cheque for the occupying Power.
The second issue, he said,
was the obligation of Member States to
implement Security Council resolutions.
Israel had refused to implement both Council
and Assembly resolutions. The third
issue was the applicability and observance of
the Fourth Geneva Convention and
international humanitarian law, which were
applicable to the West Bank and Gaza.
Despite its shortcomings, the report had
confirmed that serious violations of
international law had taken place in the
course of the Israeli military occupation of
the Jenin camp. While the word
"massacre", like
"terrorism", had not been legally
defined, what had occurred in Jenin amounted
to serious violations of international
humanitarian law, which could constitute war
crimes. The Assembly must determine
appropriate legal action for the perpetrators
and planners of such policies.
Noting that the
international community had declared a war
against terrorism, he said Pakistan was
committed to success in that war.
However, in the Holy Land, as in other areas
such as Jammu and Kashmir, the campaign
against terrorism had been used as an excuse
for violations of human rights. Durable
peace did not flow from the barrel of a gun.
ABDULLAH AL-ATHBA (Qatar)
said today's meeting was taking place at a
particularly critical time. Violence
continued in the region, and the Israeli
Government had continued its military actions
-- many of which were in direct contravention
of international law - namely,
arbitrary arrest, missile launches, killings
and restrictions on the movement of innocent
civilians.
He said there was no doubt
that the atrocities committed in Jenin and
other Palestinian cities were criminal.
Qatar could not understand why the report
avoided using the word
"massacre". The United
Nations, which so strongly condemned
terrorist actions, should equally condemn
Prime Minister Sharon's actions. The
report contained many contradictions, relying
too much on the accounts of the Israeli
Government and ignoring the Palestinian
accounts and, most unfortunately, the reports
of international humanitarian organizations
in the region.
Qatar was also certain
that if the Secretary-General's fact-finding
mission had not met such vehement resistance
from the Israeli Government, the report
before the Assembly would have portrayed a
far different account of the events in Jenin
and other cities. Israel's rigid
position on withdrawal from Palestinian
territories was well known. Qatar
refused to accept Security Council
resolutions based on a double standard --
maintaining peace and security was a
principle that must be imposed on everyone,
including Israel.
JASSIM MOHAMMED BUALLAY (Bahrain)
said that, although his country was against
terrorism in any form, that should not be
taken to mean that it was not in favour of
self-determination for people under foreign
occupation. The Palestinian people were
an example of people living under
occupation. Compared to others in
similar situations, the Palestinians had been
victims on an almost daily basis since
1948.
What had happened in Jenin
gave rise to great anger in the international
community, he said. The decision of the
Secretary-General to dispatch a team to
conduct an investigation had been welcomed at
the international level. It had been
necessary for the fact-finding team to visit
the area to determine what had happened, but
Israel had refused to allow the team to carry
out its work.
He said he had hoped for
more in terms of the Secretary-General's
report. It had been recognized that it
had not been possible to carry out a proper
study of the events. It was not
possible, he noted, to put on an equal
footing the occupation forces and those of
the occupied. It was difficult to build
a State due to the tremendous destruction
inflicted on the areas in question.
ILHAM IBRAHIM AHMED (Sudan)
reiterated her delegation's strong
condemnation of Israel's continued refusal to
comply with Security Council resolutions, to
cooperate with the Secretary-General's
fact-finding mission to Jenin and subsequent
attempts to prepare a report on the serious
events that took place there. The Sudan
regretted that the report contained no
serious conclusions or recommendations, and
that it had been based on facts contrary to
what had been witnessed by the international
community.
She said it was deeply
regrettable that the report characterized the
barbaric actions of the Israeli Government as
merely a normal response to "Palestinian
violent activities". The report
was an unbalanced account of events sparked
by the continued occupation of Palestinian
territories by Israel. To the Sudan's
great surprise, the report depicted the
bloody actions by the occupying Power on the
same level as those actions taken by the
Palestinian people to defend their sovereign
rights. There was no surprise, then,
that Israel hailed the release of the report,
as it depended mostly on that country's own
accounts of the situation in Jenin and other
cities.
By continuing its brutal
crimes and violations of international
humanitarian norms, she said, Israel
apparently considered itself to be above
international law. The occupying Power
was heedless of any and all international
legality and continued to humiliate the
bodies of the United Nations and ignore the
requests of the Security Council.
The only way to ensure
Israel's security was through complete
withdrawal from the occupied territories, she
said. That would enable the Palestinian
people to establish an independent
State. The Sudan called on all
peace-loving countries to firmly adopt a
position that would compel Israel to respond
to international legal principles.
GENNADY GATILOV (Russian
Federation) expressed serious concerned
with the situation in the occupied
Palestinian territories, saying the illegal
Israeli acts not only increased the number of
victims, but also increased violence and did
nothing positive to solve the
situation. They did not constitute
security for Israel, but only illegal acts
against the Palestinians. He called on
both sides to stop the bloodletting, avoid
using terrorist actions and try to follow up
on initiatives taken.
As one of the sponsors of
the peace process and as one of the members
of the Quartet, he said both sides should do
their utmost to stop violence and bring about
a situation in which the peace process could
move forward. It was necessary to see
how a viable Palestine could be brought about
and how both societies could live in
peace. Progress in the area of reforms
and security in humanitarian areas should be
carried out together. It should be made
possible for Palestinians to have genuine
bodies of their own. Also, the
situation of closures must be examined.
He hoped the Arab States would continue to
work in the region with the goal of renewing
the peace process.
MIKHAIL WEHBE (Syria)
said he was not surprised that certain
delegations today would refer to the actions
of the Palestinian Authority rather than
dwell on the Israeli military actions that
continued to date and which ran contrary to
all international legal legitimacy.
Human Rights Watch had depicted the
Secretary-General's report as a failure
because it "did not examine the actions
taken by Israeli military forces".
Syria further regarded the report as a
failure because it did not present any
proposals or recommendations based on facts
as they had really occurred in Jenin and
other Palestinian cities.
He said war crimes had
indeed been committed, but, unfortunately,
Israel had once again skirted its
international obligations. Once again,
it had ignored the resolutions of the
Assembly and the Security Council.
Israel had once again flouted even the will
of the Secretary-General to cooperate with
his fact-finding mission to Jenin or the
compilation of the report before the Assembly
today. The report did not properly
reflect Israel's failure to cooperate with
its preparation at any levels, but was merely
a recitation of the Israeli Government's view
of events.
More than 1,700
Palestinian's had been killed by the actions
of Israeli military forces, he
asserted. What was the justification
for the continued raids on peaceful villages
which left hundreds of women children and
other civilians dead? The
Secretary-General's report discreetly set out
many of the actions taken by the Israeli
military. Did those actions not
constitute violations of humanitarian law and
of the Fourth Geneva Convention? Why
did the report fail to call war crimes what
they really were? Such events had
previously qualified as war crimes in every
United Nations forum. Any failure to
identify such actions would open the path for
Israel and all who followed it to undermine
the efforts achieved by the international
community to put clear restrictions on
violations of international humanitarian law.
He reiterated that the
peace to which all aspired was a
comprehensive one, in accordance with
international legality. That meant
putting an end to Israeli occupation,
withdrawal from the occupied territories and
the full realization of the right of the
Palestinian people to establish an
independent State. Syria did not
believe that the massacres perpetrated in
Jenin and the recent violent aggression would
be the end of Israel's barbaric
actions. Still, Syria believed that the
international community, along with the
people of both Palestine and Israel, could
work towards establishing a lasting and just
peace in the Middle East.
WEGGER STROMMEN (Norway)
said the report before the Assembly was but a
substitute for the report that was to have
been presented by the disbanded fact- finding
team. Nevertheless, it gave clear
indications and facts as to what had happened
in Jenin and other Palestinian cities.
The report confirmed that Palestinian
militants had established military bases in
densely populated civilian areas. It
also confirmed the responsibility of the
Palestinian Authority to protect Israeli
civilians from attacks, including suicide
bombings, emanating from areas under its
security control.
However, the report also
gave clear indications that the Israeli
response to the Palestinian terrorist attacks
was out of proportion, he said. It also
pointed to Israel denying the medical and
humanitarian workers access to the areas of
operation, and to the targeting of such
personnel by the IDF. He urged Israel
and the Palestinian Authority to strictly
comply with international law, both in
fighting terrorism and in protecting
civilians. He also urged the
Palestinian Authority to do its utmost to
prevent further suicide bombings.
Encouraged by the
Palestinian Authority's serious new reform
efforts, he said the Norwegian Government was
ready to make its contribution to the reform
process both as a member of the Task Force on
reforms and bilaterally. Norway urged
Israel to cooperate with the Palestinian
Authority and the international community in
putting reforms into effect and making them
work. Israel should cease its policy of
forcible transfer of protected persons, and
refrain from collective punishment, including
harsh closures and the demolishing of
Palestinian homes, actions which were in
breach of Israel's international commitments.
RODOLFO BENITEZ VERSON (Cuba)
said that since Israel had flagrantly ignored
Council resolution 1405 (2002) and had never
responded to the Secretary-General's request
to cooperate in the preparation of the
report, it had major limitations, which were
recognized in the report itself.
Hypocrisy and double
standards continued to prevail, protected by
the use of the veto in the Security Council,
he said. The situation in the Middle
East would have been different were it not
for the 25 United States vetoes in the
Council. The United States must
immediately suspend military support to
Israel. The State terrorism unleashed
by Israel must cease and the systematic
violation of the human rights of the
Palestinians, torture and demolition of homes
must be halted. The attempts by the
United States and Israel to no longer
recognize Palestinian Authority President
Yasser Arafat was unacceptable, while Israeli
Prime Minister Ariel Sharon was maintained as
a legitimate interlocutor.
Cuba would persist in
denouncing the crimes committed against Arab
peoples, particularly the Palestinians, he
said. Innocent Israeli civilian
casualties were the victims of the policies
and actions of their Government. The
Palestinian people could not continue not to
have protection under the current
circumstances. The proposal of the
Secretary-General to establish a
multinational force must be examined without
delay, and the Assembly must act to aid the
heroic people of Palestine and uphold the
credibility of the United Nations.
ELLEN MARGRETHE LØJ (Denmark),
speaking on behalf of the European Union,
said military and violent actions only bred
more hatred and undermined attempts to
bring about reconciliation and a negotiated
settlement of the Middle East conflict.
Thus, the European Union deeply regretted the
continued violence in the region, which just
yesterday included an attack on an Israeli
bus near Safed. The fact that civilians
were being targeted by meaningless acts of
violence was significant as those activities
had picked up just as the international
community was working together with the
parties to put the peace process back on
track.
She said the dire
situation in the Palestinian areas called for
immediate humanitarian efforts.
International humanitarian agencies must be
allowed full, safe and unfettered access to
those areas. The Union noted with
concern the Secretary-General's finding that
a significant part of the fighting during
Operation Defensive Shield had taken place in
heavily populated civilian areas and that
both sides had placed civilians in harm's
way. The European Union deplored the
loss of civilian life that subsequently
occurred. The widespread and senseless
destruction of Palestinian public and private
property had grim social, economic and
humanitarian consequences for the civilian
populations in the affected areas.
The European Union
stressed the responsibility of the
Palestinian Authority, under international
law, to protect civilian, including
undertaking the maximum possible efforts to
stop terrorist attacks against the Israeli
population and bringing the perpetrators to
justice. The Union noted with grave
concern reports of the unnecessary suffering
of the civilian population due to the denial
of access to medical and humanitarian
personnel, particularly in the immediate
aftermath of the incursion. Both
parties were called on to comply strictly
with international law and to exert all
efforts to protect civilians when preventing
and combating terror.
Above all, she continued,
the Secretary-General's report painted a
picture of human suffering and clearly
illustrated that there was no military
solution to the conflict. The European
Union fully shared the view that the events
described in the report, along with the
ongoing cycle of violence and the continuing
deterioration of the situation, demonstrated
the urgent need for the parties to resume a
process that would lead back to the
negotiating table.
MOHAMMED A. ALDOURI (Iraq)
said the report recorded a number of war
crimes and crimes against humanity and
pointed to the fact that the Council had not
cooperated with the Secretary-General to
compel Israel to comply with relevant
resolutions. The question now was why
Israel had opposed the fact-finding mission
if it had nothing to hide. The fact
that it refused to receive the team set a
serious precedent for international law.
He said Israel continued
to perpetrate war crimes and crimes against
humanity against the Palestinian people, more
than 4 million of whom were living in a huge
prison. The report equated the victim
with the perpetrator and did not point
clearly to the basis of the problem.
Also, the preparation of the report by United
Nations officials at Headquarters could not
give the real picture of what had really
happened in Jenin, in light of the fact that
no witnesses had been used.
In addition, he continued,
the report did not make use of the
documentation by the media or accounts by
emergency personnel on the ground.
Furthermore, the report did not define, from
a legal point of view, the magnitude of the
crimes committed in the occupied Palestinian
territories, particularly in Jenin. The
Assembly was called upon to undertake its
responsibility to maintain international
peace and security in light of the Council's
failure to do so.
VIJAY K. NAMBIAR (India)
said that notwithstanding its drawbacks, the
report fulfilled the task of providing the
Assembly with an indispensable, detailed
account of the events along with a
comprehensive analysis of the security,
humanitarian and human rights
responsibilities of concerned parties.
The report made it clear that Israeli
military incursions into Jenin and other
cities in the occupied Palestinian
territories had resulted in a heavy toll of
life and property. It took note of the
fact that the IDF, in many instances,
resorted to a disproportionate use of force
and of heavy weaponry in Palestinian civilian
areas. In addition, humanitarian
workers were denied access to people in need
of assistance and that, in some cases, scant
respect was paid to the neutrality of medical
and humanitarian workers resulting in attacks
even on ambulances.
The report, he continued,
recorded in some detail the severe hardships
suffered by the Palestinians as a result of
IDF actions. It also reported the
widespread and indiscriminate destruction of
the Palestinian Authority's civilian
infrastructure, estimated at approximately
$361 million. In Jenin alone, private
property estimated at $27 million was
destroyed. Yet, the Secretary-General
was strangely reticent in his comment in the
report that "clarity and certainty
remain elusive" on the policy and facts
of the IDF response. Such economy and
ellipsis sometimes strained the report's
credibility. Notwithstanding that, the
details brought out in the report lead
inescapably to the conclusion that much of
the loss of life and property could have been
avoided if protecting the civilian population
had figured as a priority to the IDF.
At the same time, the
report had drawn attention to attacks by
Palestinian armed groups against Israeli
civilians resulting in heavy loss of life, he
said. He reiterated India's call for an
end to violence, whether military actions or
acts of terror against innocent and unarmed
civilians. The continuing deterioration
of the situation and ongoing cycle of
violence demonstrated the urgent need for
both parties to immediately resume a process
that would lead them back to the negotiating
table.
RAMEZ GOUSSOUS (Jordan)
said that, due to Israel's arrogant refusal
to acknowledge the will of the international
community and to allow a fact-finding mission
to examine first hand the situation in Jenin
and other Palestinian cities, questions might
forever remain about what had really happened
there. There was no doubt, however,
about the impact of the Israeli occupation on
the Palestinian people.
There was also no doubt,
he said, that Israel had committed grave
violations of international law, particularly
of the Fourth Geneva Convention. It had
taken hostages, pursued policies of arbitrary
arrest and illegal introduction of curfews,
as well as cutting off water and electricity
to Jenin and other occupied areas.
Further, the destruction of historic and
religious places was not a military
necessity, but a collective and
disproportionate punishment spitefully heaped
upon the long-suffering Palestinian
people. Jordan shared the
Secretary-General's view that the struggle
against terrorism did not mean signing a
blank cheque for Israel to violate
international law. The report showed
that Israel's flagrant violations of the
Geneva Conventions were not exceptional
events, but sustained and repeated
actions. That was a reflection of
general Israeli policy.
He emphasized the
necessity of ensuring the protection of the
Palestinian people from Israeli
aggression. According to international
law, such protection was the right of the
Palestinian people, as it would be for any
people living under foreign occupation.
The High Contracting Parties to the Fourth
Geneva Convention must shoulder their
responsibilities under that instrument, and
must identify and punish those violating its
precepts. Finally, Jordan reiterated
the Secretary-General's invitation to the
international community to undertake its
responsibility to work in cooperation towards
a peaceful and lasting solution to the
Palestinian-Israeli conflict, in accordance
with relevant Security Council resolutions.
DARMANSJAH DJUMALA (Indonesia)
said that, owing to Israel's refusal to
cooperate with the efforts of the
Secretary-General, the report was not based
on any field visit to Jenin, as had
previously been anticipated. Indonesia,
therefore, continued to denounce Israel's
refusal to offer the required cooperation in
that investigation, as well as its failure to
respond to the request for information.
It was astonishing - but not really
surprising - that, according to
the report, only 52 Palestinians were killed
during Israel's senseless and indiscriminate
rampage through the homes of the already
deprived and suffering Palestinians.
Since no authoritative
determination of the facts had really taken
place, it was inconceivable that the
report should be considered the end of the
investigation, he said. The full facts
were not known, but they must be
determined. In the interests of truth
and justice, he demanded that pressure be
maintained on Israel to grant access to a
United Nations fact-finding mission so that
the full story of what really happened in
Jenin could be known. Peace was not
possible without justice, and justice was not
possible without the truth. Only the
same standard of objectivity and full
accountability was good enough regarding
every issue on the United Nations agenda.
He reiterated that the
Palestinian people were entitled to be free
of the brutal occupation by Israel and to a
viable independent State. The occupying
Power should not be permitted to continue to
enjoy the luxury of ignoring the fundamental
rights of the Palestinian people, as well as
the resolutions of both the Security Council
and the General Assembly. The repeated
forays of killing and destruction in recent
months were an affront, not only to the
Palestinians, but also to the international
community. That systematic violence
must end.
ZAINUDDIN YAHYA (Malaysia)
said Israel's absolute refusal to cooperate
in the investigation was obviously an attempt
to conceal the truth and the actual gravity
of its actions. The findings of the
Secretary-General's report would have been
different if the fact-finding team had been
able to visit the area. He strongly
condemned the illegal conduct of the IDF,
including unlawful killings, the use of human
shields, destruction of property, arbitrary
arrests and torture, and obstruction of
humanitarian operations. Its
disproportionate use of force was apparent
throughout the report.
He expressed grave concern
at the continued curfews and other severe
restrictions on the movement of persons and
goods. Immediate measures must be taken
to alleviate the situation in the Palestinian
territories through urgently needed
assistance and services in addressing the
humanitarian needs, as well as rebuilding the
Palestinian economy. As Israeli actions
had led to a standstill of all aspects of
life for the Palestinian and as the IDF had
widely flouted international humanitarian
principles and human rights standards, Israel
must be made to bow to the demands of the
well-established principles of international
law and international humanitarian law and
undertake its obligations as a democratic and
civilized member of the international
community.
Israel had been warned
that its violent actions in pursuit of
"total security" would lead to
further violence, he said. The Hebrew
University bombing and subsequent attacks
were obviously a consequence of Israel's
missile attack on Gaza City. Israel
must realize that the root cause of
Palestinian militancy and anger, which were
beyond the control of the Palestinian
Authority, was its occupation of Palestinian
territories, expansion of illegal settlements
and its continued denial of an independent
and sovereign State of Palestine, with East
Jerusalem as its capital. Israel must
fully implement Security Council resolutions
1402 (2002) and 1403 (2002). There was
an immediate need to prevent the worsening
situation from leading to a point where the
return to negotiations would not be possible.
YOSHIYUKI MOTOMURA (Japan)
deplored the recent surge in the vicious
cycle of violence between the Israelis and
the Palestinians. Referring, in
particular, to the air strikes by the Israeli
forces on Gaza City and the recent series of
terrorist acts by Palestinian extremists at
Hebrew University, and near Safed and Eli, he
expressed his deep condolences to all the
bereaved families and heartfelt sympathy to
the injured parties. It was
particularly regrettable that those events
took place at a time when the international
community was making concerted efforts to
bring peace to the region.
He urged both the Israelis
and the Palestinians to break that cycle of
violence. He particularly urged Israel
to exert the maximum self-restraint in its
use of force and the Palestinian Authority to
make the utmost effort to suppress the acts
of extremists. The report on the Jenin
camp was the product of great effort by the
United Nations Secretariat and the
international community. It was
critical that both parties and the
international community make the utmost
effort to stop the violence on the ground, in
order to end the humanitarian crisis
described in the report. The Japanese
Government had been engaged in a strenuous
effort to improve the situation, including
through the appointment of a Special Envoy
for Middle East issues.
In order to realize the
vision of two States living side by side in
peace and security, all three aspects of
restoring security, providing economic and
humanitarian assistance, and resuming the
political process should be pursued
simultaneously, he said. Japan would
continue to contribute to the reform of the
Palestinian Authority as an active member of
the new international Task Force on
Palestinian Reform. For its part, the
Government of Israel should help create an
environment that facilitated the reform of
the Palestinian Authority by completely
withdrawing the IDF to the 28 September 2000
line; transferring tax revenues to the
Palestinian Authority; ending closure of the
Palestinian territories; and ceasing the
destruction of infrastructure and social
service facilities.
KIM CHANG GUK (Democratic
People's Republic of Korea) noted that,
in the three months since the last special
session, no substantial progress had been
made to ease tensions in the Middle
East. Israeli occupying forces had very
recently reoccupied Palestinian cities and
other populated centres and continued, as
well, to carry out high-handed military
attacks on the present national authority,
the legitimate representative of the
Palestinian people.
He said that, as had been
reported, Israel was moving ahead with plans
to deport the relatives of Palestinians
alleged to be responsible for suicide attacks
on the West Bank to the Gaza Strip.
That arrogant and contemptuous act was a
grave challenge to peace and security in the
region and the world, as well as a wanton
violation of international law. The
Democratic People's Republic of Korea
strongly condemned the atrocities committed
by the Israeli occupying forces against
Palestinian civilians living in Jenin and
other cities.
The cause of Palestinians
and other Arab peoples to restore their right
to self-determination was justifiable, he
said. However, their path towards that
goal was beset with obstacles. Israel
was now using its arms more openly --
reflecting the protection and encouragement
of a certain country. The United
Nations should, therefore, continue to
concentrate its efforts on the peaceful
solution of regional disputes and the
elimination of all unjust pressure or
interference in internal affairs. The
present session should identify solutions
aimed at ending Israeli oppression and
promote practical measures to defend the
legitimate rights of the Palestinian and
other Arab peoples.
KISHORE MAHBUBANI (Singapore)
described as illegal and immoral the
activities of recent days both at the Hebrew
University in Jerusalem and the bombings and
shootings that followed. Singapore
deplored all such acts of terror and
violence, as well as the deliberate targeting
of civilians, and urged both sides to
immediately end all violence.
He said his country
regretted Israel's refusal to allow the
Secretary-General's fact-finding team to
visit Jenin and its ignoring of "every
opportunity" to contribute information
for the Secretary-General's report on what
had happened there. In view of the many
claims and counter-claims about the events in
Jenin, it would have been to the Israeli
Government's advantage to have had the
fact-finding team resolve the matter in a
conclusive way. Due to its refusal to
allow the team access, the
Secretary-General's report, as mandated by
the General Assembly, had now had to be
compiled from secondary sources rather than
from first-hand observation and
investigation.
Welcoming the report's
publication, nevertheless, and accepting it
as a balanced and conscientious attempt to
clarify the events that had taken place, he
said the escalation of violence on both sides
was counterproductive to the ongoing
international effort to establish a just and
lasting peace in the Middle East. The
only way to achieve that was through a
negotiated settlement, on the basis of two
States, Israel and Palestine, existing side
by side, each within secure borders as called
for in Security Council resolution 1397
(2002), he said.
M. JAVAD ZARIF (Iran)
said that despite serious shortcomings, the
Secretary-General's report revealed, to some
extent, the crimes perpetrated by the Israeli
military during its invasion of the Jenin
refugee camp and other Palestinian areas last
April. It had accomplished that end
despite the fact that the Israeli regime had
adopted an obstructionist policy at the
outset and had done its utmost to block any
effort by the international community to
obtain accurate information about what went
on in the refugee camp during the period in
question.
He said the report echoed
the assertion of independent human rights
experts and eyewitness accounts that, among
other things, civilians had been used as
human shields by Israeli troops. The
report was also explicit in its description
of specific Israeli acts -- preventing access
to medical care and basic humanitarian
necessities, among them -- which amounted to
war crimes. The report also noted that,
in addition to denial of aid, medical
personnel had also been targeted in the
attacks. And while it listed many other
acts, which by any definition would
constitute crimes of war, the report failed
to call those crimes what they actually were
within the parameters of international
law.
Undoubtedly, he went on,
that and the report's other shortcomings were
attributable to the Israeli Government's
persistent policy of deceit on the diplomatic
front. That policy had been highlighted
when, well aware of the extent of their
crimes, the Israelis had attempted to buy
time by misleading the United Nations into
believing an international fact-finding
mission would be allowed to visit the Jenin
camp. Israel should not be allowed to
commit war crimes, hold the entire United
Nations system in contempt, evade
accountability and finally walk away with
impunity, he stressed. Indeed, the
events that had evolved following Israel's
refusal to abide by the will of the United
Nations, the Security Council and the wider
international community during the past few
months was a cause of great concern.
Acts of collective punishment and destruction
of the property of persons protected under
the Fourth Geneva Convention constituted
criminal offences under recognized
international law. For the sake of its
own credibility, the United Nations should
focus all its attention on efforts to end
such practices and bring their perpetrators
to justice.
ABOUL ATTA (Egypt)
said the suffering of the Palestinian people
was augmented by the occupation and its
practices, and that the expanding cycle of
violence reflected the arrogance of the
occupying Power and its flaunting of
international legitimacy and human
rights. It was hoped that the world,
still witnessing new waves of Israeli
aggression against the Palestinian people,
would force Israel to choose the path of
peace for all.
Israel's failure to allow
the fact-finding team to perform its task was
a flagrant violation of international
legitimacy and a disregard for the Fourth
Geneva Convention, he said. Israel's
attempts to conceal the war crimes committed
by its armed forces against the Palestinian
people were totally regrettable. The
principle of collective punishment could not
be justified or accepted by the international
community under any circumstances. Such
actions would only deepen the hatred which
already existed.
He called on the
international community to deal with the
deteriorating humanitarian situation in the
occupied Palestinian territories. Every
effort should be made to establish a viable,
independent Palestinian State which could
live side by side with Israel. The
violence must stop, and the parties must
return to the negotiating table.
SUN JOUN-YUNG (Republic
of Korea), noting that the outlook in the
region remained deeply disconcerting, said
military actions and terrorist attacks
continued to cause severe casualties and
suffering among civilian populations.
This past weekend had brought more violence
in Nablus, Safed and East Jerusalem, and the
humanitarian situation in the Palestinian
territories had deteriorated seriously
because of the continuing violence.
The Republic of Korea
deplored the recent tragedies on the ground,
he continued, particularly the loss of
innocent civilian lives in the Israeli air
attack over Gaza City on 23 July. There
was an urgent need to cease such
disproportionate uses of force. In the
same vein, last week's terrorist bombing that
had indiscriminately targeted Hebrew
University students was also a cause for
profound concern. Those attacks, which should
be strongly condemned, had seriously injured
several Korean nationals, among other
innocent students and passers-by.
He said those instances of
violence generally characterized the grave
state of affairs in the Middle East,
especially the toll it was taking on civilian
life. The Korean Government firmly
opposed any form of violence to address
outstanding or divisive issues and urged both
sides to exercise the utmost restraint.
They should adhere to international
humanitarian law to ensure the full
protection of civilians. The use of
violence diminished the prospects for overall
peace in the region. The process for a
genuine peace between the two sides should
resume in earnest, based on the relevant
Security Council resolutions.
PAPA LOUIS FALL (Senegal),
Chairman of the Committee on the Exercise of
the Inalienable Rights of the Palestinian
People, said that despite Israel's
incomprehensible refusal to cooperate with
the fact-finding team, thus leaving the
Secretary-General with no alternative than to
use second-hand information, his report
contained some elements of evidence
indicating that the occupying Power had
launched Operation Defensive Shield and
deliberately flouted its responsibility under
the Fourth Geneva Convention and
international humanitarian law. The
list of atrocities against the Palestinian
people and the scope of damage to the
infrastructure of the Palestinian Authority
were overwhelming and could be spoken of as
war crimes. The international community
must seriously consider the prosecution of
perpetrators of such crimes so as to prevent
them from reoccurring.
He deplored the illegal
practices, which continued in the occupied
Palestinian territories, saying the competent
international bodies must intervene as a
matter of urgency. The subjugation and
humiliation of the Palestinian people, as
well as the destruction of their
institutions, had resulted in a growing chasm
between two kindred people, as well as new
acts of hatred. Left to themselves,
Israelis and Palestinians would never be able
to extricate themselves from the cycle of
violence. The international community
must shoulder its responsibility and
intervene more resolutely by, among other
things, creating a multinational presence in
the area. The Security Council, and
particularly the Quartet, must prepare a
daring plan to put into practice the vision
of two States and to speedily convene an
international conference.
MUNSHI FAIZ AHMAD (Bangladesh)
said that while the report mentioned at least
52 confirmed Palestinian deaths, the
international community might never be able
to ascertain what really happened. The
situation in the Middle East continued to
wander in a directionless and hopeless cycle
of unprecedented cruelty and violence.
During the last few months, in particular,
Israeli actions in Palestinian-controlled
areas had created an untenable
situation. Consequent acts of
retaliation by Palestinian groups invited
renewed and further severe Israeli
actions. Throughout all this, both
Israeli and Palestinian civilians continued
to suffer.
Bangladesh condemned all
forms of terrorism and violence against
civilians, he continued. However, it
was still important to consider what would be
the expected reaction of people living not in
sane, civilized conditions, but subjected to
unremitting inhumane, degrading and cruel
treatment through occupation and various
forms of collective punishment. In such dire
circumstances, the primary responsibility to
do the right thing would rest more on the
parties that enjoyed the position of
comparative strength. Bangladesh, therefore,
strongly condemned the Israeli excesses in
the occupied territories. The
disproportionate use of Israeli force as a
response to individual Palestinian actions
was unacceptable, and it must be stopped.
Calling on both parties to
end the cycle of violence and retaliation, he
urged both sides to respect fully their
obligations under international humanitarian
law. The international community must
press for a final settlement. To that
end, Bangladesh welcomed the efforts of the
Quartet to help return the parties to the
path of negotiation. He said the United
Nations should continue to advocate an end to
the violence and to promote a meaningful
resumption of political dialogue between the
parties, leading to a comprehensive, just and
lasting political settlement of the conflict.
CHUCHAI KASEMSARN (Thailand)
said it was disheartening that the report had
been issued against the backdrop of a new
cycle of violence and terror in the
region. The situation in the Middle
East since the last meeting of the emergency
session reflected the fact that there had
been little, if any, improvement,
particularly in the humanitarian
situation. He appealed to all parties
concerned to exercise utmost restraint and to
immediately cease the use of violence and
terror, which had brought about such
suffering and grief to countless families.
The only viable and
acceptable way forward was for all parties to
work towards a comprehensive and enduring
political settlement through peaceful
negotiations, he said. Thailand
strongly urged all parties to fully implement
all relevant Security Council resolutions and
supported all relevant international efforts,
including that of Crown Prince Abdullah
endorsed at the Beirut Arab Summit, as well
as the ongoing process of consultations
within the framework of the Quartet. It
was hoped that those efforts, in close
coordination with other international
efforts, would help restore peace to the
Middle East for all the region's peoples.
JAIME ACUÑA (Chile),
expressing regret over the lack of
cooperation by the Government of Israel in
clarifying a complex reality, appealed for
the abandonment of rigid positions and urged
the adoption of constructive positions for
the achievement of peace. Chile was
concerned at the occurrence of large
offensives and excessive punishments, as well
as the attacks on the Israeli
populations. The authorities must make
peace grow and eliminate violence.
Reprisals had shown themselves to be useless
in settling disputes. Hatred did not
distinguish hatred.
He appealed to the
Government of Israel to halt its military
operations and withdraw its troops from all
Palestinian cities and areas under
Palestinian authority. Occupation must
cease, giving give rise to two independent
States living side by side in peace.
Chile appreciated the efforts of the
Secretary-General, the Security Council and
the Quartet, as well as those of Saudi
Arabia, Egypt and Jordan as part of their
participation in the negotiating
process. Their statements provided hope
for the achievement of a just and lasting
peace in the Middle East.
DUMISANI KUMALO (South
Africa), speaking on behalf of the
Non-Aligned Movement, said the Israeli
Government had done everything in its power
to withhold information on what had happened
during its invasion of Jenin and had even
prevented the Secretary-General from sending
a high-level fact-finding team to examine the
situation on the ground. Inevitably,
then, the Secretary-General's report fell
short of a comprehensive inquiry and was not
definitive on whether war crimes and crimes
against humanity had been committed. He
recalled the Secretary-General's prophetic
observation that, if such a mission were not
deployed, the long shadow of the events in
Jenin would remain.
Meanwhile, he continued,
the senseless killing of innocent Palestinian
and Israeli civilians continued. When
Member States had requested the preparation
of the report before the Assembly, some 400
Israelis and 1,500 Palestinian's had already
died. More civilians had died during
the report's subsequent compilation, and, in
one incident, an Israeli F16 fighter jet had
dropped laser guided bombs on a heavily
populated area in the Gaza Strip, inflicting
massive civilian casualties and
injuries. Prime Minister Sharon had
described the attack as one of Israel's
"most successful military operations to
date". However, the deadly
retaliatory attacks against Israel
demonstrated that so long as
"success" was determined by the
number of casualties, peace was far from a
reality in the Middle East.
He said the debate on the
report was not merely an attempt to set the
record straight on the incident in the Jenin
refugee camp, but also a reflection of the
broader reality that the Israeli military
operations, curfews, blockades, threats of
expulsion and destruction of homes amounted
to a perpetual violation of international
humanitarian law. The report contained
highly disturbing eyewitness accounts of
Israel's disproportionate use of force not
only in Jenin, but in Nablus and other cities
throughout the West Bank. It also
pointed to Israel's use of the most advanced
and lethal military equipment against densely
populated civilian areas, extrajudiciary
executions, arbitrary arrest and mass
detentions of civilian men.
It was on the issue of the
denial of humanitarian access to the
Palestinian people affected by the Israeli
operations that the report was most
authoritative, he said. The shocking
accounts of prolonged delays in medical
attention due to Israeli military operations
and blockades, and of the attacks on
ambulances and humanitarian workers, came
directly from impartial humanitarian
personnel. The Non-Aligned Movement
believed that there was an urgent need for
the parties to resume a process that would
lead back to the negotiating table. The
premise for a just and durable solution to
the Middle East crisis must be lie on an end
to Israeli occupation of Arab land and the
establishment of a Palestinian State.
Until the Palestinians had a place to call
home, the people of the Middle East were
unlikely to know peace.
MEHIEDDINE EL KADIRI (Morocco)
said the resumption of the emergency session
reflected the international community's
anxiety regarding what was happening in the
occupied Palestinian territories. The
aggravation of the situation had resulted in
the paralysis of all efforts to achieve peace
in the region, including the latest Arab
initiative and those of the Quartet.
Without a doubt, the Secretary-General's
report did not fulfil all the objective
conditions needed to throw light on the facts
and draw conclusions on the events in
Jenin. Had a visit been allowed, clear
evidence would have been gained of the
gravity of the crimes committed by Israeli
forces against Palestinian civilians.
As the Secretary-General
had declared, no detailed report on Jenin
could have been prepared without a visit to
the place itself and the cooperation of all
the parties, he said. The report proved
that many violations had been committed by
Israeli forces. Israel had flouted its
responsibilities under the Fourth Geneva
Convention and international humanitarian
law. It had been seen that the adoption
of a purely security logic could not end the
cycle of violence in the region.
The international
community must compel Israel to comply with
the rules of international law, end the
occupation of Palestinian territories, resume
negotiations and comply with the principles
on which the peace process was based, he
emphasized.
MARIA ELENA CHASSOUL (Costa
Rica), speaking on behalf of the Rio
Group, said that despite the difficult
circumstances surrounding the report's
preparation, it had still provided a
depiction of the situation in and around the
Jenin camp and other Palestinian areas.
The Rio Group condemned all acts of violence
and terrorism, particularly the targeting of
innocent civilians.
She called upon States
with influence over both parties to urge
adherence to international law and to the
relevant Security Council resolutions in an
effort to achieve peace in the region.
The Rio Group remained committed to all
efforts to achieve a lasting and just
settlement to the conflict, which would
contribute to peace and security throughout
the region.
MEHMET BILMAN (Turkey)
also condemned all acts of violence,
including the morally repugnant practice of
suicide bombings. Terrorism was a crime
against humanity and was never the way to
advance the cause of peace. While fully
recognizing Israel's right to self-defence,
that country must respect the principles of
international law and recognize that the use
of disproportionate force did not advance its
cause.
He went on to say that,
while the Secretary-General's report depicted
the actions of the Israeli military, it also
stressed the obligation of the Palestinian
Authority to fight terrorism and to work for
the safety of Israeli civilians and others
living in the region. Turkey noted with
deep concern that Palestinian groups in Jenin
had adopted measures that contravened
international law. It was equally
disturbing that those groups had used
civilians to their own ends. The road
to a lasting peace in the Middle East passed
through genuine political will, which
required moral courage and
statesmanship.
It was, therefore,
incumbent upon the leadership of both sides
to show the way, he said. There was no
alternative to diplomatic options that would
allow both the Israeli and Palestinian
peoples to live side by side in safety, peace
and security. While Turkey could not
accept the conditions to which the
Palestinian people were subjected, neither
could it accept the targeting of innocent
civilians.
MARTIN ANDJABA (Namibia),
while noting the findings contained in the
report, said it should not have contained
media reports from the Israeli Government,
which were not directed to the United
Nations. It remained a bad precedent
that Israel was allowed to obstruct the
decisions of the Security Council without
consequences.
Israel seemed determined
to destroy the Palestinian Authority, he
said. In the process,
massive human rights violations, as well as
grave breaches of international humanitarian
law, were taking place. The report
shockingly described how humanitarian
agencies had been prevented by the IDF from
delivering medical supplies and medical
assistance to the needy, resulting in
hundreds of civilian deaths.
Furthermore, medical personnel had even been
directly targeted and killed.
The international
community should ensure that Israel was held
accountable for breaches of international
humanitarian law and war crimes, he
said. It was regrettable that the
Security Council was paralysed and unwilling
to do anything about the tragic situation
unfolding in the occupied Palestinian
territory. The Council was failing to
enforce its own resolutions on the question
of Palestine, thus eroding its own authority.
BIJAYEDUTH GOKOOL (Mauritius)
reiterated his country's condemnation of all
acts which victimized innocent civilians and
deplored the deaths caused by yesterday's
bombing attack on an Israeli commuter bus, as
well as the attack on the Hebrew University
in Jerusalem. Innocent lives,
irrespective of their nationalities, deserved
to be protected, and it was a moral and legal
responsibility under humanitarian law for all
parties to commit themselves to those
obligations. Since September 2000, each
terrorist act had been followed by an IDF
incursion into Palestinian territory, and
each incursion had been followed by a further
terrorist act. The precarious and
unstable situation in the Middle East must
end.
He fully supported the
various international initiatives towards a
peaceful settlement of the Middle East
problem. A comprehensive approach must
address the political, economic, social and
humanitarian conditions in the occupied
territories. Mauritius called upon all
donors to continue with their support for the
development and rebuilding of the Palestinian
infrastructure. The "land for
peace" formula should be the basis for
all future talks, but peace would not be
attainable in the absence of a genuine
commitment from both sides. It was time
for reflection on what had gone wrong in all
the efforts carried out so far.
The most important
confidence-building measure that Israel
should undertake was immediate withdrawal
from the occupied territories, he said.
It was inconceivable that more than 700,000
Palestinian people were kept under siege for
so long a period, and it was unacceptable
that Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat had
been isolated in his headquarters for so many
months. Moreover, the infliction of
collective punishment, denying innocent
civilians the right to a free life, was
totally unjustified.
YAHYA MAHMASANI, observer
for the League of Arab States, said the
report did not state a clear position or put
responsibility on Israel for refusing to
allow the fact-finding team to perform its
tasks. Israel had committed all sorts
of crimes and flouted the resolutions of the
international community, which had failed to
take a stance against Israel's actions.
Israel had ignored international legitimacy
and refused to implement Council resolution
1405 (2002). It had become a daily fact
of life for Israel to violate international
humanitarian law, and the situation had
reached a point where there could be no
further concessions.
The report had fallen
short of using the appropriate word
"massacre", he noted. Nor had
it determined how many people had
fallen. Israel had used air power and
heavy artillery to raid Palestinian
areas. Could civilians in Jenin have
stood against such attacks? The present
deplorable situation could only deteriorate
further, and there was no light at the end of
the tunnel.
A clear message should be
sent to Israel, requesting it to bear its
responsibility, provide the necessary
protection to civilians, respect Council
resolutions and withdraw from the occupied
Palestinian territories. International
efforts should also be reasserted, especially
those of the Quartet, in order to give
credence to Assembly and Council resolutions.
SYED SHAHID HUSAIN,
Organization of the Islamic Conference,
noting that Israel's non-cooperation and
blatant sabotage of the Secretary-General's
initiative had made it impossible for him to
proceed with the fact-finding mission, said
that sending the team to Jenin would have
brought to light more credible details of
what had transpired. The truth had once
again been concealed by Israel's disregard
for United Nations resolutions. The
international community's appeasement of
Israeli intransigence, as on so many previous
occasions, was keeping the conflict
entrenched. That was particularly
disheartening, given the emergence of a
consensus to establish an independent
Palestinian State. The international
community should ensure that that consensus
proceeded to its fruition, unimpeded by the
nefarious designs and actions of any
adversaries.
Those presently holding
power in Israel had demonstrated their
aversion to the peace process and to the idea
of creating a State of Palestine with
Jerusalem as its capital, he said.
Their latest excuse was the Palestinian
resistance to the forces of occupation, which
Israel was calling terrorism. It was,
in fact, Israel's own State terrorism against
the Palestinian people, perpetrated under its
prolonged, illegal and immoral occupation,
that was inviting the resistance and
retaliation. If the Government of
Israel truly desired peace and security, then
its course of action should not be continued
force and brutality, but the withdrawal of
all its occupation forces and a return to the
negotiating table.
SIMON ANDREW CARDY (South
Africa), introducing the revised draft
resolution contained in document
A/ES-10/L.11, said that the text was the
product of extensive negotiations among all
Member States and enjoyed the overwhelming
support of the Assembly.
Action on Text
The Assembly then adopted
the text by a recorded vote of 114 in favour
to 4 against (Federated States of
Micronesia, Israel, Marshall Islands, United
States), with 11 abstentions (see Annex).
Explanations of Vote
Speaking in explanation of
position after the vote, the representative
of Canada said that regarding the
events in Jenin and other Palestinian cities
last April, her country had consistently
supported the initiative of the
Secretary-General to develop accurate
information. Canada was grateful to the
Secretary-General for the completion of the
report, which underscored the responsibility
of both sides to achieve a lasting peace, but
was disappointed with the Israeli decision
not to cooperate with the fact-finding team.
She said Canada had
abstained on the resolution because it failed
to deal with the full balance of
responsibility for the continuing
violence. That was a fundamental
weakness, and Canada could not concur with
the interpretation of those events, as stated
in the resolution, or the singling out of a
single party. She also noted that the
text, received only this evening, was
substantially changed from that circulated
earlier in the day. There had not been
sufficient time for reflection on and
consideration of the text.
The representative of Israel
said he had voted against the text because it
failed to reflect the realities of
Palestinian terrorism, distorted the
Secretary-General's report and ignored the
deaths of Israelis from a brutal terrorist
campaign. On 7 May, just an hour before
the Assembly had adopted its resolution, 15
innocent Israelis were murdered. That
attack had prompted several States to
withdraw their support for the text adopted
that day. Was it not enough that
Israeli civilians were targeted daily?
Was the murder of students at a university or
five separate attacks yesterday not enough to
garner sympathy to seek a balanced
text? Were dead and injured Israeli
also not a humanitarian crisis that must be
remedied? None of the one-sided
resolutions of the Assembly had contributed
to security for Palestinians or
Israelis. They had only hurt the
Assembly's reputation.
The representative of Australia
said that his abstention reflected the view
that the resolution did not reflect the
Secretary-General's report, particularly the
responsibility of both sides to refrain from
violence and protect civilian
populations. The deliberate targeting
of innocent civilian lives, particularly
through suicide bombings, was totally
unacceptable. Also, Australia did not
regard the procedures applied in today's
session as satisfactory.
The representative of Denmark,
speaking on behalf of the European Union and
associated States, said that she had voted in
favour of the text. The Union had, in
its earlier statement, welcomed the
Secretary-General's report and had repeatedly
condemned all attacks against civilians,
including suicide bombings. It would
have preferred that the text more strongly
reflected that position. The events
described in the report pointed to the urgent
need for the parties to return to the
negotiating table.
The representative of Guatemala
said his delegation had voted in favour of
the resolution because the current version
was more balanced than the one circulated
earlier in the day, and because his country
had no wish to break the regional
consensus. He confessed, however, that
the decision had been a difficult one. The
Secretary-General's report had been very well
put together, and Guatemala had been saddened
by the recounting of morally repugnant
suicide bombings, as well as the civilian
deaths caused by military incursions.
Guatemala would also echo the
Secretary-General's plea to the international
community to exert all efforts to ensure that
a just and lasting peace, in line with the
relevant Security Council resolutions, was
reached as soon as possible.
The representative of Peru
said his delegation had voted in favour of
the resolution, but regretted that the text
did not contain a categorical repudiation of
the terrorist acts committed against Israeli
citizens.
The representative of Paraguay
said the new version of the draft was a great
improvement over the previous text. But
once again his delegation would repudiate the
notion of any violent actions committed
against civilians on either side. He
reiterated the call by the Secretary-General
and the wider international community to
condemn acts of violence against civilians
and to promote the notion of a durable peace
in the region through diplomatic means, in
line with the relevant Security Council
resolutions and other international
agreements.
Statement
The Observer for Palestine
expressed his wholehearted appreciation to
all those who had voted in favour of the
resolution and thanked those who had
undertaken tough negotiations to arrive at a
widely held conviction on the issue before
the Assembly today. He described the
statement made earlier by the representative
of Israel as an example of Israeli arrogance
and perfidy that had been committed time and
again, not only in the face of Palestinian
people, but also of the international
community as a whole.
He said that
representative's response to the resolution's
adoption was typical of a colonialist
mindset. Israel could not understand
that it was an occupying Power -
indeed, the only State that could be
classified as such in the United
Nations. It was the only country that
openly and consistently committed gross
violations of humanitarian law, flagrant
breaches of the Fourth Geneva Convention, war
crimes and State terrorism. In any
case, the Palestinian position
had been made very clearly
this morning and had, with the adoption of
the resolution, won the respect of the
Assembly.
Noting that Israel's
representative had distorted the
Secretary-General's report, he said the
notion that the report confirmed that no
massacre had been committed was simply not
correct. The Observer had said that the
report had some shortcomings, but that it
included important aspects that deserved to
be taken into consideration. He looked
forward to changes in the situation in the
Middle East and hoped that fellow members of
the international community would assist in
bringing about such changes.
(annex follows) ANNEX
Vote on illegal Israeli
Actions in Occupied East Jerusalem
and the Rest of the
Occupied Palestinian Territory
The draft resolution
(document A/ES-10/L.11) was adopted by a
recorded vote of 114 in favour to 4 against,
with 11 abstentions, as follows:
Päätöslauselman
puolesta Israelia vastaan:
- Against:
Federated States of
Micronesia, Israel, Marshall
Islands, United States.
Pidättyivät:
- Abstaining:
Australia, Bulgaria, Canada,
Honduras, Nauru, Nicaragua,
Nigeria, Romania, Samoa,
Solomon Islands, Tonga.
Poissa:
- Absent:
Afghanistan, Albania, Angola,
Antigua and Barbuda, Bahamas,
Barbados, Bhutan, Congo,
Costa Rica, Côte d'Ivoire,
Democratic Republic of the
Congo, Dominica, Dominican
Republic, El Salvador,
Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea,
Fiji, Grenada, Haiti,
Kazakhstan, Kiribati,
Lesotho, Madagascar, Malawi,
Mali, Mongolia, Mozambique,
Palau, Panama, Papua New
Guinea, Rwanda, Saint Kitts
and Nevis, Saint Lucia, Saint
Vincent and the Grenadines,
Suriname, Swaziland, Trinidad
and Tobago, Turkmenistan,
Tuvalu, Uganda, Zambia,
Zimbabwe.
______________________________________________________________________
For information media - not an
official record