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UN human rights body asks for larger presence in PA territories

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Published on  03-24-2019 00:00
Last modified: 03-31-2019 23:41
UN human rights body asks for larger presence in PA territories

Medics and relatives move a wounded man who was shot by Israeli troops during a riot at the Gaza Strip's border with Israel to a Gaza City hospital

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The top U.N. human rights body on Friday requested a larger presence in Palestinian areas following a report alleging Israeli soldiers may have committed war crimes in a deadly response to Gaza protests last year.

The U.N. Human Rights Council made the request to U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet in a resolution that passed 23-8 with 15 abstentions, a vote loaded with political implications that quickly drew accusations of bias from the Israeli government.

Five central and eastern European countries joined Australia, Fiji and Brazil in opposing the measure. Britain and many EU countries abstained. Several Persian Gulf states, with which Israel has claimed warming ties, voted in favor.

The resolution was the strongest among five considered by the council focusing on Israel and "occupied Palestinian territory," the only such "country situation" discussed at every council meeting. The issue made up more than one-sixth of the 29 resolutions considered as the four-week session ended Friday.

Last summer, U.S. President Donald Trump withdrew the United States, long one of Israel's strongest backers at the 47-member Geneva body, from the council, in part due to its anti-Israel bias.

The resolution comes after a three-person team of investigators commissioned by the council late last month issued an extensive report on violence during a string of Palestinian riots along Israel's border with the Gaza Strip that started nearly a year ago.

In it, the Independent Commission of Inquiry said Israeli soldiers intentionally fired on civilians and could have committed war crimes and crimes against humanity. The panel said over 6,000 people had been shot by military snipers using live ammunition to repel protesters.

Jerusalem officials did not cooperate with the investigation.

On Friday, the Foreign Ministry said, "The Human Rights Council repeated today its absurd and hypocritical ritual of creating a Commission of Inquiry singling out Israel, whose findings against Israel are predetermined, and then adopting them, all the while ignoring the reality on the ground," Israel's Foreign Ministry said Friday.

"Israel will continue to exercise its right of self-defense and will protect its citizens against terror and aggression," it said.

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