UN human rights body to investigate claims of Israeli violations in Gaza
UN's human rights chief says Israel has not done enough to protect civilians while also condemning attacks by Hamas
An Israeli air strike on Wednesday leaves buildings blazing in the Shajaiyeh area of Gaza City. Photograph: Adel Hana/AP
The United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) has agreed to launch an international inquiry into violations that may have been committed during Israel's latest military offensive in Gaza.
Navi
Pillay, the UN high commissioner for human rights, warned earlier that
Israel may have committed war crimes in its offensive against Hamas in the Gaza Strip, where hundreds of Palestinian civilians have been killed in the past two weeks.
Pillay told an emergency debate at the UNHRC in Geneva that Israel had not done enough to protect civilians.
"There
seems to be a strong possibility that international law has been
violated, in a manner that could amount to war crimes," Pillay said,
citing air strikes and the shelling of homes and hospitals.
The killing of civilians in Gaza, including dozens of children, raised
concerns over Israel's precautions and its respect for proportionality,
she said.
She also condemned Hamas, the Islamist movement that
rules Gaza, and other armed Palestinian groups, for their
"indiscriminate attacks" on Israel.
At the end of an emergency
session, the 47-member Geneva state forum adopted a resolution presented
by Palestinians by a vote of 29 states in favour, one against (the
United States) with 17 abstentions (including some European Union
members).
Pillay's comments, in a debate held at the request of
Egypt, Pakistan and the state of Palestine (which has observer status at
the UN), were in response to a resolution calling for an investigation
into the Gaza campaign, launched on 8 July with the declared objective of halting rocket fire into Israel.
The
UN human rights council body has a majority that is pro-Palestinian.
Israel only recently rejoined it after a 20-month boycott.
The
resolution called for the urgent dispatch of "an independent,
international commission of inquiry" to investigate "all violations of
international human rights law and international humanitarian law in the
occupied Palestinian territory, including East Jerusalem, particularly
in the occupied Gaza Strip".
On past precedent, Israel would be
highly unlikely to cooperate with any such investigation. That was its
position with the Goldstone investigation into its Operation Cast Lead offensive of 2008-09,
which killed about 1,400 Palestinians in the Gaza Strip. Israel
rejected that report as prejudiced and full of errors, and dismissed the
charge that it had a policy of deliberately targeting civilians.
Pillay
also called for an end to the blockade of Gaza, the underlying reason
for the conflict and an issue that will have to be tackled if any ceasefire is to endure.
Israel's
envoy to the UNHRC, Eviatar Manor, responded to Pillay's comments by
accusing Hamas of committing war crimes and insisted that Israel was
acting as any other state would in seeking to defend its citizens.
"There can be no moral symmetry between a terrorist aggressor and a
democracy defending itself," he argued.
Hamas, he said, was a
terrorist organisation, not the Salvation Army. It was responsible for
civilian casualties because it was using people as "human shields".
Riyadh
Malki, the Palestinian foreign minister, appealed to the international
community for Israel to be held accountable for its actions in Gaza.
"How many martyrs must die before Israel puts an end to its aggression?"
he asked.
Pillay, whose term at the UNHRC is due to end shortly,
has been active in trying to highlight the issue of war crimes committed
in Syria. But she has failed to overcome divisions in the UN security
council, which have prevented attempts to get the Syrian government referred to the international criminal court.