by Prof. Anne Bayefsky
- While focusing on anti-Semitism has been studiously avoided by the United Nations, the subject of the Holocaust has served as the consolation prize.
- The United Nations does not want to deal with anti-Semitism because the organization would be exposed as the global platform for anti-Semitism. The foreign policy of the majority of nations today condones and even promotes anti-Semitism.
- Five of all the ten emergency sessions of the General Assembly in its history attacked Israel. The Assembly did not hold one emergency session about genocide in Rwanda or Sudan.
- The most insidious argument is the ignorant and twisted claim that the Israeli-Palestinian conflict exacerbates anti-Semitism. At the root of this assertion is the idea that the victims of anti-Semitism have a responsibility to ameliorate the pathology of their enemies.
- How is it possible that in a matter of days the UN apparatus went from discussing anti-Semitism, to the Holocaust, to Israeli war crimes? Tragically, it is because the lessons of the Holocaust have never been absorbed, and the stage is being set for a repetition.
Institute
for Contemporary Affairs
Founded
jointly with the Wechsler Family Foundation
No.
605 January-February 2015
On
January 22, 2015 the United Nations General Assembly held its first ever
session dedicated to combating anti-Semitism.1 On January 27 and 28, 2015 the UN
marked the 70th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz Birkenau and the
“International Day of Commemoration in Memory of the Victims of the
Holocaust.”2 On January 31, 2015, other divisions of the UN started gearing up
to indict Israelis for war crimes as a consequence of defending themselves
against a genocidal foe.3 Unfortunately, there is method in this madness.
The UN
was founded in 1945 on the ashes of the Jewish people, and the motivation for
the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights acknowledged the debt in its
preamble to the “barbarous acts which have outraged the conscience of
mankind.” But for 70 years the primary
organ of the UN representing all its member states, the General Assembly, never
devoted a single meeting to the subject of anti-Semitism.
The
General Assembly officially allocates days to “jazz” and “yoga,”4 but focusing
the world’s collective energy on combating the world’s oldest hatred never made
the list.
Over
the years, there were focused reports to the UN Commission on Human Rights on
Islamophobia and the “situation of Muslim and Arab peoples in various parts of
the world,”5 but never a report focusing on Jews. Multiple resolutions
expressed “deep concern about…intolerance and discrimination in matters of
religion or belief” mentioning only “Islam”6 or Muslim victims, but not one
resolution focusing on understanding and combating Jew hatred.
A
Soviet-Arab cabal succeeded in deleting “anti-Semitism” from the draft of the
1965 convention on all forms of racial discrimination as a trade-off for
omitting Zionism from the treaty’s list of racist offences.7 At the 1993 Vienna
World Conference on Human Rights – the second of only two human rights world
conferences in history – attempts to place “anti-Semitism” into the Vienna Declaration
failed because it was deemed “too controversial.”8 A backroom effort in 2004 to
adopt a focused General Assembly resolution on anti-Semitism never made it to
the introduction phase after Germany and the European Union refused to confront
Arab and Muslim opposition.9]
In
1994, when for only the second time in 30 years “anti-Semitism” appeared in a
resolution of the Commission on Human Rights, it had to get past a roll-call
vote.10 After the word eked its way into a minor place on the UN scene, Arab
and Islamic states stymied any possibility of serious focus on anti-Semitism –
which continues to this day.
Sometimes
“anti-Semitism” has been upstaged alphabetically by becoming discrimination
against “Jewish communities” and inserting discrimination against “Arab
communities” first.11 Other times, the
alphabet has been entirely ignored and “Islamophobia” placed first.12
Sometimes, the list has been expanded to include variously “blacks,”
“Negrophobia,” “Africans,” “people of African descent,” “people of Asian
descent,” “Christianophobia,” “all religious communities,” “communities of indigenous
people,” and “other communities.”13 On
other occasions, the list has been challenged as too long, or thrown out
altogether.14]
While
focusing on anti-Semitism has been studiously avoided, the subject of the
Holocaust has served as the consolation prize. The 2004 closed-door defeat of a
General Assembly resolution on anti-Semitism was followed by a 2005 resolution
on the Holocaust.15 Indeed, three-quarters of the speakers at the January 22,
2015 Assembly event on anti-Semitism mentioned the Holocaust. The reason that
there is less of an allergic reaction to the Holocaust than to anti-Semitism is
manifest from another measurement. Less
than one-fifth of the speakers at the same meeting mentioned Israel or connected
the dots between hatred of individual Jews and of the Jewish state.
The
United Nations does not want to deal with anti-Semitism because the
organization would be exposed as the global platform for anti-Semitism. Despite
the verbiage about the victims of the Holocaust and the Paris kosher market
attack, the reality is that the foreign policy of the majority of nations today
condones and even promotes anti-Semitism.
Grossly
differential treatment of Israel at the United Nations is indisputable
The
General Assembly’s anti-Semitism event was a case study in prejudice:
In 2014, the General Assembly adopted 20
times more resolutions condemning Israel for human rights violations than any
other country, and only seven such resolutions on all of the other 192 UN
member states combined.
Five of all the ten emergency sessions of
the General Assembly in its history attack Israel. The Assembly did not hold
one emergency session about genocide in Rwanda or Sudan.16]
One-third of all the resolutions and
decisions ever adopted by the UN’s top human rights body, the UN Human Rights
Council, condemn only Israel.
In advance of every regular session,
regardless of the facts, the Council sets aside time specifically to condemn
only one state – Israel.17]
38 percent of the special sessions and urgent
debates ever held by the Council have been convened to condemn Israel. Not a
single such session has been held on countries violating the rights of millions
– like China, Iran, Saudi Arabia or Russia.
There
is a word for patently obvious double-standards and discrimination against the
Jewish state and for using the nomenclature of human rights to demonize and
delegitimize the self-determination of the Jewish people – anti-Semitism.
This is
the conclusion: the nations of the world and UN leaders dodge, conceal and
deny. Ironically, it was even clearer from the General Assembly event on
anti-Semitism itself.
UN
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon – who did not even bother to show up at UN
headquarters for the historic meeting except by videotape – opened the session
with these words, “Criticisms of Israeli actions should not be summarily
dismissed as anti-Semitism.”18 Lebanon declared, “When we criticize Israel and
condemn its policies…it is never because of the Jewish character of the
majority of its population.”19 Turkey claimed: “Turkey’s stance is not directed
at the Jewish people either in Israel or elsewhere, but solely against the
conduct and practices of the government of Israel.”20]
Invited
guest Elisa Massimino from “Human Rights First” (formerly known as the “Lawyers
Committee for Human Rights,” an NGO that refused to vote against the NGO Durban
declaration’s claim that Zionism is racism) argued about the
“Israeli-Palestinian conflict — “…only a
fool would deny that it exacerbates anti-Semitism.”21 The stand-in for the
President of the General Assembly (who was also a no-show), Vice-President
Alvaro José de Mendonça e Moura of Portugal, enthusiastically quoted her words
and added: “The crucial point is to distinguish any anti-Semitic attitude and…fair
criticism of the policies of the State of Israel.” “Criticism of the State of
Israel cannot be equated with an attack on Jews.”22]
The
straw man argument is unmistakable. No one outside or inside Israel’s vibrant
democracy “summarily” dismisses all criticism as anti-Semitism, or “equates”
any criticism with anti-Semitism, or denies the legitimacy of “fair criticism”
of Israeli policies. And no one believes that the policies of increasingly
Islamist Turkey or Hizbullah-driven Lebanon are unrelated to their antipathy
towards any Jewish state.
But
most insidious is the ignorant and twisted claim that the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict, rightly or wrongly, exacerbates anti-Semitism. At the root of this
assertion is the idea that the victims of anti-Semitism have a responsibility
to ameliorate the pathology of their enemies.
The
fact is that the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is rooted in the rejection of a
Jewish state and the denial of Jewish self-determination. It is itself quintessential anti-Semitism.
The conflict legitimizes anti-Semitism for anti-Semites. The solution to the
conflict is to call the discrimination, demonization, and intended destruction
of Israel on the battlefields of the United Nations and the Middle East, by its
name – anti-Semitism.
Instead,
the General Assembly was treated to this contribution from Saudi Arabia,
speaking on behalf of the 57 members of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation
(OIC): “The practices of the occupation and colonization have fueled
anti-Semitism….Occupation itself is an anti-Semitic act. It threatens humankind….Persecution of the
Palestinian people…is also an example of anti-Semitism.”23]
Lebanon
added, “Anti-Semitism may be a misnomer as Arabs are Semites too,” and
fantastically announced that, “There have never been any Arab pogroms” and “the
Muslims never imposed their religion by force on Jews and Christians.”24]
The
endeavors to divorce anti-Semitism from Israel and individual Jews from the
Jewish collective also stood out in the commentary about the murders of four
Jews in Paris in January 2015. Though selected for death because they were Jews
and not because they were French, the representatives of Brazil, the European
Union, Japan, Luxembourg, India and Costa Rica, all expressed “solidarity with
the people of France” and not with the Jewish people or the Jewish state.
Similarly,
the palpable discomfort among UN actors with addressing anti-Semitism head-on,
resulted in the subject matter being repeatedly generalized and alleged Muslim
victims of “Islamophobia” constantly injected. The Secretary-General: “Jews
remain targets, as do Muslims…”25 The General Assembly President: “We must
condemn without reservation all manifestations of intolerance, including
anti-Semitism, including Islamophobia…”26 Argentina: “…violence and hatred for
others feeds anti-Semitism, anti-Arabism, Islamophobia…”27 Denmark even thanked
the Organization of Islamic Cooperation for its showcase UN resolution on
religion that is a notorious assault on free speech.28]
South
Africa, whose current government welcomed the world’s decades-long attention to
apartheid,, lashed out at the whole concept of one event on anti-Semitism:
“We
limit the scope at which we can address these challenges when we single out one
particular form of intolerance without highlighting others, including the rise
in Afrophobia, Nazism, Islamophobia, xenophobia, anti-ciganism [anti-Romani] as
they all lead to violence worldwide. The issue of anti-Semitism falls within
the anti-racism agenda within the UN and should be addressed within the
spectrum of all forms of intolerance to avoid creating confusion.”29]
Less
confusing, according to South Africa, were the anti-Semitic “anti-racist” 2001
Durban conference and declaration – that they asserted remain “the cornerstone
in combating racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related
intolerance.”30]
The UN
event on anti-Semitism did not even avoid what is so often heard at UN meetings
– an open display of anti-Semitism. Lebanon retold the lie of Jews having no
ties to the land and analogized Israelis to Nazis: “No code of morals can
justify the persecution of one people in an attempt to relieve the persecution
of another…[T]he relief of Jewish distress may not be accomplished at the cost
of inflicting a corresponding distress upon an innocent and peaceful
population.”31]
The UN press
office issued a scandalous release after the session, apparently reading from a
UN playbook rather than the actual content of the statements. The press release
fabricated the remarks of keynote speaker Bernard-Henri Lévy, piecing together
disparate references to ethnic cleansing in Bosnia and a later comment on
Palestinians. The release reads: “Mr. Lévy…called for a second meeting…to
reveal the truth of the past decades — of the horror of the ethnic cleansing in
Bosnia, Burundi, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Palestine.”32]
Beyond
Israel, only two states reached the crux of modern anti-Semitism: Canada and
the tiny country of Palau. Canada sent a Cabinet Minister, Steven Blaney, to
speak truth to diplomatic power:
“Israel
has every right to exist as a Jewish state… Our Canadian government has adopted
an unequivocal approach against groups that…are in favour of terrorist acts
committed against the State of Israel. … Canada has taken a zero-tolerance
approach to anti-Semitism and all forms of discrimination including in rhetoric
towards Israel, and attempts to delegitimize Israel such as the Boycott,
Divestment and Sanctions movement.”33]
The
Canadians provided a very stark contrast to the input of the Obama
administration, whose UN Ambassador Samantha Power shamefully made no mention
of Israel at all.34]
This is
not semantics. It is the way we know whether the pro forma “Never Again,”
tripping easily off the lips of UN speakers, means anything.
The
more than one hundred states represented could have mentioned the 3.5 million
Israelis endangered by Hamas rocket fire just a few months ago,35 the three
Israeli teens kidnapped and murdered on their way home from school, the
four-year old child mortally wounded by shrapnel seconds away from a safe-house,
the construction worker who fell to his death after his cables were cut, or the
3-month old killed when her stroller was rammed by a car.36 Or the 66 Israeli soldiers killed this past
summer in the line of duty – because virtually all 18-year old Israelis have
had to take up arms to defend their loved ones from anti-Semites for the past
67 years. But they did not.
The
explanation lies between the lines.
States frequently referred to the Paris shoppers as “innocent,” and to
Holocaust victims as “innocent,” but not to innocent Israelis. This is the
sickening nature of modern anti-Semitism – a strategic calculus over where to
draw the politically-opportunistic line between innocent and culpable Jews.
At the
end of the anti-Semitism meeting – which was informal because formal agreement
by the General Assembly to address the subject would have run smack into Arab
and OIC intransigence –a joint statement was issued.37 The lack of formality
meant it could not take the form of an official UN resolution. It does not
explicitly mention Israel, but it is tangible. Fifty states signed on to what
could be called the New York declaration on anti-Semitism.
Tellingly,
90 percent of the signatories are fully free democracies (on the Freedom House
scale), while only 45 percent of all UN member states are fully free. The countries that participated in the event
but refused to sign the commitment to combating anti-Semitism, not only
included Lebanon, Turkey, Qatar and Russia, but, disgracefully, Brazil, India,
Mexico, New Zealand, South Korea, South Africa, and Switzerland.
Less
than a week later, at the UN Holocaust commemoration held on January 28, 2015
in New York, listeners heard the gut-wrenching story of one of the few
surviving twins of the Nazi Dr. Mengele’s hideous experiments. Jona Laks
concluded her account of the horrors of Auschwitz and surviving the Nazi death
marches, only to be turned away from her former home in Poland, with this: “In 1948, an orphan, and completely alone, I
made my way…to the soon to be born State of Israel. I began to rebuild my life.
Only then, I began to get the feeling that I was a human being again, with a
name and no more just a number.”38]
It was
a precise and authentic message understood long ago by the majority at the United
Nations, but no longer.
On
January 31, 2015, the UN Human Rights Council finished the first phase of its
latest legal pogrom against the State of Israel when an inquiry that it
commissioned wrapped up so-called fact-finding on the Gaza war. Although the inquiry’s Chair, William
Schabas, was forced to resign on February 2, 2015 when it was revealed he had
been a paid legal advisor to the PLO in 2012, all the hearings and preparatory
work that he managed and directed will form the basis of the report due in
March. Before he had even started,
Schabas had been recorded on camera calling for “Netanyahu in the dock of the
International Criminal Court.”39 His “impartial and objective” successor,40
Mary McGowan Davis (one of the two remaining inquiry members), chaired the
Council committee to implement the infamous Goldstone report that charged
Israel with war crimes in the previous Gaza war.41]
The
devotion of Hamas to genocide is spelled out in its Covenant42 and reiterated
continuously by its leadership.43 During the Gaza War, Israel was forced to
respond to 4,564 rockets and mortars in just 50 days that deliberately targeted
its civilian population.44 In the first 26 days alone, 597 of those rockets
specifically came from Palestinian civilian sites.45 These are archetypal war
crimes.
Pursuing
Israel and its democratically-elected, accountable leaders for war crimes –
after they dutifully acted to protect their citizens from Palestinian war
crimes – is an attempt to ravage the essence of Israeli sovereignty: the right
of self-defense. This move aims to cast asunder the promise that a Jewish state
made to Jona Laks and to all Jews after the Holocaust.
How is
it possible that in a matter of days the UN apparatus went from discussing
anti-Semitism, to the Holocaust, to Israeli war crimes?
Tragically,
one can only assume it is because the lessons of the Holocaust have never been
absorbed, and the stage is being set for a repetition.
* * *
Notes
1 UN Daily Journal Announcement of “an informal
meeting of the plenary to address concerns of a rise in anti-Semitic violence
worldwide” by the General Assembly, January 22, 2015 http://www.un.org/Docs/journal/En/20150122e.pdf
2 UN
Daily Journal Announcement of “special events on the occasion of the
International Day of Commemoration in Memory of the Victims of the Holocaust,”
January 27/28, 2015. http://www.un.org/Docs/journal/En/20150127e.pdf
3 “Submissions
should be sent no later than 31 January 2015,“ Call for Submissions, The United
Nations Independent Commission of Inquiry on the 2014 Gaza Conflict, http://www.ohchr.org/EN/HRBodies/HRC/CoIGazaConflict/Pages/CommissionOfInquiry.aspx
4
United Nations Observances, International Days, “International Jazz Day,”
(April 30), “International Day of Yoga,” (June 21), http://www.un.org/en/events/observances/days.shtml
5
“Situation of Muslims and Arab peoples in various parts of the world,”
Commission on Human Rights Report, E/CN.4/2006/17, February 13, 2006. See also:
“Report of the Special Rapporteur on contemporary forms of racism, racial
discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance, Githu Muigai, on the
manifestations of defamation of religions, and in particular on the ongoing
serious implications of Islamophobia, for the enjoyment of all rights by their
followers,” Human Rights Council, A/HRC/15/53, July 10, 2010
6
“Combating defamation of religions,” General Assembly Resolution A/RES/62/154,
Adopted December 18, 2007. See also for example: “Combating defamation of
religions,” Commission on Human Rights Resolution 2004/6, April 13, 2004.
7 Natan
Lerner, Group Rights and Discrimination in International Law, Martinus Nijhoff
Publishers, c. 2003, p. 132
8 Anne
Bayefsky, “Inequity in the United Nations Human Rights System,” Justice, No. 6,
August 1995, p. 28; http://www.intjewishlawyers.org/main/files/Justice%20No.6%20August1995.pdf
9 Anne Bayefsky, “Fatal Failure: The U.N. won’t
recognize the connection between anti-Zionism and anti-Semitism,” November 30,
2004. http://www.nationalreview.com/articles/213010/fatal-failure/anne-bayefsky
10 E/CN.4/1994/SR.31, February 18, 1994,
Commission on Human Rights, Summary Record of the 31st meeting; “56. The
seventh preambular paragraph of draft resolution E/CN.4/1994/L.14/Rev.1
[“Measures to combat contemporary forms of racism, racial discrimination,
xenophobia and related intolerance”] was adopted by 34 votes to none, with 17
abstentions.” http://documents-dds-ny.un.org/doc/UNDOC/GEN/G94/112/17/pdf/G9411217.pdf?OpenElement The first time and only previous time
anti-Semitism appeared in a UN resolution was a Commission on Human Rights
Resolution in 1959 after 2,000 anti-Jewish incidents occurred in almost 40
countries. Mention of anti-Semitism,
however, did not make it as far as the version adopted by the General Assembly
(1510(XV), “Manifestations of racial and national harmony,” Adopted December
12, 1960
11 “Global efforts for the total elimination of
racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance and the
comprehensive implementation of and follow-up to the Durban Declaration and
Programme of Action,” General Assembly Resolution A/RES/67/155, 2012, Adopted
December 20, 2012 (by vote), paragraph 35, http://www.un.org/en/ga/search/view_doc.asp?symbol=A/RES/67/155;
In many cases, anti-Semitism is deliberately inserted in a UN resolution that
also focuses on the implementation of the 2001 Durban Declaration, in the full
knowledge that Israel, the United States, Canada and others are opposed to the
Declaration and will vote against.
12
“Freedom of religion or belief,” General Assembly Resolution A/RES/69/175,
Adopted December 18, 2014, paragraph 4.
13
“Measures to combat contemporary forms of racism and racial discrimination,
xenophobia and related intolerance,” General Assembly Resolution A/RES/55/83, 2000, Adopted December 4, 2000,
paragraph 22, http://www.un.org/en/ga/search/view_doc.asp?symbol=A/RES/55/83;
“Measures to combat contemporary forms of racism and racial discrimination,
xenophobia and related intolerance,” General Assembly Resolution A/RES/56/267, http://www.un.org/en/ga/search/view_doc.asp?symbol=A/RES/56/267,
Adopted March 27, 2002, paragraph 35, 2001; “Global efforts for the total
elimination of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related
intolerance and the comprehensive implementation of and follow-up to the Durban
Declaration and Programme of Action,” General Assembly Resolution A/RES/67/155,
2012, http://www.un.org/en/ga/search/view_doc.asp?symbol=A/RES/67/155,
Adopted December 20, 2012 (by vote), paragraph 35
14 In
2002 the Commission on Human Rights removed anti-Semitism from the their
resolution (2002/68), “Racism, racial
discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance.” Adopted by vote, April 25, 2002. See
preambular paragraph 7. Anti-Semitism had been included in this resolution
every year since 1994.
15 UN
General Assembly Resolution A/RES/60/7, November 1, 2005; Transcript of the
General Assembly Proceedings at which the resolution was adopted, 42nd plenary
meeting of the 60th session of the General Assembly: http://www.un.org/en/ga/search/view_doc.asp?symbol=A/60/PV.42
16
Emergency special sessions, http://www.un.org/en/ga/sessions/emergency.shtml
17
Resolution 5/1 of the UN Human Rights Council, Institution-building of the
United Nations Human Rights Council, June 18, 2007, Annex, V. Agenda and
Framework for the Programme of Work, B.
Agenda, “Item 7. Human rights situation in Palestine and other occupied
Arab territories”
18
Secretary-General’s video message for the Informal Meeting of the General
Assembly to address concerns of a rise in anti-semitism worldwide, New York, 22
January 2015 http://www.un.org/sg/statements/index.asp?nid=8341
19 UN
Webcast, January 22, 2015. http://webtv.un.org/watch/part-2-concerns-of-a-rise-in-anti-semitic-violence-worldwide-general-assembly-informal-meeting-of-the-plenary-69th-session/4005728787001
20 UN
Webcast, January 22, 2015. http://webtv.un.org/watch/part-2-concerns-of-a-rise-in-anti-semitic-violence-worldwide-general-assembly-informal-meeting-of-the-plenary-69th-session/4005728787001
21 UN
Webcast, January 22, 2015. http://webtv.un.org/watch/part-2-concerns-of-a-rise-in-anti-semitic-violence-worldwide-general-assembly-informal-meeting-of-the-plenary-69th-session/4005728787001
22 UN
Webcast, January 22, 2015. http://webtv.un.org/watch/part-2-concerns-of-a-rise-in-anti-semitic-violence-worldwide-general-assembly-informal-meeting-of-the-plenary-69th-session/4005728787001
23 UN
Webcast, January 22, 2015. http://webtv.un.org/watch/part-2-concerns-of-a-rise-in-anti-semitic-violence-worldwide-general-assembly-informal-meeting-of-the-plenary-69th-session/4005728787001
24 UN
Webcast, January 22, 2015. http://webtv.un.org/watch/part-2-concerns-of-a-rise-in-anti-semitic-violence-worldwide-general-assembly-informal-meeting-of-the-plenary-69th-session/4005728787001
25Secretary-General’s
video message for the Informal Meeting of the General Assembly to address
concerns of a rise in anti-semitism worldwide, New York, 22 January 2015 http://www.un.org/sg/statements/index.asp?nid=8341
26
Statement on behalf of the President delivered by Vice-President Alvaro José de
Mendonça e Moura, at the General Assembly meeting on the rise of anti-Semitism
New York, January 22, 2015, http://www.un.org/pga/220115_statement-anti-semitism/
27 UN
Webcast, January 22, 2015. http://webtv.un.org/watch/part-2-concerns-of-a-rise-in-anti-semitic-violence-worldwide-general-assembly-informal-meeting-of-the-plenary-69th-session/4005728787001
28 UN
Webcast, January 22, 2015. http://webtv.un.org/watch/part-2-concerns-of-a-rise-in-anti-semitic-violence-worldwide-general-assembly-informal-meeting-of-the-plenary-69th-session/4005728787001
29 UN
Webcast, January 22, 2015. http://webtv.un.org/watch/part-2-concerns-of-a-rise-in-anti-semitic-violence-worldwide-general-assembly-informal-meeting-of-the-plenary-69th-session/4005728787001
30 UN
Webcast, January 22, 2015. http://webtv.un.org/watch/part-2-concerns-of-a-rise-in-anti-semitic-violence-worldwide-general-assembly-informal-meeting-of-the-plenary-69th-session/4005728787001
31 UN
Webcast, January 22, 2015. http://webtv.un.org/watch/part-2-concerns-of-a-rise-in-anti-semitic-violence-worldwide-general-assembly-informal-meeting-of-the-plenary-69th-session/4005728787001
32 “Fight against Anti-Semitism ‘A Fight for All
of Us’, Secretary-General Says, as General Assembly Debates Issue Following
Rise in Attacks on Jews,” UN Press Release, January 22, 2015, GA/11613, http://www.un.org/press/en/2015/ga11613.doc.htm The text of the actual speech can be found
at: Bernard-Henri Lévy, “Against the New Anti-Semitism: Remembering the
Holocaust Protects Us All,” http://www.huffingtonpost.com/bernardhenri-levy/against-the-new-anti-semi_b_6526364.html
33
United Nations General Assembly Session on Anti-Semitism, Statement by Public
Safety and Emergency Preparedness Minister Steven Blaney, New York, January 22,
2015 http://www.canadainternational.gc.ca/prmny-mponu/canada_un-canada_onu/statements-declarations/other-autres/2015-01-22_AS_Blaney.aspx?lang=en
34
Remarks by Ambassador Samantha Power, U.S. Permanent Representative to the
United Nations, at a General Assembly Meeting on Anti-Semitism, New York, NY,
January 22, 2015. http://usun.state.gov/briefing/statements/236203.htm
35
Operation Protective Edge by the Numbers, August 5, 2014, IDF Blog, http://www.idfblog.com/blog/2014/08/05/operation-protective-edge-numbers/
36
Victims of Palestinian Violence and Terrorism since September 2000, Israeli
Ministry of Foreign Affairs, http://www.mfa.gov.il/mfa/foreignpolicy/terrorism/palestinian/pages/victims%20of%20palestinian%20violence%20and%20terrorism%20sinc.aspx
37 http://embassies.gov.il/un/NewsAndEvents/Pages/Joint-statement-following-the-Informal-meeting-of-the-General-Assembly-to-address-concerns-of-a-rise-in-Anti-Semitic-violenc.aspx
By January 28, 2015, 50 countries had signed the Joint Statement/Declaration
Against Anti-Semitism.
38 UN
Webcast, January 28, 2015. http://webtv.un.org/watch/united-nations-holocaust-memorial-ceremony-liberty-life-and-the-legacy-of-holocaust-survivors/4018684117001
39
Russell Tribunal, New York, October 6-7, 2012, Youtube video: (excerpt) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0EgykgqpgQY&index=4&list=PLgpQlmlhMOVnMrWTFFUpkUXLMqoj2Ya8X
(complete) http://www.russelltribunalonpalestine.com/en/sessions/future-sessions/new-york-session-video-presentations/william-schabas
40 UN
Human Rights Council rules state: “The following general criteria will be of
paramount importance while nominating, selecting and appointing
mandate-holders: (a) expertise; (b) experience in the field of the mandate; (c)
independence; (d) impartiality; (e) personal integrity; and (f) objectivity.”
Human Rights Council resolution 5/1, June 18, 2007, para. 39.
41 See
her follow-up reports: (as Chair)
“Report of the Committee of independent experts in international humanitarian
and human rights law established pursuant to Council resolution 13/9,”
A/HRC/16/24, March 18, 2011, http://www2.ohchr.org/english/bodies/hrcouncil/docs/16session/A.HRC.16.24_AUV.pdf;
and (as Committee member) A/HRC/15/50, September 21, 2010, http://www2.ohchr.org/english/bodies/hrcouncil/docs/15session/A.HRC.15.50_AEV.pdf
42 The
Hamas Covenant, August 10, 1988, http://avalon.law.yale.edu/20th_century/hamas.asp
43 “The
gun is our only response to [the] Zionist regime” (Ismail Haniyeh, Feb. 12,
2012), http://www.idfblog.com/hamas/2014/02/19/8-years-8-quotes-hamas-leader-ismail-haniyeh/ “Palestine is from the sea to the river…We
will not recognize Israel.” (Ismail Haniyeh, Dec. 14, 2010), http://www.idfblog.com/hamas/2014/02/19/8-years-8-quotes-hamas-leader-ismail-haniyeh/ “The Hamas political leadership has freed the
hand of the brigades to do whatever they want against the brothers of monkeys
and pigs.” (Abdel Aziz al-Rantissi, July 31, 2001), Reuters; Testimony of John
S. Pistole, Assistant Director, Counterterrorism Division, FBI, Before the House Committee on Firnancial
Services Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations, September 24, 2003; http://www2.fbi.gov/congress/congress03/pistole092403.htm
44
Operation Protective Edge, IDF Blog, http://www.idfblog.com/IDFsummary2014/
45
Operation Protective Edge by the Numbers, August 5, 2014, IDF blog, http://www.idfblog.com/blog/2014/08/05/operation-protective-edge-numbers/
Publication:
Jerusalem Viewpoints
Prof. Anne Bayefsky
Source: http://jcpa.org/article/un-mixes-anti-semitism-holocaust/
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
1 comment:
Good article...how about turning your brilliant mind ( mean this as a true compliment) to some possible suggestions to change this situation...even a little bit!
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