by Reuters and Israel Hayom Staff
Israeli Ambassador to the U.N. in Geneva Aviva Raz Shechter tells U.N. Human Rights Council Israel has always stood up for democratic values "while facing serious threats to its security and needing to integrate diverse communities and religious groups."
Ambassador Aviva Raz
Shechter
Photo: Mission of
Israel to the U.N. in Geneva
Israel accused
the United Nations on Tuesday of continuous discrimination against
it over its treatment of Palestinians and called for reforms of its
human rights body.
The Human Rights Council's regular
examination of Israel's record, the first since 2013, comes after U.S.
President Donald Trump recognized Jerusalem last month as the capital
of Israel, angering Palestinians, Middle East leaders and world powers.
Aviva Raz Shechter, Israel's ambassador to
the U.N. in Geneva, told the Human Rights Council that her country had
always stood up for human rights and democratic values.
"It has done so while facing serious
threats to its security, and while needing to integrate diverse
communities and religious groups," Shechter told the Geneva forum.
Israel withdrew soldiers and settlers from
Gaza in 2005. Most countries consider the settlements, in areas of the
West Bank and Jerusalem the Palestinians see as part of an eventual
independent state, illegal, but Israel disputes this and continues their
expansion. An "unparalleled number of one-sided biased and political
resolutions adopted regularly by the automatic majority of its members
testify not only to the unfair treatment of the State of Israel but also
to the deficiencies of the Council itself and its agenda," Shechter
said, adding that "this theater of the absurd cannot go on forever."
Washington says the Council is stacked with
opponents of Israel. U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Nikki Haley told the
Council last June that it was reviewing its participation given what it
sees as its "chronic anti-Israel bias."
Israel considered its relations with
the Palestinians to be "of the highest priority" and it would continue
to seek a lasting solution that would enable the two peoples to live
side by side in peace and security, she said.
Jordan's diplomat Akram Harahsheh, speaking
first in the three-hour debate, condemned what he said were "attempts
to prejudge the identity of occupied Jerusalem" and called on Israel to
withdraw from all territories seized in the 1967 Six-Day War.
Reuters and Israel Hayom Staff
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/2018/01/23/israel-accuses-un-rights-forum-of-bias-on-palestinian-issue/
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