UN assembly presses Israel
to withdraw from Gaza
UNITED NATIONS, Saturday (Reuters) - The U.N.
General Assembly voted overwhelmingly on Friday to deplore a deadly
Israeli artillery attack in Gaza, six days after the United States
vetoed a similar measure in the Security Council. The assembly voted
156-7 with six abstentions to approve a resolution put forward by
Arab states that also urged the Jewish state to immediately withdraw
its troops from Gaza.
A Palestinian boy collects belongings from the rubble of his
destroyed house after it was demolished by Israeli warplanes
in the southern Gaza Strip town of Rafah on Friday. AFP |
Palestinian U.N. Observer Riyad Mansour told the
assembly that last Saturday's veto by Washington, Israel's closest
ally, sent a message to the Jewish state “that it can continue
to commit crimes and acts of outright aggression with impunity,”The
Nov. 8 shelling of Beit Hanoun killed 19 civilians, including seven
children and five women.
Voting “no” were the United States,
Israel, Australia, the Marshall Islands, Micronesia, Nauru and Palau.
Abstaining were Canada, Ivory Coast, Papua New Guinea, Tonga, Tuvalu
and Vanuatu. U.S. Ambassador John Bolton said the assembly resolution,
like the one before the Security Council, was a “one-sided,
unbalanced” text that raised questions about the world body's
ability to confront global problems.
“We believe that the United Nations is ill-served
when its members seek to transform the organization into a forum
that is little more than a self-serving and polemical attack against
Israel or the United States,” he said. Arab diplomats said
they took particular umbrage at Israeli U.N. Ambassador Dan Gillerman
for cautioning delegates a “yes” vote would make them
“accomplices to terror.”
“The blood of poor innocents will be on
your hands.” Gillerman said, even as he acknowledged the attack
had been “a tragic accident ... which Israel deeply regrets.”
While the vote was largely symbolic, simply expressing the will
of world governments, Arab states took the matter to the 192-nation
assembly because Washington has no veto there.
Gillerman said Palestinian rocket fire and the
Palestinians' elected Hamas government, which refuses to acknowledge
Israel or renounce violence, were to blame for the continuing Israeli
military action in Gaza. He also accused Qatar, the sole Arab member
of the Security Council, of pressing for a quick vote last Saturday
because it had learned of a major guerrilla attack in the works
and feared it might embarrass Arab states if it occurred before
a vote.
Qatari Ambassador Nassir Abdulaziz Al-Nasser flatly
denied Gillerman's accusation, telling Reuters: “That is not
correct. We don't know anything about that.” The resolution
called for the immediate cessation of all acts of violence and terror
by both the Palestinian and Israeli sides and asked Secretary-General
Kofi Annan to set up a fact-finding mission to look into the Beit
Hanoun attack.
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