UN battle to ‘shame’ Israel over abuse of children
to put Israeli army on same list as Islamic State and Taliban
to step up the pressure on United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to
include Israel for the first time on a “shame list” of serious violators of
children’s rights.
online petition to Ban’s office on 7 May, was launched after indications that
Israel is exerting enormous pressure on UN officials to avoid being named.
coming weeks.
because of the diplomatically sensitive nature of any announcement, told Middle
East Eye that Ban’s chief advisers had recommended that the Israeli army be
identified as a serious violator of children’s rights.
like Islamic State, the Taliban and al-Qaeda-affiliated groups, pushing Israel
further towards international isolation.
international community as it has tried to prevent Palestinian moves both to
win recognition at the UN for statehood and to be accepted at international
bodies such as the International Criminal Court in the Hague. Relations with
the White House have recently hit an unprecedented low.
after the recent findings of a UN inquiry into Israel’s attack on Gaza last
summer known as Operation Protective Edge that killed more than 500
Palestinian children and injured at least 3,300 others.
targeted six UN schools where civilians, including many children, were
sheltering, even though it had been notified of the sites and their GPS
coordinates in advance.
– which killed 44 Palestinians and injured 227 more – as “a matter of the
utmost gravity”.
on schools, are among the “triggers” for inclusion on the list in a UN
monitoring process of children’s right in conflicts around the world introduced
a decade ago.
children’s rights experts that, despite the evidence against Israel, political
pressure from Israel and the US could ensure that the Israeli army remains off
the list.
strenuously in February when local UN staff in Jerusalem were due to ratify a
recommendation to UN headquarters that Israel be included. At the last minute,
the meeting was cancelled.
Ron Prosor, Israel’s ambassador to the UN, over the intimidation of
agency staff in Jerusalem, according to a report in Britain’s Guardian
newspaper.
agency officials in Jerusalem and Ban’s advisers in New York had decided the
evidence against Israel was compelling.
on him would be intense, said Gerard Horton, a lawyer specialising in Israel’s
treatment of children. “Once things move to New York, they become highly
political,” he told MEE.
budget, so UN officials cannot afford to ignore the administration’s wishes. If
UN officials want to help children in Africa and Iraq, they have to ask
themselves whether it is worth risking it all for a fight over Israel.”
Ban.
that, if Israel is put on the list, it will begin a process of bringing
sanctions to bear against Israel from the international community.”
vetoed the advice of his team in New York dealing with children and armed
conflict, headed by Leila Zerrougui.
recommendation for inclusion on this list and it will be hard for him to do so
now and maintain the UN’s credibility in the Middle East,” said the source.
local monitoring process, referred all questions to New York, saying the matter
was “confidential”.
but would not comment on which countries were to be listed or whether Israel
had lobbied the Secretary-General.
have to take account of the fact that the UN’s Human Rights Council is due to
submit its report into Operation Protective Edge in the coming months. The
report is expected to be harshly critical of Israel’s 50-day operation and the
resulting high number of casualties of Palestinian civilians.
commissions, most recently in a resolution
by the Commission on the Status of Women. But Israel and the US usually dismiss
such findings as partisan, given that the commissions represent national
governments, including Arab and Muslim states.
of the Security Council, which originally set up the monitoring of children’s rights
in conflict zones – will carry much more weight.
organisation monitoring Israel’s detention of Palestinian children, said
western states’ current displeasure with Israel might give Ban the diplomatic
room he needs to punish it.
the Israeli government, especially after [Israeli prime minister] Benjamin
Netanyahu publicly declared during the recent election campaign that he would
not allow the creation of a Palestinian state,” he said.
shot across the bows. It would be a major embarrassment for Israel, but it
would draw a lot less blood than the US vetoing a resolution in the Security
Council against, say, Israel’s settlements.”
monitoring 23 conflicts, including the one between Israel and the Palestinians,
for serious violations of children’s rights.
party to a conflict for inclusion on the list. They are: killing and maiming
children, abductions, sexual attacks, attacks on schools and hospitals, the
denial of humanitarian access, and the recruitment of children as soldiers.
annual reports into all the conflicts, highlighting major violations of
children’s rights. However, the Israeli army has so far avoided inclusion in an
annex that has come to be known as the “list of shame”.
gravest violations against children in states such as Afghanistan, the Central
African Republic, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Mali, Myanmar, Somalia,
South Sudan, Sudan, Syria, and Yemen. Several government armed forces were
included.
report as one of the most serious abusers, it was criticised for violations
against Palestinian children that included: actions that led to deaths and
injuries; night-time arrests; cruel and degrading treatment during
interrogations; threats of sexual violence; transfers to Israeli prisons, in
violation of the Geneva Conventions; attacks on schools; and the denial for
patients in Gaza of required hospital treatments.
that inclusion on the list has proved successful in curbing states’ worst
abuses of children’s rights.
tool in getting governments to improve their children’s rights records,” Bede
Sheppard, the deputy director of the children’s rights division at HRW, noted
earlier this year.
in Gaza, told MEE that listing Israel was vital to increasing protections for
Palestinians under occupation.
especially in Gaza, where it has a green light to do what it likes. Gaza is a
society of children [figures show
44 per cent of the population are under 14] so it is inevitable that they pay
the heaviest price for Israeli impunity.”
territories, violations have been documented and monitored since 2007 by a
working group led by the UN children’s agency, UNICEF. The group includes other
major UN agencies, international aid organisations and Israeli and Palestinian
human rights organisations.
noted, Israel had not only been excluded from the final list publicised by the
UN Secretary General’s office, but had not even been discussed for inclusion.
report included a proposal for the first time to consider whether Israel should
be on the list,” said Ayed Abed Eqtaish, a lawyer with the Palestine branch of
Defence for Children International.
meeting in February.
Israel. The pressure is growing year by year.”
Organisations Council, a coalition of 12 Palestinian groups, sent a letter to
Ban in February urging him to be “impartial” and include Israel on the list.
prolonged military occupation, and recurrent military violence combined with
complete disregard for international law has hindered any meaningful efforts
toward implementing comprehensive protections for children living [under
occupation].”
mounting criticism of Israel’s conduct during last year’s Operation Protective
Edge. Reports from human rights groups have already accused Israel of carrying
out war crimes.
the Silence, published testimonies from soldiers who served in Gaza. Many said
they had received similar orders from their commanders: to shoot any
Palestinian, whether armed or not, in areas Israel considered combat zones.
saying: “The instructions are to shoot right away. Whoever you spot – be they
armed or unarmed, no matter what. The instructions are very clear. Any person
you run into, that you see with your eyes – shoot to kill. It’s an explicit
instruction.”
that Israel was “at best indifferent about casualties among the Palestinian
population”.
the killing and maiming of children in last year’s attack on Gaza, Yunis of
Al-Mezan said Israel should have been listed long before for the grave
violation of “denying humanitarian access”.
and meets the criteria of a grave violation,” he said. “If Israel is listed
this year, it’s important that it stays there until it ends such violations.”





