Disentitling Israel at the International Level
"Given the current circumstances on the ground, we believe that this resolution is not a step in the right direction, as it risks potentially sowing further divisions.""[The resolution] fails to address the immense security challenges Israel faces, including Hamas's use of the Gaza Strip as a launching pad for its rampage of killing of Israelis, while systematically using the Palestinian civilians as human shields.""[This] assembly has once again failed to acknowledge this issue with today's vote."Czech Republic Ambassador to the UN Jakub Kulhanek
The final result of a vote during the emergency session on the legal consequences of Israel’s actions in the Palestinian territories is shown at United Nations Headquarters in New York on Sept 18, 2024. (PHOTO / AFP) |
Israel,
that tiny sliver of land that the world community gave its permission
to allow Jews to call its homeland, representing a fraction of its
historical ancestral land base and which has been forced by its
neighbours -- furious at its presence in land they claim is consecrated
to a divine entity of a much later entry to the pantheon of the world's
religions -- to militarily respond whenever a neighbouring country or
irregular terrorist militia feels impelled to challenge its presence,
suffers the ongoing indignity of UN accusations of human rights abuses.
It
has been made manifestly evident that any time Israel responds to the
never-ending violent assaults from its neighbours by militarily
protecting itself and its citizens from their deadly force, the
international community takes umbrage at the most technologically
sophisticated, moral armed force in the world daring to project its
determination to foil every such attack's purpose; its destruction.
Israel's drubbing of its enemies when it has been provoked beyond
endurance is never applauded as just, but consequentially condemned as
'just too much'.
Israel,
unique enough as the homeland of the world's great dispersal of Jews
throughout history, and a modern giant of technology and innovation
whose inventiveness in every sphere of human endeavour gifts itself and
the world at large with forward looking human enterprise -- enriching
science, medicine, agriculture, technology and education -- still
becomes an object of accusatory slander; that classic syndrome of doing
everything right, interpreted as disproportionately engaged in defending
itself.
The
United Nations General Assembly saw fit to pass 14 resolutions in
condemnation of the Jewish state, fully double the entire number of
condemnations of all other countries combined, in 2023 alone. Global
human rights violators barely register for a chiding by the UN. Rather,
countries like Iran, Venezuela, China, Saudi Arabia, North Korea and
Syria are either entirely bypassed for censure for their human rights
violations, or face a single resolution of condemnation in an entire
year.
There
were 140 resolutions raised against Israel between 2015 and 2022 where
the General Assembly focused on Israel; a number more than double passed
against all other countries in the world combined. That states
committing human rights violations barely risk a nod from the UN is
commonplace. For the second time in the year that is moving toward the
anniversary date of October 7 reflecting a sadistically savage pogrom by
Islamist terrorists against Israel, 124 countries of the General
Assembly voted in favour of the latest resolution, with 14 against and
43 abstaining.
The
call was for Israel to withdraw its forces from Gaza in its pursuit of
the Hamas terrorists who slaughtered over a thousand Israeli civilians,
raped and mutilated Israeli girls and women before murdering them
relentlessly, destroyed farming villages, setting homes on fire with
entire families burning to death, and taking 240 infants, elderly,
women, men, soldiers hostage back to Gaza. Many of the hostages were
tortured, many murdered, and all have been kept in inhumane conditions
and subjected to violations of humanity.
At
no time has a resolution been tabled before the General Assembly
demanding the dismantling of Palestinian terrorist groups, requiring
their weapons to be set aside, that the hostages be released back to
Israel, and that hostilities on the part of the terrorists cease and
desist. Israel only, in its resolve to destroy the death cult that
continues to ravage Israel with the clear intention of murdering as many
Jews as possible -- anywhere, is held to account and judged inadequate
in its response to the nonsensical and obviously biased opinion of the
UN. A UN which would never impose retaliatory restrictions on any other
country that had suffered such a massive loss.
Conflicts
of massive offence are treated as inconvenient incidents, but Israel's
right of self-defense is placed under the microscope of special
'contexts'. Terrorist entities calling openly for the destruction of
Israel and the concurrent death of Jews are given no notice; it is
Israel which must withdraw and make reparations. Countries like Canada
which at one time could be relied upon to vote against such unjust
resolutions now prefer to withhold their vote as though a national
morality of 'neutrality' reigned.
Whereas
a handful of courageous and morally decisive countries like the Czech
Republic, clearly understanding the level of deception and hypocrisy
involved will have none of it, and hold the United Nations and its
anti-Israel cliques to account for their jaundiced hateful
interpretation of a situation they cannot bring themselves to condemn,
to the point of supporting the right of existence of a member nation
which has endured the unendurable by those who wish it ill.
"In my speech at the General Assembly, I condemned the hypocrisy and bias in the United Nations, which since October 7 has passed two resolutions that failed to mention Hamas and its responsibility for the massacre last October.""I reiterated that anyone who supports this circus is a collaborator. Every vote you cast in support of this circus fuels the violence.""This empty show is not just an insult to the victims of October 7. It is an insult to the hostages."Israeli Ambassador to the UN Danny Danon
Labels: Discriminatory Bias, Injustices, Resolutions, State of Israel, United Nations, United Nations General Assembly
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