INDEPENDENT.UK
Nikki Haley warns US may pull
out of UN Human Rights Council over 'anti-Israel bias'
The US envoy to the UN
said the council is stacked with opponents to Israel
Mythili
Sampathkumar New York Tuesday 6 June
2017 13:15 BST
US ambassador to the UN Nikki Haley warns the Trump
administration may
pull out from the UN Human Rights Council Getty
|
US ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley said the US
is "reviewing its participation" in the Human Rights
Council over what said is the group's "chronic anti-Israel bias".
The Geneva-based Council
made up of 47 member countries is beginning a three-week session and Ms Haley
said the US “sees some areas for significant strengthening” in the group.
The council's critical
stance of Israel has long been a contentious issue for the US, Israel's main
ally. Ms Haley has said in the past that Israel is the “only country
permanently on the body’s calendar”.
The council's members have
taken a strong position against Israel's continued occupation of territory
seized in the 1967 Six-Day War, its treatment of Palestinians, and its building
of Jewish settlements.
Most countries in the UN
system and international bodies consider the settlements illegal since they are
built in areas Palestinians consider part of an eventual independent
state.
Ms Haley used Venezuela's alleged human
rights violations as an example of anti-Israel bias. She noted the council
pursued five resolutions against Israel in its March session but none against
the government of President Nicolas Maduro.
“If Venezuela cannot [address human rights issues], it should voluntarily
step down from its seat on the Human Rights Council until it can get its own
house in order. Being a member of this council is a privilege, and no country
who is a human rights violator should be allowed a seat at the table," she
said.
Ms Haley is set to host a
side event in Geneva specifically regarding the South American nation,
where at least 65 people have died and hundreds have been injured in continued
anti-government protests since the end of March.
Venezuela responded to Ms
Haley's comment, saying the forum “needs to be free of politicisation and double
standards”.
The US ambassador also
called on the council to vote on resolutions against Syria, Eritrea, Belarus,
Ukraine and the Democratic Republic of Congo.
Some activists urged
Washington to focus on abuses at home. “It's hard to take Ambassador Haley
seriously on US support for human rights in light of Trump administration
actions like the Muslim ban and immigration crackdowns," Jamil Dakwar,
director of the human rights program at the American Civil Liberties Union
(ACLU), told Reuters.
The US “must get its own
house in order and make human rights at home a priority – then, it can
begin to credibly demand the same of other countries abroad”.
Despite remaining allies,
former President Obama
had an icy relationship with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu.
In fact, in late December
2016 during the waning moments of the Obama administration, the UN Security
Council passed a resolution condemning Israel's settlements in the West Bank
and East Jerusalem. Then-UN ambassador Samantha Power
chose not to veto the resolution as was normal procedure for the US.
Comparatively, Donald Trump and Mr
Netanyahu seem to have a far friendlier relationship according to foreign
policy experts. The Israeli leader recently hosted the US President during Mr
Trump's first foreign trip.
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