DATE=04/05/02
TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT
TITLE=PALESTINIANS/HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION (L)
NUMBER=2-288382
BYLINE=DALE GAVLAK
DATELINE=GENEVA
INTERNET=YES
CONTENT=
VOICED AT:
INTRO: Pressed by angry Arab delegations, the U-N
Human Rights Commission has voted today (Friday) to
immediately send a mission to the Palestinian territories to investigate
reports of gross violations. The U-N-H-R-C High
Commissioner, Mary Robinson, will head the delegation
traveling to Israel next week. Dale Gavlak has the
details from Geneva.
TEXT: The U-N Human Rights Commission voted 44 to 2
with seven abstentions to accept a resolution backed
by Islamic states to send Mary Robinson posthaste on a
trip to the West Bank and Gaza Strip. Mrs.
Robinson will file a report with the Commission
on the ongoing violence between Israel and the Palestinians.
She said she would be guided by the advice of U-N Secretary
General Kofi Annan to ask two prominent international
personalities to join her mission, which is not supported by
the United States.
Canada and Guatemala were the two countries voting
against the resolution. But they are widely believed
to represent the United States' position on the
matter. For the first time since the Commission was
founded in 1947, the United States could not vote
because it failed to win re-election to the Commission last
year. Israel also is not a member. Its ambassador to
the U-N in Geneva, Yaacov Levy, called the resolution
one-sided.
///LEVY ACT///
It will not contribute to peace and the other fora
discussing the subject at this very moment--more
appropriate ones--we have the mission of General Zinni
on the spot and we are expecting Secretary Powell. So
we feel at this time there is no need for other
missions which could very well affect negatively the
delicate situation in the area.
///END ACT///
Israel has repeatedly rejected proposals put forward
by the U-N, Arab states and the Mitchell Report for
the positioning of international observers in the
Palestinian territories as a means of monitoring and
stemming the continuing bloodshed.
Palestinian Ambassador to the U-N, Nabil Ramlawi,
welcomed the Commission's decision to send a mission
headed by Mrs. Robinson. He argues that Israeli
violence has reached an unprecedented, unimaginable
level against the Palestinians. He says such a
mission will only reinforce international efforts to
stop the bloodshed.
///RAMLAWI ACT///
It helps build a sort of public opinion on what is
going on, and I think this can be a positive attitude
towards the suffering of the Palestinian people under
Israeli occupation.
///END ACT///
But in November 2000, shortly after the start of the
current Palestinian uprising, a convoy carrying Mrs.
Robinson came under sniper fire during a visit to the
West Bank town of Hebron. Several diplomats have
expressed concern for the safety of such a mission, and
it is not clear whether Israel will assist such an
investigation. (Signed)
NEB/DG/SAB