Tuesday, November 21, 2006

UN Human Rights Commissioner gets kassam’d and then boo’d in Sderot

So UN Human Rights Commissioner, Lousie Arbour goes to Sderot Israel and gets more than she bargained for according to this Ynet News account.
United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Louise Arbour's visit to a Sderot factory, where a worker was seriously injured by a Qassam rocket, ended with a brawl. UN spokesperson in Israel, Christopher Gans told Ynet: "Arbour regrets the events. She said the fire is illegal, even if it is directed at military targets. It's a flagrant violation of international law."

"The government of Israel has a responsibility to protect its citizens, like any government and it must do this within the law; within the human rights and the humanitarian law," said Jose Diaz, the spokeman for the United Nations High Commission for Human Rights. "We have been consistent about condemning such attacks and Louise Arbour condemned it again this morning, there is no question about it - these kinds of attacks with these kinds of weapons violate humanitarian law," he added.

Diaz told Ynetnews of the difficult scenes Arbour witnessed in Sderot: "Our visit to Sderot was traumatic as we personally witnessed an attack. As we were driving into Sderot we heard a loud explosion and a rocket landed 200 meters away; we went to the actual site but couldn't examine it closely, because officials feared there was a gas leak, so we had to leave the site.

"We went to a daycare center and met with children some of whom were with their parents. Some were adolescents, some young teenagers and some as young as 9-10 years old. It was hard to tell if they were traumatized but while we were at the daycare center there was either a drill or another attack, or a fear of another attack, and everyone was told to go inside, children were told to face the wall as they had practiced in their drills. It was quite a striking scene seeing all these children lined up against the wall, not the kind of thing any human being wants to go through," he said.

Diaz said that Arbour discussed efforts to bring Israel and Palestinian gunmen to agree to a ceasefire during talks with President Mahmoud Abbas on Monday. Moyal told Arbour that Sderot has been suffering Qassam attacks for six years. A Sderot Municipality official said Arbour was embarrassed by the reaction of workers at the Qassam-stricken factory as they hit UN vehicles and shouted slogans accusing the UN of being biased against Israel. "I came here to see what is happening and hear about how the residents feel," she told workers before being interrupted, forcing police to lead her away.

I imagine she wasn’t “embarrassed” as much as she was stupefied to discover (probably for the first time) that as a representative of the UN, ordinary Israelis perceived her as part of the problem and not the solution.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

I think the UN is surprised everyone doesn't love them. They live in their own world. I'm glad the UN officials were not warmly received, the UN deserves no warm receptions.

Anonymous said...

I thinks it's funny and typical of the liberal and pluralistic societies of the UN that they can only condemn the militants by condemning Israel for protecting itself.

Just the other day there were massive (maybe an overstatement) protests in Haiti because they want the UN to leave. I guess the Haitians are tired of being raped and occupied by the French and their ilk.