09:00 09/06/2015
New York - Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon's latest list of parties
that kill or injure children in armed conflict does not include Israel,
as some UN officials had recommended, but the UN chief strongly
criticised Israel for the "unprecedented and unacceptable" scale of its
violence against young people.
Ban said in a report circulated on
Monday that the thousands of Palestinian casualties raise "grave
concerns" about Israel's compliance with international law, including
requirements that any military actions must distinguish between
combatants and civilians, be proportional, and avoid excessive use of
force.
UN officials said the UN special envoy for children in
armed conflict, Leila Zerrougui, had recommended that both Israel and
Hamas, which controls the Gaza Strip, be placed on the list of parties
that recruit, use, kill, maim or commit acts of sexual violence against
children.
But
the officials, speaking on condition of anonymity because the
recommendation was not public, said there were differences of opinion
among those on the ground on whether Israel should be listed, a key
reason why it wasn't and neither was Hamas.
Ban said in the annual
report to the UN Security Council and the General Assembly that the
year 2014 saw a dramatic increase in violence against children in the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict, at least 561 children killed and 4 271
injured, almost all Palestinians and the vast majority during last
summer's war in Gaza. It cites 4 Israeli youngsters killed and 22
injured.
'Concrete and immediate steps'
The
annual list is significant because it names and shames governments and
insurgent groups that violate children's rights in conflicts. The
Security Council resolution that established the list in August 2009
states the council's intention "to take action", including possible
sanctions against repeat violators of international laws protecting
children in armed conflicts.
This year, the list in the report
includes groups in Afghanistan, Central African Republic, Colombia,
Congo, Iraq, Mali, Myanmar, Nigeria, Philippines, Somalia, South Sudan,
Sudan, Syria and Yemen. It also lists government forces in Congo,
Somalia, Sudan, South Sudan, Syria and Yemen.
The
secretary-general said that in the Israel-Palestine conflict as well as
the Central African Republic, Iraq, Nigeria, South Sudan and Syria,
"children were affected to a degree which is an affront to our common
humanity."
Israel maintains that its actions in Gaza were in
response to rocket attacks on southern Israel, and were never aimed at
children.
Israel's
UN Ambassador Ron Prosor said Ban "was right not to submit to the
dictates of the terrorist organisations and the Arab states" and include
Israel on a "shameful list" with organisations like ISIS, al-Qaeda and
the Taliban.
Riyad Mansour, the Palestinian UN ambassador, said
the Palestinians "deeply regret" Ban's decision to exclude Israel from
the list which contradicts UN evidence.
"It is without doubt that
Israel, flagrantly, systematically and grossly commits human rights
violations against Palestinian children constituting grave violations
that qualify it for such a listing," Mansour said.
Pummeled with
questions about Israel's exclusion, Ban's spokesman, Stephane Dujarric,
said the list was the "result of a consultative process" and in the end
was Ban's "difficult decision to take".
Dujarric alluded to the
intense lobbying ahead of the report's release by Israel's supporters,
reportedly including the United States, and opponents, saying UN member
states and non-governmental organisations "have never been shy" about
expressing their opinions to Ban.
The secretary-general urged
Israel "to take concrete and immediate steps" including reviewing its
policies and practices to ensure that children are protected, not killed
or maimed, that schools and hospitals aren't attacked, and that
perpetrators of alleged violations are brought to justice.
"I
would like to put all parties to conflict on notice that those that
engage in military action that results in numerous grave violations
against children will, regardless of intent, find themselves under
continued scrutiny by the United Nations, including in future reports
relating to children and armed conflict," Ban said.
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