UK charities alarmed by UK decision not to support the UN Commission of Inquiry on Gaza

This article was published on
 | News and analysis
Image
Israeli snipers. Photo: IDF.
A dereliction of responsibility: UK charities alarmed by UK decision not to support UN Commission of Inquiry report into Gaza protests at the UN Human Rights Council

As a coalition of UK-based humanitarian, development, human rights and faith organisations working to support the rights and welfare of the Palestinian people, we express alarm at the UK government's decision at the UN Human Rights Council this morning to abstain on a resolution that welcomed the important report of the UN-mandated independent Commission of Inquiry into the 2018 protests in Gaza and the implementation of its recommendations.

The UK's abstention on the Commission of Inquiry's report represents a regrettable dereliction of its responsibility to uphold respect for the rule of international law and human rights. The UK failed to clearly affirm that victims, survivors and their families of serious violations perpetrated by Israel's forces at the civilian protests in Gaza require legal accountability and justice. The  Commission found reasonable grounds to believe that all 189 fatalities were caused by unlawful use of force – with the possible exception of two incidents - and that medical workers, journalists, some children and some people with visible disabilities were shot intentionally.

We now urge the UK to consider whether it is doing all it can to ensure that impunity no longer persists for recurrent and serious alleged violations of international humanitarian and human rights law across the occupied Palestinian territory (oPt). This should include urgently outlining what meaningful steps it is taking to protect civilians and uphold the rule of international law within the oPt.

Notes to the Editor

The Commission’s 252-page impartial and thorough report found that “the use of live ammunition by Israeli security forces against demonstrators was unlawful” in all the cases it investigated – all 189 fatalities (183 by live ammunition) and over 300 of the 23,000 injuries (over 6,100 by live ammunition)– with the possible exception of two incidents.

The report made appropriate recommendations in relation to preventing future violations at protests and protecting civilians, prompt access to healthcare for the injured, lifting the closure/blockade of Gaza, and accountability measures for violations committed.

For more on the content of the report, please see our one page statement dated 5 March 2019.

Statement endorsed by the following 11 organisations

ABCD Bethlehem

CAFOD

Christian Aid

Council for Arab-British Understanding

Friends of Birzeit University

Friends of Nablus and Surrounding Areas

Interpal

Lawyers for Palestinian Human Rights

Medical Aid for Palestinians

War on Want

Welfare Association