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The US Withdrawal from UNHRC Is a Reflection of
Widespread Impunity
By Ramona Wadi
PIC, Al-Jazeerah, CCUN,
June 29, 2018
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Nikki Haley announcing US' withdrawal from UN Human Rights
Council in Washington, June 2018 |
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There is a major flaw which is overlooked when discussing the US
withdrawal from the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC). On one hand it
shows the collaborative efforts of Israel and the US to marginalize
their human rights violations away from scrutiny. However, analyzing the
departure within the limited framework of Israel and the US claiming
“anti-Israel” bias also shields the international organisation from
scrutiny.
One can only speak of loss if either the US or the
UNHRC contributed an action of significance, in this case, towards
supporting Palestinians against Israeli colonial violence. In the
absence of such dynamics, the US departure is merely a reflection of the
impunity that exists at an international level, as well as the futility
of articulating human rights from a platform that operates on different
levels in order to maintain the status quo.
Are we expecting the
UNHRC to act differently now that Israel’s greatest ally has departed
the scene? Probably not. Agenda Item 7 has become another fixture that
serves several interests which are, for the major part, incompatible
with Palestinian aspirations. Why are Palestinians expected to rejoice,
or feel they have achieved a milestone, simply because there is a
specific and permanent discussion at the UNHRC about Israel’s ongoing
violations?
If discussions took place alongside political action
to support Palestine, Agenda Item 7 would not have been disfigured into
a farce to be manipulated at random. Putting Israel as a permanent
agenda item is not enough and leaves room for exploitation of purpose.
Indeed, less fanfare about discussing Israel permanently and building an
international collective effort to combat the hypocritical stances taken
by the UN and its organisations with regard to colonialism would serve a
better purpose. Yet the question begets itself. Where would the UN be
without the collateral damage caused by colonialism?
Likewise,
Agenda Item 7 serves other purposes than just highlighting Israel’s
violations against Palestinians. Its impact is lost amid inaction for
Palestine. If one removes its permanence, there is little that
distinguishes the nature of Israeli criticism at the UNHRC from
criticism elsewhere. The formula employed by the international community
is consistent and ultimately leads back to the two-state compromise.
External decisions are being taken for Palestinians while the only
options are between limited and forced acceptance.
If Agenda item
7 was as prestigious as it is made out to be, it would have operated
from a framework that is independent of the obsolete requirements
imposed upon Palestinians to appease Israel. Any genuine voices within
the international community face perpetual censorship from the dynamics
of a system that corrupts any initiative that might have contributed
towards change.
With the US out of the UNHRC arena, business will
continue as usual. But unless international institutions are
scrutinized, the latest ploy will continue to be analysed as a victory
for Israel, while forgetting that the international system is geared
towards constructing Palestine’s defeat, regardless of membership in the
UNHRC, or the existence of Agenda Item 7. For discussion of Israel’s
violations to exist as an aftermath, it is also pertinent to note that
colonial violence will continue to take precedence over human rights.
- Ramona Wadi is an independent researcher, freelance
journalist, book reviewer and blogger. Her writing covers a range of
themes in relation to Palestine, Chile and Latin America. Her article
appeared in MEMO.
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