A message for U.N.

June 29, 2016 Agencies
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Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu issued a public statement before beginning his meeting in Jerusalem with United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon.

UN Sec Gen Ban Ki-moon And Benjamin Netanyahu  Photo: Haim Zach/GPO

UN Sec Gen Ban Ki-moon And Benjamin Netanyahu Photo: Haim Zach/GPO

During the address, the prime minister called on the Secretary General to help return home citizens and the remains of soldiers held by Hamas in Gaza.

Netanyahu told Ban Ki-moon: “The UN has a noble mandate to protect peace around the world and bring nations and bring nations closer together.

During his years of service the Secretary General has travelled the globe many times in service of these ideals, ideals which Israel shares. I remember well when you came in Israel in 2013 you said that Israel and the Israeli people face some bias.

That’s an understatement. But you also said that Israel must be treated equally at the UN. I appreciate your candor and this clear moral stance. It was exemplified in your efforts to secure the final Palmer report which was very important for Israel, and Mr. Secretary, I appreciate your personal efforts in that particular instance.

Regrettably, the goal of treating Israel fairly remains unfulfilled across a wide spectrum of UN activities and UN forums. Your visit here comes as the UN Human Rights Council is meeting. As it always does, the Council will condemn Israel, a country that does more to promote and protect human rights and liberal values than any other in the blood soaked Middle East.

Our progressive democracy has faced more country-specific resolutions, more country-specific condemnations at the UN Human Rights Council than all the other countries combined. And I believe this is a profound betrayal of the United Nations noble mandate.

So today I want to echo your words from 2013, Israel still faces bias at the UN.I know that your desire for all countries to be treated fairly and equally remains true today. I urge you to dedicate your last six months as the Secretary General of the United Nations in trying to right this wrong. And when I say that, it’s not just for Israel’s sake. It’s for the credibility of the UN.

Mr. Secretary, many many years ago when I came to serve as Israel’s ambassador to the UN I gave a very brief speech, it was actually the shortest speech I gave, three minutes. And it was addressed to the efforts to expel Israel from the UN; it was an annual ritual at the time.  And I said that what was at stake was not the future of Israel but the future of the UN itself.

Because If you can unfairly and in a bias way single out a country and apply to it what I call the Ostracon rule which is just decide to kick them out, just decide to brand them as criminal or whatever, you can apply that same principle to any other country and this served as the downfall of the Athenian assembly, the first such body on which all of our parliaments and the UN itself is modeled after. And I believe that this Ostracon problem, the singling out of Israel and the unfair treatment that it receives is a palpable threat to the future of the UN and not just for the interests of our country.

I want to thank you Mr. Secretary for agreeing to meet with the Goldin, Shaul and Mangisto families. Hamas is cruelly and illegally holding the remains of our soldiers and holding our citizens. I ask you to use your standing to help return home these soldiers and these citizens. It’s a humanitarian position and elementary humanitarian requirement that Hamas and its criminal activities is of course throwing into the winds.

Hamas is a terrorist organisation. Hamas has genocidal aims. It doesn’t merely practice terrorism. It says openly that its goal is to wipe away from the face of the earth a member state of the United Nations.

I hope the UN will highlight Hamas’s crimes and understand that our security measures are aimed only at keeping our citizens safe from this threat and we use judicious force in this regards. I don’t know what any other country, faced with thousands of rockets and missiles aimed at our citizens, at our children, would do differently. Many have done it differently and they have not used the restraint and the responsibility that Israel uses.

I know you are aware of all this, we’ve spoken about it many, many times. We’ve had many meetings and many productive meetings and once again I want to thank you for your many years of dedicated service to diplomacy and to the advancement of noble ideals, however distant they are today. Again, I want to thank you and I want to welcome you to Jerusalem.”

Comments

2 Responses to “A message for U.N.”
  1. Leon Poddebsky says:

    Any one who advocates the lifting of Israel’s maritime blockade of Gaza clearly wants to enable Hamas to intensify its war against Jews.
    The people of Gaza receive non-military supplies via Israel by land.
    Ban Ki Moon is not a particularly smart man, but even the corrupt UN, which he heads, has declared Israel’s blockade to be perfectly legal.
    Thus those who oppose the blockade are motivated by sheer malice towards Israel and thus to the Jewish People.
    That applies equally to Australian politicians.

  2. Ron Jontof-Hutter says:

    Not only Hamas, but UNRWA encourages the 5 million “refugees” to maintain resilience and hope to return to Palestine. Nakba Day is “essential” to keep the flame of hope alive, according to UNRWA.
    UNRWA’s goal is not that different to Hamas. They just do it in the more PC manner.

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