Israel is a rogue nation. It should be removed from the United Nations

By Mehdi Hasan, Tue 15 Oct 2024 15.53.
Source: The Guardian

One rogue nation cannot declare war on the UN itself and continue to get away with it.

Over the past year, Israel has launched attacks on multiple countries and occupied territories: the Gaza Strip, the West Bank, Lebanon, Syria, Yemen and Iran.

Yet countries and territories aside, Israel has also targeted one specific organization with a series of unprecedented rhetorical and violent attacks.

Yes, the United Nations. We have all witnessed Israel, effectively, declare war on the UN.

Consider the record of recent weeks and months:

  • Israel’s prime minister, while standing on stage at the UN general assembly, denounced the body as “contemptible”, a “house of darkness” and a “swamp of antisemitic bile”.
  • Israel’s outgoing ambassador to the UN shredded a copy of the UN charter with a miniature paper shredder while also standing at the podium of the general assembly, and later said the UN headquarters in New York “should be closed and wiped off the face of the Earth”.
  • Israel’s foreign minister falsely accusedthe UN secretary general of not having condemned Iran’s attacks on Israel, declared him “persona non grata in Israel” and announced that he had “banned him from entering the country”.
  • The Israeli government actively obstructed a UN-mandated commission of inquiry trying to collect evidence on the 7 October attacks.
  • Israel’s parliament is in the process of designating a longstanding UN agency, Unrwa, as a “terrorist organization”.
  • The Israeli military has bombed UN schoolswarehouses and refugee campsin Gaza for 12 consecutive months, and killed a record 228 UN employees in the process. “By far the highest number of our personnel killed in a single conflict or natural disaster since the creation of the United Nations,” to quote the UN secretary general.
  • The Israeli military is now also attackingUN peacekeepers in southern Lebanon. According to the UN, “five UN ‘Blue Helmets’ serving with UNIFIL in Lebanon have been injured as Israeli forces inflicted damage on UN positions close to the ‘Blue Line’.”

How is any of this OK? Acceptable? Legal?

Perhaps the biggest question of all: how is Israel still allowed to remain a member of the UN? Why has it not yet been expelled from an organization that it is relentlessly and shamelessly attacking and undermining? Sure, there are other human rights abusers that remain card-carrying members of the UN – Syria, Russia and North Korea, to name but a few – but none of them have killed UN employees en masse; none of them have sent tanks to invade a UN base; none of them have “refused to comply with more than two dozen UNSC resolutions”. It has been more than 60 years since any country in the world dared make the UN secretary general himself “persona non grata”.

To be clear: it’s not as if there isn’t a mechanism for expelling a UN member state. Article 6 of the UN charter says:

“A Member of the United Nations which has persistently violated the Principles contained in the present Charter may be expelled from the Organization by the General Assembly upon the recommendation of the Security Council.”

Now some might point out that no member state has ever been expelled from the UN under Article 6. Plus, the United States, which has vetoed over 50 UN security council resolutions critical of Israel since the early 1970s, would never allow such a “recommendation of the Security Council” to be made.

It’s a valid objection. History, however, teaches us that there are workarounds to security council vetoes. As the international law professor and former US state department adviser Thomas Grant pointed out in October 2022, while making his own case for expelling Russia from the United Nations in the wake of Vladimir Putin’s illegal invasion of Ukraine, “UN members on two occasions in the past have judged a particular Member delegation no longer fit to sit at the organization’s table. On both occasions, the UN improvised a solution.”

In 1971, socialist and non-aligned nations in the Global South voted in the UN general assembly to recognized the People’s Republic of China as “the only legitimate representative of China to the United Nations” and thereby replaced the representatives from the Republic of China (Taiwan), which had been a founding member of the UN. ROC was out, PRC was in – and it was the general assembly, not the security council, that decided it.

Three years later, relying again not on the UN charter but its own “rules of procedure” as the human rights lawyer and former UN official Saul Takahisi has noted, the UN general assembly “voted to refuse to recognize the credentials of the South African delegation” and “barred South Africa from participation in the Unga” until 1994.

Oh, and the two main reasons cited by the UN general assembly for suspending South Africa’s membership? Its practice of apartheid against the indigenous Black population and its illegal occupation of neighboring Namibia. Sound familiar?

Crucially, as Thomas Grant has written, “the move against South Africa followed no precise procedural pathway in the UN charter or existing UN practice” and the UN showed how “an improvisatory ethos prevails, when the member states judge a matter important enough that they must act.”

So what is more “important” for the UN member states right now than attacks on the UN itself by a single member state? On the UN’s authority, personnel, headquarters and charter? On Saturday, 40 countries issued a joint statement condemningIsrael’s brazen and ongoing assault on UN peacekeepers in Lebanon but talk is cheap. UN member states need to act.

The Israeli government may want to pretend that the United Nations, and the general assembly in particular, is irrelevant, impotent and filled with antisemitic bias, yet Israel only exists today because of a UN general assembly resolution. The country’s own 1948 Declaration of Independencemakes seven different references to the United Nations, all of them super-positive and ever-so-grateful.

So evicting Israel from the UN, or at least suspending its participation in the general assembly as a first step, would send a powerful message – both to the people of Israel and to the rest of the world.

That the authority of the United Nations still matters. That the lives of UN staff and peacekeepers also matter. And that one rogue nation cannot declare war on the UN itself and continue to get away with it.

  • Mehdi Hasan is the CEO and editor-in-chief of the new media compay Zeteo
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Letter from Parliament: Tony Lloyd MP

22 December 2023

Tony Lloyd MP

Tony Lloyd MP

Israel & Gaza

Hopes of a long-term ceasefire in Gaza are on hold again and the Israeli murderous campaign against civilians has re-started. Sadly we don’t even hear our own government repeating the Americans’ demand for less killings. But the world should be demanding a ceasefire. I raised this with Ministers in the House of Commons, which you can watch here.

The current conflict in Gaza shows the dire humanitarian situation with approximately 19,000 Palestinians killed and a lack of access to water, food, medicine and humanitarian aid. The big concern now is that killing diseases, like influenza and cholera, may sweep the Palestinian camps. This amounts to collective punishment of Palestinians and goes against the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and international law. The kidnappings of Israeli men, women and children and their brutal treatment by Hamas is still unforgiveable but not a reason for the way in which Gazans are being treated and we must call for the return of all hostages. Gaza is at breaking point and a permanent ceasefire is urgently needed. We are only delaying the inevitable and costing lives in the meantime.

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Innocence Erased: The Tragedy of Stolen Lands

Palestinians carry their possessions on their heads as they flee from a village in Galilee about five months after the creation of the state of Israel in 1948 File: Reuters

Background 
The Israeli-Palestinian conflict has claimed tens of thousands of lives and displaced many millions of palestinians and has its roots in a colonial act carried out more than a century ago.

Land stolen, a ruthless decree,
Palestinian soil, soaked in misery.
Occupation’s grip, a sorrowful brand,
Apartheid whispers, scars on the land.

Ethnic cleansing, a haunting past,
Israel claims, forcefully cast.
Human rights denied, a brutal truth,
Amnesty’s report, a damning reproof.

Checkpoints loom, silent hells,
Cities divided, heart-wrenching spells.
Arrests and detentions, fear’s cruel gear,
Injustice thrives, the tragedy severe.

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Gaza put humanity on trial in 2024 – and we’ve got blood on our hands

In 2024, humanity has been stained by genocide in Gaza, war, and the climate crisis. And while signs of hope persist, the future is bleak, says Owen Jones.

Owen Jones, 31 Dec, 2024

Source

The West’s moral claims — used to justify its global hegemony — were buried in the rubble of Gaza, alongside countless, and uncounted, thousands of Palestinians, writes Owen Jones [photo credit: Getty Images]

For those who fear that our species is taking a gruesome wrong turn, 2024 was a year which offered no shortage of evidence.

Israel’s genocide against the Palestinian people of Gaza, of course, is the most hideous case study.

Much of the world never took seriously the so-called ‘rules-based order’, noting how the world is rigged in favour of the US and former European colonisers, with the recent examples of the Iraq war or indeed Israel before October 7 underlining how the West picks and chooses international law as it deems convenient.

But witnessing the world’s first live-streamed genocide, armed and facilitated by the US and its allies, shocked even those who had few existing illusions.

The West’s moral claims — used to justify its global hegemony — were buried in the rubble of Gaza, alongside countless, and uncounted, thousands of Palestinians.

2024 left those who facilitated — or denied — one of the worst crimes of our age with nowhere to hide.

In January, South Africa’s case alleging genocide was heard at the International Court of Justice: presenting the devastating evidence, Irish lawyer Blinne Ni Gralaigh declared this was “the first genocide in history where its victims are broadcasting their own destruction in real-time in the desperate, so far vain hope that the world might do something.”

The ICJ issued provisional ordersdemanding Israel refrain from acts prohibited under the Genocide Convention, not least ensuring the provision of humanitarian aid, which were grievously flouted.

In May, the International Criminal Court’s chief prosecutor requested arrest warrants for Benjamin Netanyahu and his then-defence minister Yoav Gallant for war crimes and crimes against humanity, and in November, they were finally issued.

By the end of the year, a consensus had been forged that Israel was committing genocide in Gaza, from academics specialising in genocide such as Professor Omer Bartov to Amnesty International in a report issued in December.

Israel committed some of the most depraved atrocities imaginable on a daily basis in a tiny strip of land already largely reduced to apocalyptic ruin when the year began.

Most infrastructure was left severely damaged or destroyed. Almost every school was attacked, some repeatedly, like the al-Tabin school in August in which over 100 Palestinians were killed. Gaza’s hospitals were violently dismantled, with the flagship Al-Shifa hospital left in ruins in April.

Children were routinely butchered by the Israeli army, like 5-year-old Hind Rajab, slaughtered in her car alongside her relatives, including her four cousins, after phoning the Red Crescent begging for help: the paramedics sent to save her were slaughtered by the Israeli military, too.

The Israeli military systematically prevented aid from getting in, with two US government agencies concluding by April that this was deliberate. Joe Biden declared an Israeli assault on Rafah was a red line Israel must not cross: after it was subjected to military assault, no action was taken.

Famine spread throughout Gaza. Babies were freezing to death by the end of the year. The official death toll — more than 45,000 — was widely accepted as a drastic undercount, with thousands missing under rubble and deaths from indirect causes not included, and the counting system imploding along with Gaza’s healthcare system. Estimates of the real death toll varied: three public health experts estimated 186,000 in the Lancet medical journal in July.

Despite most of the world repulsed by this genocidal mayhem in Gaza, Israel retained the support of the world’s only superpower, ensuring it enjoyed impunity.

Pogroms escalated in the West Bank, while Israel’s butchery extended to Lebanon, and it invaded Syria. The Israeli leadership became consumed with triumphalism, with Hamas leaders killed, not least Yahya Sinwar in October, and Hezbollah left decimated by exploding pagers in September and the assassination of Hassan Nasrallah.

The West’s facilitation of Israel’s barbarism underlined its moral collapse, but there were other symptoms, not least a growing right-wing authoritarian wave. Donald Trump’s election underlined that his 2016 victory was not an aberration, but an epochal shift. His victorious incarnation was more extreme and vengeful, leaving question marks over US democracy.

From Austria — where the far-right Freedom Party topped the polls — to the United Kingdom — where right-wing populist Nigel Farage’s Reform surged — the trend is clear. The fragility of ‘centrism’was underlined by the disintegration of Emmanuel Macron in France, the collapse of Germany’s government, and elections in Britain.

There, the ruling Conservatives imploded amidst scandal, collapsing public services and plummeting living standards, but Keir Starmer’s Labour party secured little more than a third of the vote. By the end of the year, an absence of vision for a crisis-ridden country left the Labour leader with the worst ratings of any prime minister recorded at this point into their rule.

There were moments of hope: the lightning removal of Bashar al-Assad’s dictatorship in Syria led to jubilation there, even though the nation’s future is far from certain or stable.

India’s Hindu nationalist government suffered a setback in elections, weakening its rule. But the overall picture was bleak. The war in Ukraine remained a hideous meat grinder, with a Russian victory appearing ever likelier. And climate scientists repeatedly revealed data underlining the existential menace facing humanity, with one report in October warning “We are on the brink of an irreversible climate disaster.” 

War, genocide, a right-wing surge and looming existential crisis: the vital signs of humanity are not good. But at the same time, growing numbers have become increasingly stripped of their illusions, a precondition for change.

Gaza has been the greatest catalyst, leaving growing numbers to ask how their leaders could facilitate such a grotesque crime, and mainstream media outlets’ failure to accurately report on such an abomination exposed.

In Britain’s elections, the surge of the Green Party and anti-genocide independent candidates spoke to this politicisation. Whether enough will develop to offer a counterweight to the terrifying direction of travel is another question. There are no guarantees, and 2025 will reveal whether there are new signs of hope — or whether humanity’s descent into the abyss remains the norm.

Owen Jones is a British journalist, columnist, and political activist. He is the author of Chavs: The Demonisation of the Working Class and The Establishment – And How They Get Away With It

Follow him on X: @OwenJones84

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Child Killers

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“Visit Historic Palestine” by Banksy

Background

Banksy opens the Walled Off Hotel in 2017 in Bethlehem, 100 years after the British took control of Palestine. The name is a nod to the Waldorf Luxury hotels and to the separation wall that can be seen from every room in the hotel. Banksy said in a statement “It has the worst view of any hotel in the world”

The hotel has 10 rooms, all decorated with Banksy artworks and art from Palestinian artists. The hotel has his own gift shop offering Banksy merchandise and all profits go into the local economy.

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Petition: Urgent International Military Protection for Palestinians

Sign this petition

By Ousman N., 20/09/2024

Leaders of Governments Worldwide

To: Leaders of Governments Worldwide

We, the undersigned, call upon the international community to take immediate and decisive action to halt the ongoing genocide of the Palestinian people.

Since October 2023 over 40,000 Palestinians have been killed by the Israeli Occupation Force, including over 17,000 children and over 100,000 wounded, with many in critical condition. While the vast majority of violence has taken place in Gaza,widespread atrocities are now escalating against Palestinians in the unlawfully occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem.

The world cannot remain silent in the face of such relentless attacks ,displacement and systematic violence perpetrated by Israel against the Palestinian people.

These violations of international law, human rights, and humanitarian norms by Israel in Gaza, East Jerusalem, and the West Bank neccesitate urgent military protection for Palestinian civilians to safeguard against further harm.

We demand:

  • The immediate establishment of aninternational military force to protect Palestinian civilians.
  • Immediate cessation of all military actions by Israel against the civilian populations of Gaza, East Jerusalem and the West Bank.
  • Enforcement of United Nations resolutions and international legal frameworks that recognize the rights of the Palestinian people to peace, security, and self-determination.
  • Accountability for those responsible for war crimes and violations of human rights.

We call on governments worldwide tostand against these atrocities and fulfill their moral and legal obligations toprotect the Palestinian people 

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Palestine ❤️ Ireland!

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British Complicity in Gaza: Public Outrage vs. Government Support for Israeli Apartheid

By Phalapoem editor, 29/12/2024

The catastrophic humanitarian crisis made by Israel in Gaza has drawn starkly contrasting responses from the British public and the UK government. While widespread protests, petitions, and vocal outcries highlight a deep sense of solidarity with the Palestinian people among British citizens, the government’s unwavering support for Israel has raised serious ethical and political concerns.

The Public’s Growing Solidarity with Gaza

British public opinion has increasingly leaned towards a critical view of Israel’s genocide in Gaza. Massive protests in cities like London, Manchester, and Birmingham have seen hundreds of thousands taking to the streets, calling for an immediate ceasefire and an end to the siege of Gaza. These demonstrations, often led by grassroots organizations and human rights advocates, reflect a broad coalition of people—Muslims, Christians, Jews, and secular activists—united in their demand for justice and accountability.

Social media has amplified the public’s voice, with millions sharing images, videos, and personal stories from Israeli war on Gaza that underscore the ongoing  genocide. Public outrage has been fueled by reports of deliberate Israeli killing of tens of thousands of civilian, Israeli targeting of hospitals, schools, and refugee camps, and the Israeli calculated and deliberate plans of  starvation and dire humanitarian conditions resulting from the siege. A YouGov poll in late 2023 found that a significant majority of Britons supported an immediate ceasefire and wanted their government to take a more balanced and humane approach to the crisis.

The UK Government’s Controversial Stance

In stark contrast, the UK government has maintained steadfast support for Israel, framing its actions as a defense against terrorism. Sunak’s and Starmer’s administrations have resisted calls for a ceasefire, instead emphasizing Israel’s “right to self-defense.” This position, widely criticized as gainer international law, one-sided and dismissive of the catastrophic loss of innocent Palestinian lives, has alienated many Britons who see it as an endorsement of collective punishment and apartheid policies. 

Reasons Behind the UK Government’s Stance

1. Historical and Political Alliances: The UK has long-standing ties with Israel, shaped by shared geopolitical interests and historical alliances. These bonds have been reinforced through defense agreements, trade relations, and political cooperation, making it politically costly for the UK government to criticize Israeli policies openly.

2. Influence of Lobbying Groups: Pro-Israel lobbying organizations, such as the Conservative Friends of Israel, wield considerable influence in British politics. These groups play a pivotal role in shaping parliamentary discourse and framing the narrative around Israel as a key ally and a bulwark of democracy in the Middle East.

3. US Alignment: The UK often aligns its foreign policy with the United States, Israel’s staunchest ally regardless of the  grave concerns of ongoing breach by Israeli apartheid all aspect of Palestinian human rights. Washington’s  shameless   support for Israel places additional pressure on the UK government to maintain a similar stance, even in the face of domestic opposition which would question the credibility of so called democracy in these countries. 

4. Framing of Security: The government’s false narrative has leaned heavily on the framing of Palestinian resistance, a perspective that has overshadowed calls for addressing the root causes of the conflict, including decades of occupation, hundreds of massacres, ethnic cleansing, and apartheid policies. This false and dirty security-focused narrative serves to justify support for illegal Israeli occupation, despite the abhorrent and disproportionate and indiscriminate impact on Palestinian civilians who combine to suffer under Israeli racist rules.

5. Media Representation: Much of the mainstream British media and mainly BBC has echoed the government’s shameful narrative, emphasising unjustified Israel’s security concerns (as the case with all colonialist countries) while downplaying or misrepresenting the scale of suffering in Gaza and West Bank. This racist and biased coverage has provided the government with a degree of insulation from British public criticism, though alternative media like Al Jazeera and social platforms have increasingly countered this zionist narrative.

Public Backlash and Calls for Change

The disconnect between the UK government’s stance and the sentiments of its citizens has led to mounting calls for accountability. Prominent figures, human rights organizations, and members of Parliament have condemned the government’s position, accusing it of complicity in war crimes. The Labour Party, under Keir Starmer, has faced internal divisions, with many party members and supporters demanding a stronger stand against Israeli aggression.

This growing dissent has also led to a resurgence of interest in boycott, divestment, and sanctions (BDS) campaigns targeting companies and institutions complicit in Israeli apartheid. Grassroots activism, coupled with increasing international pressure, suggests that the British government’s position may become increasingly untenable if public outrage continues to grow.

The British public’s overwhelming solidarity with Palestinians highlights a deep humanitarian impulse that contrasts sharply with the government’s political calculus. As the genocide in Gaza unfolds, the UK government’s unwillingness to confront Israeli apartheid not only undermines its moral standing but also risks alienating an electorate that demands justice, accountability, and a commitment to human rights. The question remains: will public pressure be enough to shift the UK’s stance, or will political interests continue to outweigh the cries for justice?

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Shame on you!

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