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In the UN: Throw Israel out

NEW YORK — A UN commission formed to investigate alleged human rights abuses in Israel and the Palestinian Territories was under renewed scrutiny last week as two prominent American diplomats have accused one of its members of anti-Israel and anti-Semitic speech.

Miloon Kothari (Bertrand Guay/AFP via Getty Images)

In an interview with the Palestinian website Mondoweiss last week, Miloon Kothari questioned “why [Israel is] even a member of the UN,” and made a comment linking social media efforts to discredit the commission to “the Jewish lobby,” comments the diplomats said were anti-Israel and anti-Semitic.

Deborah Lipstadt, the State Dept.’s special envoy on anti-Semitism, and Michèle Taylor, the US ambassador to the UN Human Rights Council, condemned Kothari.

He sits on the council’s Commission of Inquiry on the Occupied Palestinian Territory, Including East Jerusalem, and in Israel.

“Outrageous that an [UN Human Rights Council] appointed human rights expert on Israel and the West Bank and Gaza repeated anti-Semitic tropes & questioned Israel’s legitimacy as a UN member,” Lipstadt tweeted July 28.

“We are outraged by recent anti-Semitic, anti-Israel comments made by a member of the Israel COI,” Taylor said the same day.

Taylor also took the opportunity to reiterate concerns the US and Israel have expressed over the three-member UN commission, which was formed in May, 2021, amid the deadly fighting in Israel and Gaza, to investigate human rights abuses in the region.

The commission has since broadened its inquiry to examine periods before and after the latest round of fighting.

“These unacceptable remarks sadly exacerbate our deep concerns about the open-ended nature & overly broad scope of the COI and the HRC’s disproportionate & biased treatment of Israel,” Taylor said.

Kothari said he questioned Israel’s UN status because “the Israeli government does not respect its own obligations as a UN member state. They, in fact, consistently, either directly or through the US, try to undermine UN mechanisms.”

In the same interview, Kothari said, “We are very disheartened by the social media that is controlled largely by — whether it is the Jewish lobby or specific NGOs, a lot of money is being thrown into trying to discredit us.”

Jewish organizations including the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations and B’nai Brith International called on the UN to disband its Israel commission.

The chair of the commission, Navi Pillay, defended the inquiry and Kothari’s remarks in a letter sent last week to the head of the UN Human Rights Council.

In the letter, Pillay said the commission “does not question the status or UN membership of either of the concerned states of its mandate,” and said that Kothari’s comments about social media were “deliberately misquoted to imply that ‘social media’ was controlled by the Jewish lobby.”

Instead, Pillay said, Kothari had been referring to concentrated efforts on social media to discredit the commission’s work.

The commission is about to embark on a US tour, where, Kothari said, they hope to meet with universities and members of Congress.

Israel has not participated in the commission’s inquiry, calling it “biased and one-sided,” and has prevented commissioners from interviewing Israeli investigators.

A spokesperson for Israeli Prime Minister Yair Lapid called Kothari’s comments “anti-Semitic” and “racist.”

In a June report, the commission said Israel was pursuing “complete control” over the occupied territories and said “ending the occupation alone will not be sufficient” to address injustices in the region.




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