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UN
Expresses Deep Concern over Deteriorating Situation
November 27, 2000
United Nations High
Commissioner for Human Rights Mary Robinson said today every effort
should be made to explore the feasibility of establishing an
international monitoring presence in the occupied Palestinian
territories.
Speaking in Geneva following the presentation of a report on her recent
visit to the region, Mrs. Robinson said she was deeply concerned about
the serious deterioration of the situation in the occupied territories
and Israel and at the terrible cost it has taken in terms of human
lives.
"It is vital that both parties renew efforts to halt the current
dangerous escalation", said the High Commissioner. "The only
path to lasting peace and stability is through peaceful negotiation,
which calls for courage and responsibility on the part of the leadership
of both sides".
Mrs. Robinson, who visited the occupied territories, Israel, Egypt and
Jordan between 8 and 16 November, said she had heard urgent pleas for
international protection at each of her meetings in the occupied
territories. She pointed out that the most persistent allegation brought
to her attention was that Israeli security forces have engaged in
excessive force, disproportionate to the threat faced by their soldiers.
In her report, submitted today to the United Nations Commission on Human
Rights and the General Assembly, Mrs. Robinson recommends that the
security forces of both sides should act in full conformity with the
Code of Conduct for Law Enforcement Officials and the Basic Principles
on the Use of Force and Firearms by Law Enforcement Officials.
"Whenever force is used, the principle of proportionality has to be
applied, and all necessary measures have to be taken to avoid loss of
life or injury to civilians or damage to civilian property", she
writes.
Among the other recommendations in the report, the High Commissioner
urges that:
- the construction of
new settlements should cease and that those located in the midst of
heavily populated Palestinian areas should be removed;
- all cases of use of lethal force on both sides should be
investigated and subjected to the processes of justice in order to
avoid impunity;
- all holy sites and their access by all faiths should be respected,
and
- the Israeli authorities should facilitate access and ensure
freedom of movement of international and national staff of UN
agencies to those in need of assistance.
In her conclusions, the High
Commissioner also recalls that the General Assembly and the Commission
on Human Rights have repeatedly reaffirmed the de jure applicability
to the occupied Palestinian Territories of the 1949 Fourth Geneva
Convention relative to the Protection of Civilians in Time of War. She
said it would be appropriate for the High Contracting Parties to assume
their responsibility under the Convention.
As for the future of the region, Mrs. Robinson said a peaceful and
stable coexistence could only be achieved on the basis of a framework
conforming to the requirements of international human rights and
humanitarian law. However, she added, "perhaps the strongest and
most troubling impression I took away from the visit to Israel and the
occupied Palestinian territories was that of two peoples, linked by
history and geography but currently separated by a wide and growing gap
in their perception of each other. The recent violence has resulted in a
hardening of positions, with little willingness on either side to
understand or accept the narrative of the other. I stand ready to
facilitate dialogue between the human rights bodies of Israel and the
Palestinian Authority, Palestinian and Israeli non-governmental
organizations, and other civil society representatives in order to
enhance mutual understanding".
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