UN assembly to vote on Gaza report…with wide support
Dozens of nations at the UN have backed a non-binding resolution calling for independent inquiries by "Israel" and the Palestinians into war crimes in Gaza.
The UN General Assembly is set to vote on a resolution requiring "Israel" to conduct an investigation into charges of war crimes committed during its January offensive on Gaza.
The assembly's 192 member nations will decide on the non-binding resolution on Thursday at the end of a two-day debate on a report by an independent UN fact-finding committee headed by former war crimes prosecutor Richard Goldstone.
The derogatory report mainly highlighted "Israeli" violation of international laws during the deadly attacks by "Israeli" fighter jets and ground troops during the Gaza onslaught that left more than 1,400 Palestinians, mostly women and children, killed.
The UN committee charged the "Israeli" army with intentional targeting of places known to hold civilians and using Palestinians as human shields among other war crimes.
The report exasperated Tel Aviv officials who vowed to go to any length to prevent what could face the "Israeli" initiators of the war with prosecution in The Hague-based International Criminal Court.
The United States has also voiced it full support for the "Israeli" regime and promised to stay by Tel Aviv's side in its fight against the UN report.
But the coalition is likely to be outshone by a vast majority of nations who seem determined to put an end to what they call "Israel's" impunity.
The General Assembly's draft resolution introduced by Arab states and the Non-Aligned Movement, which represents 118 nations, wants the UN chief to send the findings from the Goldstone report to the Security Council if independent investigations of the alleged war crimes are not set up within three months.
The report, backed by the United Nations Human Rights Council, looked into 36 incidents during "Israel's" war on Gaza, saying it could not find any military targets to justify attacks by "Israeli" forces.
Tel Aviv has repeatedly threatened to discard long-stalled peace negotiations with Palestinians if the report finds its way to the UN Security Council.
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