GENEVA: Israel snubbed a United Nations Human Rights Council session on Monday debating a scathing report detailing likely war crimes committed during last year’s Gaza war, with Israel’s ambassador slamming the body as “morally flawed”.

“I am out here and not in there because the Human Rights Council has abandoned fairness, has become morally flawed and has entirely politicised its concern for universal human rights,” Israel’s representative to the council Eviatar Manor told reporters outside the council chambers at the UN in Geneva.

Earlier, Mary McGowan Davis, head of the UN Commission of Inquiry on the 2014 Gaza, had presented the commission’s report, published last week, to the council. She decried “serious violations of international humanitarian law and international human rights law by Israel and Palestinian armed groups, in some cases amounting to war crimes”.

More than 2,140 Palestinians, most of them civilians, and 73 people on the Israeli side, mostly soldiers, were killed during the 51-day conflict.

The commission report especially decried the “huge firepower” Israel had used in Gaza, particularly against residential buildings and UN schools, and questioned whether a policy of civilian attacks had been “approved at least tacitly by decision-makers at the highest levels of the government of Israel”.

The Palestinian representative to the council, Ambassador Ibrahim Khraishi, hailed the report, but lamented that it had sought a false balance.

“The language of the report did not take into consideration that the conflict is unbalanced... The losses are not equatable,” he told the council. Manor meanwhile blasted the rights council that created the commission as inherently biased against the Jewish state.

“This is not the Human Rights Council. It is the Palestinian Human Rights Council,” he said, pointing out that it has adopted more resolutions against Israel than the rest of the world’s country’s combined.

Published in Dawn, June 30th, 2015

On a mobile phone? Get the Dawn Mobile App: Apple Store | Google Play

Opinion

Editorial

Removing subsidies
Updated 09 May, 2026

Removing subsidies

The government no longer has the budgetary space to continue carrying hundreds of billions of rupees in untargeted subsidies while the power sector itself remains trapped in circular debt, inefficiencies, theft and under-recovery.
Scarred at home
09 May, 2026

Scarred at home

WHEN homes turn violent towards children, the psychosocial damage is lifelong. In Pakistan, parental violence is...
Zionist zealotry
09 May, 2026

Zionist zealotry

BOTH the Israeli military and far-right citizens of the Zionist state have been involved in appalling hate crimes...
Shifting climate tone
Updated 08 May, 2026

Shifting climate tone

Our financial system is geared towards short-term, risk-averse lending, while climate adaptation and green infrastructure require patient, long-term capital.
Honour and impunity
08 May, 2026

Honour and impunity

THE Sindh Assembly’s discussion on karo-kari this week reminds us of the enduring nature of ‘honour’ killings...
No real change
08 May, 2026

No real change

THE Indian sports ministry’s move to allow Pakistani players and teams to participate in multilateral events ...