U.S. Blocks UN Resolution Condemning Israel Over Violent Riots On Gaza Border

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AFP

TEL AVIV – The U.S. on Saturday blocked the UN Security Council from issuing a resolution expressing “grave concern” over Israel’s handling of Hamas-planned riots along the border with Gaza and calling for an “independent and transparent investigation” into the violence.

The draft statement, presented by Kuwait, expressed “the right to peaceful protest” and the council’s “sorrow at the loss of innocent Palestinian lives.”

It also called “for respect for international human rights law and international humanitarian law, including protection of civilians,” according to a copy of the draft seen by AFP.

Both Israel and the Palestinians were called upon to “exercise restraint and prevent a further escalation,” the draft said.

It also called on the sides to work towards peace based on the two-state solution.

The Palestinian Authority on Saturday charged the U.S. and Britain with preventing Arab efforts to issue a Security Council resolution condemning Israel for the 16 Palestinians killed during the clashes.

Their refusal meant the U.S. and Britain were “accomplices in the horrific massacre committed by the Israeli occupation army against our defenseless people,” spokesperson for the PA Yusef al Mahmoud  said.

He added that Washington and London showed “bias in favor of oppression and suppression.” He also claimed that the protests were “peaceful marches and demonstrations” commemorating Land Day.

Israel was “directly responsible for this dreadful massacre, which resulted in 16 martyrs and hundreds of wounded.”

Another spokesman for PA President Mahmoud Abbas, Nabil Abu Rudeineh, said the U.S. was “providing a cover for Israel to continue its aggression against the Palestinian people.”

The U.S. and its envoy Nikki Haley, he said, “encourages Israel to defy UN resolutions aimed at ending its occupation.”

Hamas said the U.S. “encouraged Israel to commit more violence and terrorism against Palestinian civilians.”

The Security Council summoned a closed meeting on Friday night to discuss the situation, ignoring a request from the US and Israel to postpone the meeting until Saturday because of Passover.

The following day UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres called for “those concerned to refrain from any act that could lead to further casualties.” He also said there should be an independent and transparent investigation into the deaths and injuries during Friday’s clashes.

Defense Minister Avigdor Liberman dismissed the idea of cooperation in any investigation, saying the calls for a probe were “hypocritical.”

“There will be no commission of inquiry,” he told Israel’s army radio. “There will be no such thing here. We shall not cooperate with any commission of inquiry.”

He added that the protests were not a “Woodstock festival.”

At least 10 of the 16 Palestinians killed were identified as members of terror groups, the IDF said Saturday.

The army published a list of the terrorists along with their positions in various terror groups – with eight of them coming from Hamas. The riots saw rocks and Molotov cocktails hurled at Israeli soldiers along the border from a crowd of some 30,000 Gazans attempting to storm the fence. There was an instance of live fire as one rioter shot at IDF troops.

The “March of the Return” was initially billed as a “non-violent” protest that organizers promised would take place a half-mile away from the border fence, with no attempts to breach it.

The IDF responded mainly with tear gas and rubber bullets, and only rioters who explicitly used violence against troops or who were seen damaging or breaching the security fence were targeted with live fire, the army stated.

Some of the terrorists who were killed were said to have attempted to place bombs along the security fence.

Friday’s “day of rage” coincided with both Passover eve and Palestinian Land Day, which marks events in 1976 that reflect the Palestinians’ struggle to own the land. The protest will be ongoing until May 15’s Nakba Day – the day of “catastrophe” that marks the establishment of the State of Israel.

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