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Number 3396 - Mon, May 11, 2009 - Ordibehesht 21 1388-Jamdi Al-Avval 16 1430

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Ban Israel’s New Ally
147561.jpg
UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon (R) shakes hands with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Beit-ul-Moqaddas. (File Photo)
By Jean Shaoul

A United Nations inquiry concluded that Israel’s military forces carried out direct and intentional strikes on its premises during the assault on Gaza earlier this year. Israel was therefore responsible for the deaths and injuries of UN personnel and civilians, as well as extensive damage to its property.
The inquiry, led by Ian Martin, a former secretary general of Amnesty International, found that the Israel Defense Force (IDF) was “involved in varying degrees of negligence or recklessness with regard to United Nations premises and to the safety of United Nations staff and other civilians within those premises, with consequent deaths, injuries, and extensive physical damage and loss of property.“
This included:
¥ The deaths of three young men killed by a single IDF missile strike at the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) Asma School in Gaza City.
¥ The firing of heavy mortar rounds into the UNRWA Jabalia School, injuring seven people sheltering in the school, killing up to 40 people in the immediate vicinity and injuring a further 50.
¥ Aerial bombing of the UNRWA Bureij health center on the same day, causing the death of a patient, serious injuries to two other patients and injuries to nine of the health center’s employees.
¥ Small arms firing on a UNRWA convoy in Ezbet Abed Rabou, leading to a temporary suspension of its transport, and disruption of its humanitarian operations.
¥ Artillery firing by the IDF into the UNRWA field office compound in Gaza city, combined with the use of white phosphorous, causing injuries and considerable damage to it and the surrounding buildings, and leading to the disruption of the UN’s humanitarian operations in Gaza.
¥ Artillery firing by the IDF into the UNRWA Beit Lahia School, again with the use of white phosphorous, causing the deaths of two children and the injuries to 13 others.
¥ Aerial bombing by the IDF of the Unesco compound, causing damage to UN buildings and vehicles.
The report accused Israeli forces of repeatedly breaching the principle that “UN personnel and all civilians within UN premises, as well as civilians in the immediate vicinity of those premises, are to be protected in accordance with the rules and principles of international humanitarian law.“
It found no evidence that Hamas militants had used UN property to attack Israel or the IDF and demanded that the UN urge Israel to retract its allegations that Palestinians had fired from two UN run buildings.

Visible Subservience
Despite the gravity of these findings, UN Secretary General Ban Ki Moon bowed to pressure from the United States and Israel, and moved swiftly to try and draw a line under the whole affair.
He rejectedÑwithout any explanationÑthe inquiry’s key recommendation that there should be a broader investigation into Israel’s conduct during the assault on Gaza and allegations of violations of international humanitarian law, including its use of white phosphorous. Instead, he would seek $10.4 million compensation from Israel for damage to UN property.
Ban’s response is symptomatic of the UN’s subservience to the imperialist powers in general and the US in particular, and thus to Israel, Washington’s client state and policeman in the Middle East.

Set up by the victors after World War II to replace the defunct League of Nations, the UN gave the power of veto to the five permanent members of the Security Council--US, Britain, France, Russia (the Soviet Union before 1991) and China (Taiwan before 1971). Since 1972, Washington has repeatedly used its veto to shield Israel from international criticism--and the threat of veto to close down discussion. About half of all its vetoes were used in the explicit defense of Israel.
Since the 1967 War, there have been six major resolutions (242, 338, 1397, 1515, 1850 and 1860) setting out the basis for the resolution of the long running conflict between Israel and the Palestinians. There have been countless resolutions condemning Israel’s actions against the Palestinians, demanding a halt to settlement activity in East Jerusalem and the occupied territories and its human rights violations. Each and every one of them has been a dead letter. There have never been any attempts to implement them, much less sanction Israel for non-compliance.
Occasionally, the UN has been forced to denounce Israel when either its actions were particularly egregious or its own interests were at stake. But the US always steps in to mitigate the impact.
In 1996, Washington tried to prevent the publication of a report that accused Israel of shelling a UN base at Qana in Lebanon, killing more than 100 civilians sheltering there. Shortly afterwards, the Clinton administration vetoed a second term for Boutros Boutros Ghali of Egypt, the then UN secretary general who had commissioned the report.
In 2002, Israeli opposition forced the then UN chief Kofi Annan, to abandon plans for a Security Council investigation into the IDF’s conduct in its assault on Jenin in March 2002.
This latest inquiry was forced upon Ban as international concern over Israel’s disproportionate and massive use of force against an essentially unarmed population mounted. Israel’s 22-day offensive against a largely defenseless population killed 1,400 people, the majority of them civilians, including 400 women and children, injured at least 5,000 people, and destroyed 21,000 homes. Israel suffered only 13 deaths, and several of these were by “friendly fire.“
Even then, Ban did everything he could to limit its remit and impact. He restricted its terms of reference to include only those attacks on UN property and personnel, since this undermined the authority of the UN itself. Even then he named just nine such incidents. Yet, as the inquiry notes, there were attacks on 36 of UNRWA schools, five of which were being used as temporary shelters at the time, seven of the 17 UNRWA health centers and two of the 11 UNRWA distribution centers, leading to deaths, injuries and extensive physical damage.

Report Not on UN Website
Neither the 184-page report, nor its 27-page summary is available on the UN website. The full report has not been published, while the summary was produced, not by the inquiry team but by the secretary general and given to journalists at his press conference.
The release of the inquiry’s findings was delayed for several days as Ban sought to water-down the report. He made every effort to accommodate Israel’s sensibilities. He thanked Israel in the most obsequious terms for its cooperation in the inquiry. He made a point--urged on him by Israeli ministers and officials--of speaking out against “continued and indiscriminate“ attacks by Hamas. But above all, he said what they wanted to hear: “I do not plan any further enquiries.“
This time, rather than wait for the US to veto any further action against Israel, Ban himself ruled out any further action that might lead to Israel being charged with war crimes.
Despite his best efforts to appease Israel, the government of Binyamin Netanyahu rejected the report’s findings. A spokesman for Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman of the far right Yisrael Beiteinu condemned the report as “unbalanced, biased and oblivious to the facts... It has preferred the claims of Hamas, a murderous terror organization, and by doing so has misled the world.“
Defense Secretary Ehud Barak of Labor repeated his absurd claim that Israel has “the most moral army in the world“ and laid full responsibility for casualties on Hamas.
Uruknet.info

IMF: Recession Threatens MEOE
The economies of Middle East oil exporters (MEOE) are likely to suffer from a possible prolonged global recession as demand for the region’s main export wanes, the International Monetary Fund said on Sunday.
Government expenditure, however, should mitigate the slowdown, the IMF said in a report
Arab states in the Persian Gulf and other oil exporters in the Middle East were previously seen as less vulnerable to financial turmoil as they were cushioned by accumulated windfall revenues from oil, AFP reported.
But with a continued oil price slide, those governments will be less inclined to maintain robust public spending, a key policy in mitigating the fallout from the economic downturn, the report said.
“A major risk to the economic outlook is the possibility of a prolonged recession. This would keep oil demand and prices low,“ it said.
“If MEOE (Middle East Oil Exporters) governments come to believe that oil prices will remain depressed for a prolonged period of time, they are likely to reduce their spending to maintain fiscal sustainability.“
Although oil has lost 100 dollars since peaking at a record 147 dollars a barrel in July, MEOE states have maintained a high level of capital spending, going from a massive collective surplus of 400 billion dollars last year to a projected deficit of 10 billion dollars in 2009, it said.
Economic growth rates in Middle East oil exporters are expected to decline significantly although public expenditure should moderate the slowdown in non-oil growth, the IMF said, projecting real gross domestic product for those countries to grow 2.3 percent this year compared to 5.4 percent in 2008.

Arab GDP to Slow
GDP growth rates in Arab countries in the Persian Gulf, the world’s top oil exporters, is expected to slow by more than one third to 1.3 percent this year, it added.
The economies of the region are, however, expected to fare better than the economies of the European Union and the United States, which are expected to shrink 4.0 percent and 2.8 percent respectively, the IMF said.
“The reason why despite this drop in oil prices, they continue to do reasonably well is because most of them are using the reserves they’ve accumulated during the boom years to continue to maintain the level of public spending,“ Masood Ahmed, director of the IMF’s Middle East and Central Asia Department, said at a panel discussion in Dubai. “This continued public spending during the downturn is protecting their own economies and is also having positive spillover effects on neighboring countries.“
Arab countries of the Persian Gulf, for example, have witnessed a six-year oil-fuelled economic boom, triggering a rally in the real estate and financial sectors.
With the onset of the global financial crisis, governments in that region have stepped up spending to ramp up their economies.
Saudi Arabia vowed in late 2008 to maintain spending on major projects despite the global financial crisis, forecasting spending at 475 billion riyals (127 billion dollars) for this year.
The UAE, the second-biggest Arab economy, expected total spending across all sectors fully controlled by the government to hit 135 billion dirhams (36.8 billion dollars) this year, an 11-percent increase over 2008.
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