Sunday, June 30, 2024
ADVT 
International

Both Israel and Hamas committed war crimes in Gaza: UN

Darpan News Desk IANS, 12 Jun, 2024 02:57 PM
  • Both Israel and Hamas committed war crimes in Gaza: UN

Geneva, June 12 (IANS/DPA) Both Israel and Hamas in the Gaza Strip have committed war crimes since the conflict there erupted on October 7 last year, according to a report by the UN Human Rights Council on Wednesday.

"It is imperative that all those who have committed crimes be held accountable," said the chair of the UN Human Rights Council Commission, Navi Pillay.

Pillay called on Israel to end its military action in the Gaza Strip. Israel's war crimes include starving the population as a means of warfare, deliberate attacks on civilians and civilian objects, sexual violence, torture and inhuman or cruel treatment, the UN Rights Council reported.

Pillay also called for an end to the attacks by Palestinian armed groups on Israel and the release of all hostages.

The commission lists attacks on civilians, torture, inhumane and cruel treatment and hostage-taking as war crimes committed by the military arm of the Islamist Hamas movement and six other armed groups.

"The taking of hostages constitutes a war crime," Pillay said.

During the Hamas attack on October 7 on Israel around 1,200 people were killed and another 250 taken as hostages. Around 120 are still in the hands of Hamas, but it is feared that many are already dead.

Israel responded to the attack with a massive military offensive on Gaza, in which more than 37,000 people have been killed and many more thousands injured, according to the Hamas authorities.

Around 85 per cent of the population in Gaza, 1.9 million people, has been forcibly displaced in the wake of the Israeli attacks, according to UN figures.

Israel had obstructed the work of the commission and had refused access to the occupied Palestinian territories, she said. According to the UN, this also includes the Gaza Strip.

The commission said it had analysed thousands of verified reports, forensic analyses, satellite images and medical reports, and spoken to victims and witnesses in Turkey and Egypt.

The report, presented in Geneva, is written by a commission of independent experts appointed by the UN Human Rights Council.

The UN Human Rights Office has repeatedly spoken of war crimes on both sides.

Israel rejected the report. According to a statement from the Israeli embassy in Geneva, the commission had taken a one-sided view of the situation. It ignored the fact that Hamas used people as shields and thus put civilians in the line of fire, it said.

MORE International ARTICLES

Quick-moving winter storm brings snow to Northeast, disrupting travel and schools

Quick-moving winter storm brings snow to Northeast, disrupting travel and schools
The storm quickly passed through the region, producing snowfall totals that were significant in some cities but much less than expected in others. New York City recorded just 3 inches (7.62 centimeters) of snow in Central Park, but areas of Pennsylvania and Connecticut were blanketed with 15 inches (38.10 centimeters) of fluffy snow, according to National Weather Service reports.

Quick-moving winter storm brings snow to Northeast, disrupting travel and schools

UK English test scandal: Indians, other foreign students renew bid to clear their names

UK English test scandal: Indians, other foreign students renew bid to clear their names
A group of international students, including many Indians, who had their visas revoked almost 10 years ago after accusations of cheating in English language tests in the UK, are making renewed efforts to clear their names. According to a report in The Guardian, fresh evidence has recently been presented in the court that questions the Home Office's cheating allegations against 35,000 international students.  

UK English test scandal: Indians, other foreign students renew bid to clear their names

India partners with Russia as it sees US as weak, doesn't trust it to lead: Haley

India partners with Russia as it sees US as weak, doesn't trust it to lead: Haley
Asserting that India has always played it smart, Indian-American Republican Presidential hopeful Nikki Haley said that the country partners with Russia as it doesn't trust the US to win and lead. In an interview with Charles Payne of Fox Business News, the 51-year-old former UN ambassador said that she has "dealt" with India and spoken to Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

India partners with Russia as it sees US as weak, doesn't trust it to lead: Haley

Violence mars Pakistan polls, five cops killed

Violence mars Pakistan polls, five cops killed
At least five policemen were killed and six others injured in militant attacks in Pakistan, where polling for general elections is underway on Thursday. At least four police officials were killed and six others injured in a bomb attack on a police vehicle in Graha Aslam polling station in Dera Ismail Khan district in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, The Express Tribune reported.

Violence mars Pakistan polls, five cops killed

Man accused of stabbing Indian to death appears in NZ court

Man accused of stabbing Indian to death appears in NZ court
Appearing before Justice of the Peace, Helen Meiklejohn, at Dunedin District Court on Monday, the man, who was arrested on the same day, was granted interim name suppression. He was ordered to appear at the High Court on February 27 in connection with the murder of Gurjit Singh, the New Zealand Herald newspaper reported.

Man accused of stabbing Indian to death appears in NZ court

Fresh trouble for Sunak as Minister accused of giving Infosys 'VIP access': Report

Fresh trouble for Sunak as Minister accused of giving Infosys 'VIP access': Report
According to a Daily Mirror investigation, Trade Minister Dominic Johnson said he was "keen to see a bigger Infosys presence in the UK and would be happy to do what he could to facilitate that". The development comes as the Bengaluru-based firm founded by Akshata Murty's father vies for contracts in the UK worth 750 million pounds and plans to increase its workforce in its second-biggest market by 20 per cent to 6,000.

Fresh trouble for Sunak as Minister accused of giving Infosys 'VIP access': Report