In May 2021, following another round of violence in the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas, the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) established an ongoing Commission of Inquiry into the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem, and Israel (COI). The budget for the COI for 2021-2023 was approved by the General Assembly’s Fifth Committee in December 2021.
The creation of the COI has attracted much criticism. After considering the concerns expressed by numerous United Nations member states, thinc. has assembled a team of international lawyers who have analyzed the principle instruments on which the COI is founded, namely Res 60/251 (establishing the UNHRC itself), Res S-30/1, in which the UNHRC establishes the COI, and the COI’s Terms of Reference, and considered the inquiry’s implications under international law. The team led by Prof. Gregory Rose (Australia) and Prof. Geoffrey Corn (USA), has documented its findings in a Briefing Paper. According to the authors, this Commission should never have been established.
A summary of the Conclusions and Recommendations of the Briefing Paper follows below.
11 reasons why the UNHRC Commission of Inquiry should never have been established
- Political support for the Commission is marginal. In fact, only 24 of the UNHRC’s 47 members voted in favor of its creation. Over recent months, a significant number of UN Member states have formally criticized the COI. While it is not necessary for a UNHRC Commission of Inquiry to enjoy universal support, it is highly undesirable to launch a massive, ongoing inquiry in the face of significant international criticism, and disagreement related to the underlying issues, and opposition to the inquiry.
- The COI is wasteful. The allocated budget of more than USD 5 million per year is a waste of money and totally out of proportion to the seriousness of the alleged international law violations, and in comparison with other areas and conflicts where serious human rights violations have been committed.
- The COI’s mandate is imbalanced. In particular, its mandate does not sufficiently reflect Hamas’ deliberate attacks against civilians and civilian property, indiscriminate attacks, and deliberate use of civilians in an effort to shield lawful military objectives from attack and to compel the infliction of civilian casualties for media purposes. The sole reference to the State of Israel in association with “alleged violations and abuses” and “Occupied Palestinian Territories” give little confidence that actions of Hamas and other Palestinian entities such as the PLO, Fatah, Palestinian Islamic Jihad or the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PLFP) will be credibly scrutinized – despite the fact that Israeli armed forces routinely and consistently acted in compliance with the legal obligation to implement feasible precautionary measures to mitigate the risk of casualties.
- The COI is unnecessary. There are already many institutions within the UN system focused on Israel and the “Occupied Palestinian territories”. There is no need for another duplicative institution investigating the “underlying root causes of tensions”.
- The COI will be unable to ascertain the truth. The quality of the COI’s findings of “facts” and “evidence”, as well as its legal analysis, will inevitably be compromised. Given Hamas’ history of disinformation and manipulation of data, as well as Israel’s legitimate decision not to cooperate with the COI, it will simply be impossible for the COI to compile credible evidence and test that evidence for its veracity. And in assessing the legality of the conduct of hostilities, the COI will have no choice but to speculate when assessing the reasonableness of attack judgments.
- The COI will lead to injustice. In order to fulfill its mandate, the COI will necessarily breach the fundamental human rights of accused persons to due process and a fair trial. Resolution S-30/1 essentially obliges the COI to prepare evidence and make legal findings to maximize the likelihood that Israelis will be prosecuted for crimes. The assumption that crimes have been committed means that, in effect, the COI has been set up as a kind of “star chamber “ – hearing unverifiable “evidence” submitted by anonymous accusers, identifying absent “perpetrators”, and preparing charges behind closed doors.
- The COI is biased. The Commission’s members, especially its Chairperson Navi Pillay, have a record of outspoken bias against Israel. The legal standard of reasonable apprehension of bias, when applied to records of each, leaves the credibility of the Commission severely diminished and its findings void ab initio. In other words, this Commission is a priori biased against Israel and therefore itself a breach of the rule of law.
- The COI is illegal. The COI’s mandate to prepare evidence for criminal proceedings and to investigate the “root causes” of the conflict exceeds the UNHRC’s limited human rights jurisdiction. The COI’s mandate is at least in part ultra viresand thus, on yet another ground, illegal.
- The COI will promote conflict, not reconciliation. Engaging criminal, human rights and humanitarian law instrumentally in order to force a predetermined outcome of a complex and multilayered political dispute is an inappropriate use of the UN system. Moreover, “criminalizing” the conflict has failed to bring the parties closer in the past, and is unlikely to do so in the future. The narrow focus of this COI on retributive justice and “ending impunity” for (perceived or alleged) crimes means that it, like its dozens of predecessors, will fail to resolve or even narrow this complex conflict. Indeed, it may even deepen the conflict, diminishing the likelihood of enduring peace and security.
- The COI’s mandate is based on flawed legal assumptions. The COI’s mandate is based on the assumptions that “the State of Palestine” exists and that Israel has no valid sovereignty claims with respect to the “Occupied Palestinian Territories”. These assumptions are simply incorrect. The future status of these territories are the subject of bilateral negotiations, pursuant to the binding Oslo agreements, and they are the subject of contestation before international tribunals, including the ICJ and ICC. In these circumstances, it is premature and inappropriate for the UNHRC to adopt legal positions on either issue.
- The COI is immoral. This COI is yet another example of how the UNHRC is treating the State of Israel differently (and less favorably) than every other UN member state. Under the UN Charter, the UNHRC and all member states are obliged to treat all UN member states equally. Singling out Israel, without demonstrably compelling and urgent reasons to do so, is both a morally and legally unacceptable assault on the sovereign equality of the State of Israel.
In summary-
This UNHRC Commission of Inquiry is a legal failure and a moral crime against the Jewish State of Israel. Its sole purpose is to condemn Israel and Israeli leaders.
The Briefing Paper concludes with the following recommendations.
Recommendations
- The COI should be abolished. Within the UNHRC, every opportunity must be seized to dissolve the COI. Failing that, the COI’s mandate should be revisited.
- The budget of the COI should be removed. The UN has several committees and procedures through which this can be achieved.
- The COI should be discredited. UN Member States can take unilateral steps, which may include:
- Making political statements condemning the COI in its entirety;
- Withholding national funding to the UN in the full amount of the budget of the COI;
- Condemning the UNHRC for its unjustified bias and discrimination against Israel.
- The UNHRC must be reformed. The time has come for a major reform of the UNHRC. This reform should focus on investigating large-scale but politically “less appropriate” human rights violations, such as by China and Russia. And the UNHRC’s bias against Israel must be brought to an end.
The analysis leads to shocking conclusions and startling recommendations.
Click here for the Briefing Paper (72 pp).
Click here for the summary ‘Conclusions and Recommendations’ (6 pp).
Click here for the résumé ‘Conclusions et Recommandations’ (French, 6 pp).