Today: 8 May 2025
3 June 2021
3 mins read

Palestine concerned as India skips UN vote on Gaza

The resolution was voted on last week, and passed with 24 countries voting in favour, nine against and 14 abstaining…reports Asian Lite News.

The Palestinian Authority’s foreign minister has expressed “concern” with India over its decision to abstain from a UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) resolution that called for a probe into alleged crimes committed during Israel’s 11-day offensive in the Gaza Strip.

In a letter addressed to India’s minister of external affairs, S Jaishankar, Riyad al-Maliki said he was concerned by the position taken by India at the rights council’s special session last week.

“The Republic of India missed an opportunity to join the international community at this turning point, [both] crucial and long overdue on the path to accountability, justice and peace,” Maliki wrote in the letter, which was sent on Sunday but made public on Wednesday.

“Your abstention stifles the important work of the human rights council at advancing human rights for all peoples, including those of the Palestinian people.”

Palestinian Territories, Gaza city: Fire billows from a building hit by an Israeli airstrike on the Gaza Strip, amid the escalating flare-up of Israeli-Palestinian violence(Photo: Mahmoud Khattab/Quds Net News via ZUMA Wire/dpa/IANS)

The resolution was voted on last week, and passed with 24 countries voting in favour, nine against and 14 abstaining. Other countries that abstained included the Bahamas; Brazil; Denmark; Fiji; France; Italy; Japan; Nepal; the Netherlands; Poland; South Korea; Togo; and Ukraine.

The resolution, which appoints a commission of inquiry to investigate possible war crimes and other abuses, was drafted after resistance against Israel’s attempts to forcibly evict Palestinian families from their homes in occupied East Jerusalem led to an Israeli aerial bombing campaign on the Gaza Strip last month, which killed around 250 Palestinians, including at least 67 children.

Israel’s foreign ministry said the country would not cooperate with the probe, deeming it a bid to “whitewash crimes committed by the terror organization Hamas”.

In the letter, Maliki said the UN resolution was “not an aberration to the human rights council” but rather a result of years of “thorough investigations into and reporting on Israel’s grave violations” by states, UN experts, human rights bodies and international organisations.

The “root causes of the injustice that befell the Palestinian people, the decades-long dispossession, displacement, colonization, oppression of the Palestinian people and the denial and violation of their every human rights by Israel, the occupying power, must be prioritized,” Malki continued, adding that, without accountability, “the situation will not only remain volatile but will continue deteriorating with far-reaching and grave repercussions”.

Growing India, Israel ties

India’s refusal to participate in the resolution comes as its relationship with Israel becomes increasingly close.

Last year, Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who took office in 2014, went so far as to urge the Palestinian leadership to accept former US President Donald Trump’s controversial Middle East plan, which was considered heavily biased in favour of Israel and was fully rejected by the Palestinians.

At the time, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu tweeted that “between Israel and India, a deep friendship has emerged”.

The Modi government has also sent troops and police to Israel for special training, and in recent years has become one of the largest buyers of Israeli weaponry, in deals thought to be worth around $1bn annually. India also reportedly signed a secretive defence deal with Israel last year, to the tune of $200m.

Formerly a strong supporter of the Palestinian cause, the Indian government did not establish full diplomatic relations with Israel until 1992. It voted against the creation of Israel at the United Nations General Assembly in 1947 on several grounds, including opposition to settler colonialism and the creation of a government based on religion.

ALSO READ-Egypt, Israel FMs hold talks on Gaza truce

READ MORE-A Third Israeli-Hamas War — What’s Next?

Previous Story

Opposition reaches deal to oust Netanyahu

Next Story

Pakistan, Tajikistan deepen ties

Latest from -Top News

India Strikes Terror Bases in Pakistan

‘Justice is served’, says Indian Army as Operation Sindoor unfolds In a significant military response to the deadly terror attack in Pahalgam that claimed 26 civilian lives, the Indian Army on Wednesday

UAE Reopens Doors to Lebanon

The prime minister expressed Lebanon’s “utmost gratitude and appreciation to the UAE” and President Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan….reports Asian Lite News Lebanon welcomed the decision by the United Arab Emirates

SYRIA RAIDS: Arab League Slams Israel

The Arab League condemned the airstrikes and called on the international community and the United Nations to confront what it described as “repeated violations committed by Israel against the Syrian state.” The

India Rises, Africa Watches 

While struggling economies in Africa engulf themselves in ideological battles and take sides in the tariff battles, nations like India are placing their national interest first and navigating Global Trade challenges in

WAVES 2025: Jaishankar Advocates Cultural Pluralism

External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar delivered a powerful address at the WAVES 2025 Global Media Dialogue, highlighting the significance of cultural pluralism in shaping global change. Speaking on the second day of
Go toTop

Don't Miss

UAE Provides $20M in Aid to Palestinians

The aid will be channelled through the United Nations Relief

Gaza violence: Biden concerned for journalists

Biden remarks came amid report that an airstrike carried out