Israel Institute urges vote against anti-Israel resolution
Israel Institute of NZ urges Government to vote against anti-Israel UN resolution
Israel Institute of New Zealand Director David Cumin is urging the Government to vote against a UN resolution criticising the US decision to recognize Jerusalem as Israel's capital - cautioning that the resolution is misguided and a politicisation of the United Nations.
Earlier this week an Egyptian-drafted Security Council resolution called on US President Trump to rescind his decision and demanded that UN states acknowledge that “any decisions and actions which purport to have altered the character, status or demographic composition of the Holy City of Jerusalem have no legal effect”. It also demanded all states “not to recognize any actions or measures contrary to these resolutions”.
The resolution was vetoed by the US at the Security Council - but Turkey and Yemen have now called an emergency meeting of the general assembly to vote on a similar resolution and to call on the UN General Assembly to declare the US move “null and void”. UN general assembly votes are not legally binding, but they serve as a barometer of international sentiment on key issues.
However, Dr Cumin says that there are several reasons why New Zealand should vote against the resolution:
1. “New Zealand made an ill-considered error in co-sponsoring UNSC resolution 2334 in December of 2016, alongside Senegal, Venezuela, and Malaysia. That resolution did ‘purport to alter the status of Jerusalem’ by defining boundaries rather than leave them open for negotiation. A vote against this current resolution would demonstrate that New Zealand is acting with principle and balance”.
2. “While the present resolution will call on UN members not to recognise Jerusalem as the Capital of Israel in order to promote negotiations, the same States sponsoring and pushing it are seeking recognition of East Jerusalem as the Capital of Palestine - a move that will remove an incentive for negotiations. It seems that the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) wants to have its cake, eat it, and not let anyone else have any”.
3. “The US decision is simply acknowledging an existing fact. It does not preclude negotiations that might result in the capital of a future Palestinian state in East Jerusalem.”
4. “The US position on Jerusalem as the Capital of Israel isn’t new. It was first passed into law in 1995. However, ostensibly for national security reasons, every six months for the last two decades, successive US presidents have signed a waiver to suspend the relocation of the Embassy. Previous US Presidents have gone so far as to call Jerusalem the ‘undivided capital of Israel’”.
5. “The United Nations
has been hijacked by an anti-Israel agenda and New Zealand
should not continue to enable
bullies.
• There are 193 member states of
the United Nations. The Organisation of Islamic Cooperation has
57 member states and they are all members of the ‘Non-aligned movement’, which has 125
member states. These countries invariably vote against
Israel; 32 UN member states don’t even recognise
Israel as a country.
• There have
been 19 resolutions condemning Israel at the United Nations
this past year. There were only 6 other resolutions that
specifically singled out a nation and no country was targeted more than once
except for Is
New Zealand voted to support 16 of the 19
anti-Israel resolutions and abstained in the remaining 3. In
contrast, Australia voted no to 6 of the resolutions, Canada
voted no to 17 (they also abstained on the other 2), and the
United States voted the same as
Canada.
• Twice this year, UNESCO has passed
resolutions that deny the historical Jewish connection to
religious sites in Israel. This includes removing mention of
Jewish connections to Jerusalem - the site of the Temple
Mount, which is the Holiest site in Judaism - and Hebron,
where Judaism’s patriarchs and matriarchs are believed to
be buried.
• Israel and the United States
left UNESCO because of their anti-Israel
politicisation of history in October. New Zealand has
been silent.
The Israel Institute of New Zealand has previously called on the New Zealand government to also recognise Jerusalem as Israel’s capital.