GENEVA, August 15, 2019 — On the conclusion of the first examination of the Palestinian record on racism by the UN's Committee on the
Elimination of Racial Discrimination (CERD), UN Watch commended the 18-member expert body for asking the representatives
of President Mahmoud Abbas to explain the prevalence of of antisemitism in Palestinian textbooks and the mistreatment of
minorities in Palestinian-controlled areas.
UN Watch's founder, civil rights leader Morris Abram, was a key drafter of the committee's core document, the convention to eliminate racism, when he served as a UN expert in the 1960s. A new book to be published in December, "Touched with Fire: Morris B. Abram and the Battle against Racial and Religious
Discrimination," recount this history.
Ahead of the panel's findings and recommendations due on August 29th, UN Watch Executive Director Hillel Neuer issued
the following statement:
"What happened this week was unprecedented. Since 1974 when Yasser Arafat and the PLO were welcomed into the United
Nations, this if the first time that the world body’s spotlight was officially placed on Palestinian racism,
discrimination and antisemitism."
"UN Watch submitted a major legal brief, and our Legal Advisor Dina Rovner yesterday appeared before the committee to document systematic anti-Jewish hate and other forms of racism incited daily by Palestinian
Authority and Hamas officials, preachers, school books, TV stations, and social media."
"Importantly, several committee experts used our materials to ask serious questions of the Palestinian delegation. Sadly, despite their signing of UN treaties, the Palestinian side
failed to show any sense of accountability, instead repeatedly pointing the finger at Israel as an excuse. The
Palestinians declined to explain why, for example, their newspapers and websites publish grotesque caricatures of Jews
that look straight out of Der Sturmer."
"UN Watch trusts that the committee's findings will not be influenced by the Palestinian attempt to politicize the review session, and by their transparent strategy of deflection, and that it will instead apply real scrutiny to
Palestinian laws and practices, pressing them to curb some of their most virulent forms of racism and antisemitism."
"Astonishingly, while dozens of EU-funded Palestinian NGOs routinely address UN sessions on Israeli actions, and submit
voluminous reports, not a single one of these groups submitted a report at this week’s first-ever UN review of the
Palestinians' record on racism. Only one, Al Haq, showed up at the last minute, possibly to mitigate this embarrassment.
The effective boycott by these groups of a UN meeting on Palestinian human rights was the elephant in the room that no
one dared to mention."