World Health Organization passes motion alleging Israel violating health rights

The UN’s World Health Organization held a session Tuesday singling out Israel as a violator of Palestinians’ health rights and passed a resolution on the matter, in the only country-specific discussion during its annual assembly, which was largely devoted to the coronavirus pandemic. The delegations of some 25 countries held speeches accusing Israel of violating the health rights of Palestinians and the Druze population in the Golan Heights. The agenda item was slammed by UN Watch, a nonprofit that tracks alleged incidents of anti-Israel bias in the United Nations and its bodies, where pro-Israel critics say there is an automatic majority against the Jewish state. Similar resolutions have been passed in previous years. The resolution required the WHO to hold the same debate at next year’s assembly, and to prepare another report on the “Health conditions in the occupied Palestinian territory, including east Jerusalem, and in the occupied Syrian Golan.” The motion passed with 82 countries supporting it, 14 opposing, 40 abstaining and 38 absent. It was submitted by the Palestinian delegation and co-sponsored by 26 countries, including Cuba, Iraq, Libya, Pakistan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Syria, Turkey, Venezuela and Yemen, as well as three countries that recently normalized ties with Israel: The United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Morocco. A health worker holds empty vials of the Pfizer-BioNtech COVID-19 vaccine at a clinic in East Jerusalem on February 3, 2021. (AHMAD GHARABLI / AFP) It called for “non-discriminatory, affordable and equitable access to COVID-19 vaccines” for Palestinians and for Syrians in the Golan. In an apparent reference to the recent 11-day military conflict between Israel and the Hamas terror group, which rules Gaza, the motion urged an assessment of “the extent and nature of psychiatric morbidity, and other forms of mental health problems, resulting from protracted aerial and other forms of bombing among the population.” The resolution did not include comparative data explaining the sole focus on the status of health care in the West Bank, Gaza and the Golan. UN Watch said Austria, Colombia and the Netherlands had shifted their position from abstaining last year to voting against the motion this year. Other countries that opposed it were the United States, Britain, Australia, Brazil, Cameroon, Canada, the Czech Republic, Germany, Honduras and Hungary. Poland, Malta and Monaco were said to have shifted their position from supporting the resolution last year to abstaining this year. The Palestinian Authority Foreign Ministry welcomed the decision in a series of tweets, saying that “the resolution affirms the unassailable international community’s support for the Palestinian people’s fundamental right to health, especially during this deadly pandemic and Israel’s systematic attacks on health facilities and personnel.” “Those who politicize this humanitarian resolution aim at depriving the Palestinian people of their basic fundamental right,” it added.

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