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US to veto international probe on Gaza incident
By Yitzhak Benhorin  November 9, 2006
 
The US is expected to veto Thursday night's UN Security Council decision against Israel regarding recent IDF operations in the Gaza Strip and the killing of Palestinians in Beit Hanoun Wednesday.

A Palestinian proposal to establish an international investigation committee and the stationing of UN observers in the Strip was expected to come up in the meeting. Due to US objections, it wasn't clear whether there would be a vote at the end of the meeting.

The demand to convene the Security Council was raised on Monday by Qatar, the only Arab Council representative. The demand was initially rejected, but the Beit Hanoun incident changed matters.

US Ambassador John Bolton said Qatar's request was discussed by the council on Tuesday "and there was no support for it."

The Palestinian proposal makes no mention of the Quartet's decision calling on the Hamas-led Palestinian Authority to recognize Israel, accept past agreements and denounce terror. There is also no mention of the incessant Qassam rocket attacks on Israel, which the IDF's activity in Gaza was meant to prevent.

The clause calling for the stationing of foreign observers in Gaza is especially problematic for Israel and the US, as it is Israel's position that the Palestinians must take responsibility for Gaza and put an end to the rocket attacks.

Palestinian UN observer Riyad Mansour said it was time for the UN's most powerful body to shoulder its responsibilities with regard to the Israeli offensive in Gaza, a view backed by Arab and Islamic nations and the 117-member Nonaligned Movement of developing countries.

"The Israeli occupying forces have committed another massacre this morning in Beit Hanoun," Mansour said. "The Security Council has to react and to react immediately in order to stop this aggression and these crimes against the Palestinian people."

Danny Carmon, the deputy head of the Israeli delegation to the UN, said during the meeting that the escalation stems from the Qassam rocket fire on Israel, which is acting 'in self-defense.' He stressed that the death of the Palestinian family in Beit Hanoun was an 'unfortunate accident.'

"Israel regrets the death of the innocent civilians," Carmon said, adding that Israel treated some of those wounded in the incident and launched an investigation into the IDF's artillery fire in the north Gaza town.

This article first appeared on Ynet.


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