ap

Skip to content
Palestinian stone-throwers wear gas masks during clashes Thursday with Israeli border police at the Qalandia checkpoint, between the West Bank city of Ramallah and Jerusalem.
Palestinian stone-throwers wear gas masks during clashes Thursday with Israeli border police at the Qalandia checkpoint, between the West Bank city of Ramallah and Jerusalem.
PUBLISHED: | UPDATED:
Getting your player ready...

UNITED NATIONS — The Palestinian leadership has quickly backtracked in its approach to a U.N. report accusing Israel of possible war crimes in Gaza, in what its top diplomat acknowledged Thursday is erupting into a “clear crisis” for its people.

Palestinian Foreign Minister Riad Malki didn’t say who was responsible for the crisis but told reporters at U.N. headquarters that the militant Islamist group Hamas is trying to take cynical advantage of the report to court favor with the Palestinians.

“This clear crisis about the report proves that the Hamas position is really trying to exploit it, to its own favor, trying to take advantage of it, and really score points, rather than having a genuine principled position regarding the report,” Malki said.

The report also accuses Palestinian armed groups of possible war crimes in the Israeli-Hamas conflict last winter. Hamas, the Palestinian Authority’s main rival, controls Gaza.

The Palestinian Authority initially pushed for the U.N. Human Rights Council to forward its commissioned Sept. 15 report to the Security Council.

Then it agreed last week under U.S. pressure not to push the issue at the United Nations.

That brought harsh criticism, including angry protests at home and condemnation around the Arab world.

Finally, on Wednesday, the Palestinian leadership again switched gears. It reversed itself by strongly backing Security Council member Libya’s push to hold the 15-nation council’s monthly debate on the Middle East a week earlier than planned and provide a high-profile forum for the explosive report to be discussed.

Malki said Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas’ Fatah movement — which lost power in Gaza when it was overrun by Hamas militants in 2007 — remains “far apart” in any potential deal with Hamas to reconcile and hold Palestinian elections. The Egyptians hope to broker a deal in Cairo this month.

Malki said the Palestinian leadership supports “all the recommendations” contained in the U.N. report on Gaza and had dispatched him to New York to press the case Thursday for having the Security Council or other arms of the United Nations take up the findings.

The 575-page report accused Israel of using disproportionate force and failing to protect civilians while calling Hamas’ firing of rockets at civilian areas in southern Israel a war crime.

RevContent Feed

More in News