BRIEF: Libya Blocks UN Condemnation

GENEVA, Switzerland – For the second time in two months, the UN Security Council was unable to agree on a statement condemning violence and unrest in the Middle East.  On March 6, the US prepared a statement, which carries less weight than a formal resolution, condemning a day of violence that included an attack at a seminary in Jerusalem.

Libya opposed the statement, believing that it should be more balanced and that it should also condemn Israel’s recent operation in Gaza.  Libya’s deputy ambassador to the United Nations, Ibrahim Dabbashi, said the attack on the school was no different than Israeli military offensives against militants in Gaza.  He said that “when we have to condemn the killing of the Israeli civilians, we also have to look at what’s happening in Gaza.”

Israel stated that no comparison could be made between the two events.  Dan Gillerman, Israel’s ambassador to the United Nation, said that the attack on the seminary was not an act of retaliation, but rather “these people have been terrorizing Israel for years, have been carrying out suicide bombings and indiscriminate attacks for years.”

Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman, Arye Merkel, echoed Gillerman’s statement, by saying that there’s a major difference between the attack on the seminary and Israel’s operation in Gaza. He said, “We attack terrorists and unfortunately in a situation of war it happens that some civilians are also hurt. They attacked civilians only.  Today it was a school, the other day it was a hospital, and then another school.”

For more information, please see:
The Associate Press – Libya Blocks UN from Condemning Violence – 7 March 2008

CNN – Libya Blocks UN Condemnation of Jerusalem Seminary Attack – 7 March 2008

Author: Impunity Watch Archive