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UN Chief Guterres Accepts Resignation of Head of UN’s ESCWA over Report on Israel | ASHARQ AL-AWSAT English Archive 2005 -2017
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UN Under-Secretary General and ESCWA Executive Secretary Rima Khalaf reacts during a news conference in Beirut, Lebanon March 15, 2017. REUTERS/Mohamed Azakir


United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres accepted the resignation of the head of the UN West Asia commission on Friday after he asked her to remove from the internet a report accusing Israel of imposing an “apartheid regime” on Palestinians, a UN spokesman said.

“This is not about content, this is about process,” said Guterres’ spokesman Stephane Dujarric.

“The secretary-general cannot accept that an under-secretary-general or any other senior UN official that reports to him would authorize the publication under the UN name, under the UN logo, without consulting the competent departments and even himself,” he told reporters.

Earlier on Friday the head of the United Nation’s West Asia commission put forth her resignation after what she described as pressure from the secretary general to withdraw a report accusing Israel of imposing an “apartheid regime” on Palestinians.

The Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia (ESCWA), which comprises 18 Arab states, published the report on Wednesday and said it was the first time a UN body had clearly made the charge.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres had asked the commission to remove the report from its website, a UN official said earlier. Guterres insisted on the withdrawal of the report, UN Under-Secretary General and ESCWA Executive Secretary Rima Khalaf said.

“Based on that, I submitted to him my resignation from the United Nations,” Khalaf told a news conference in Beirut on Friday.

The report concluded “Israel has established an apartheid regime that dominates the Palestinian people as a whole”. The accusation – often directed at Israel by its critics – is fiercely rejected by Israel.
“It was expected that Israel and its allies would put enormous pressure on the United Nations secretary general to renounce the report,” Khalaf said.

Khalaf stood by the report, calling it the “first of its kind” from a UN agency that sheds light on “the crimes that Israel continues to commit against the Palestinian people, which amount to war crimes against humanity”.

The report, which Khalaf had said had been prepared at the request of ESCWA member states, was no longer visible on the commission’s website on Friday.