Twenty-eight countries voted in favor, 13 abstained and six
opposed the resolution, including the United States and Germany.
The adoption prompted several representatives to the Council to
cheer and clap.
The resolution stressed "the need to ensure accountability for
all violations of international humanitarian law and
international human rights law in order to end impunity".
It also expressed "grave concern at reports of serious human
rights violations and grave breaches of international
humanitarian law, including of possible war crimes and crimes
against humanity in the Occupied Palestinian Territory".
Meirav Eilon Shahar, Israel's permanent representative to the
United Nations in Geneva, accused the Council of having "long
abandoned the Israeli people and long defended Hamas".
"According to the resolution before you today, Israel has no
right to protect its people, while Hamas has every right to
murder and torture innocent Israelis," she said ahead of the
vote. "A vote 'Yes' is a vote for Hamas."
The United States had pledged to vote against the resolution
because it did not contain a specific condemnation of Hamas for
the Oct. 7 attacks, nor "any reference to the terrorist nature
of those actions".
It did, however, said that its ally Israel had not done enough
to mitigate harm to civilians.
"The United States has repeatedly urged Israel to de-conflict
military operations against Hamas with humanitarian operations,
in order to avoid civilian casualties and to ensure humanitarian
actors can carry out their essential mission in safety," said
Michèle Taylor, U.S. permanent representative to the Council.
"That has not happened and, in just six months, more
humanitarians have been killed in this conflict than in any war
of the modern era."
The U.N. Human Rights Council, which meets several times a year,
is the only intergovernmental body designed to protect human
rights worldwide. It can increase scrutiny of countries' human
rights records and authorize investigations.
(Reporting by Gabrielle Tétrault-Farber; Editing by Matthias
Williams and Kevin Liffey)
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