UN SECRETARY GENERAL BAN ON SUICIDE TERROR: "TOO MANY PEOPLE HAVE ALREADY BEEN KILLED ... AN UNACCEPTABLE POLITICAL WEAPON"
UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon met with leaders of the Simon Wiesenthal Center, one of the largest Jewish rights NGOs, at United Nations Headquarters in New York in response to the Wiesenthal Center's international campaign for a UN General Assembly special session on suicide terror. During the 50 minute meeting, the world's chief human rights official labeled suicide terror, "an unacceptable political weapon" and said he would personally present the initiative to the President of the General Assembly. For the past four years, the Center has been urging the international community to designate suicide bombing a crime against humanity. In the wake of the bombing last December that killed former Pakistani Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto and at least 20 of her followers, the Center launched an online petition drive to the Secretary General which generated thousands of signatures from 85 countries including Egypt, Turkey and Pakistan itself. Rabbi Marvin Hier, the Founder and Dean of the Center, pointed out that the UN has held Special Sessions on important issues including Disarmament, Apartheid, AIDS and the Environment, and that "The time has come to place suicide terror at the top of the international agenda. This scourge is only going to get worse and world must act before it's too late." Rabbi Hier also noted, "no group has escaped suicide terror and that today Muslims are the predominant victims of this scourge." Also discussed were concerns surrounding the so-called Durban II process, with the UN chief saying that countries must avoid repeating the debacle of the Durban I Conference in 2001 which degenerated into an anti-semitic and anti-American hatefest. Mr. Ban said that Durban II must "galvanize to fight against anti-semitism." The Wiesenthal Center expressed open skepticism that the UN Human Rights Council, which regularly singles out Israel for one-sided condemnation, could properly supervise Durban II. Rabbi Abraham Cooper, the Center's Associate Dean presented four pictures drawn by elementary school children from Sderot, the Israeli town that borders the Hamas-run Gaza. Despite having no military infrastructure, Sderot is under constant barrage from rockets fired from Gaza. The effect on the town is so great that one psychologist who recently briefed the Center, stated that 75% of its citizens show symptoms of Post-Traumatic Stress Syndrome. Secretary General Ban expressed understanding for Israel's right to defend herself against the missile barrages but warned that steps should be taken avoid a humanitarian crisis among Gaza's civilians. Also attending the meeting were Rabbi Meyer May, the Center's Executive Director and Mark Weitzman who represents the Center at the United Nations.
The Simon Wiesenthal Center is one of the largest international Jewish human rights organizations with over 400,000 member families in the United States. It is an NGO at international agencies including the United Nations, UNESCO, the OSCE, the OAS and the Council of Europe.
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