(Reuters) - Israel said on Wednesday it would not cooperate with a United Nations Human Rights Council investigation into this year's Gaza war because its findings were "pre-determined". The U.N. panel, due to make its first report by March, is meant to look into the conduct of both Israel and Hamas, the Islamist movement that controls Gaza, during the 50-day conflict. But
Israel's government has already dismissed the investigation as
"kangaroo court", accusing its chairman, Canadian academic William
Schabas, of anti-Israeli bias. "In
view of the fact that the Schabas committee is not a fact-finding panel
but an investigation whose results are pre-determined ... Israel will
not cooperate with the committee," |Israel's Foreign Ministry said in a
statement on Wednesday. It added that the decision was also taken in view of what it called the Geneva-based council's "obsessive hostility to Israel". Israel
launched its Gaza offensive on July 8 with the declared aim of halting
cross-border rocket salvoes by Islamist Hamas, the dominant militant
group in the enclave. More
than 2,100 Palestinians, most of them civilians, were killed in seven
weeks of fighting, according to the Gaza health ministry. Sixty-seven
Israeli soldiers and six civilians in Israel were killed. Schabas told Reuters this month he was determined to put aside any views about "things that have gone on in the past". On
Monday, U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon named retired Dutch general
Patrick Cammaert to head an inquiry into Israeli attacks on U.N.
facilities in the Gaza Strip and the use of U.N. sites to store weapons.
Israel's military opened
five criminal investigations in September into its own operations in
Gaza, including attacks that killed four Palestinian children on a beach
and 17 people at a U.N. school.
Israel says will not cooperate with U.N. Gaza investigation
Reuters
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