…Rabbi Marvin Hier, urged the Secretary General to pave the way for the U.N. to declare terrorism a crime against humanity. Guterres acknowledged the seriousness of the issue, and said he was committed to reforming the world body’s current structure to better deal with it.
Bob Eschliman : Jun 5, 2017 : Charisma News
[Charisma News] UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres, during a discussion this week with officials from the Simon Wiesenthal Center, said that denying Israel’s right to exist is a form of anti-Semitism. (Reuters photo/via Charisma News)
United Nations Secretary-General Guterres spoke recently with senior officials of the Simon Wiesenthal Center at his offices at UN headquarters in New York City about a wide range of topics, including:
efforts to make terrorism a crime against humanity;
the UN’s role in countering burgeoning anti-Semitism in Europe;
ending the demonizing and abuse of Israel in and by U.N. agencies, including UNRWA, UNESCO and the UN Human Rights Council; and
stumbling blocks hampering Middle East peace prospects.
During that meeting, however, Guterres outright rejected the campaigns to erase Jewish history in the Holy Land.
“Denial of Israel’s right to exist is anti-Semitism,” he said. “History must be respected. Jerusalem is a holy city for three religions.”
The Simon Wiesenthal Center’s founder, Rabbi Marvin Hier, urged the Secretary General to pave the way for the U.N. to declare terrorism a crime against humanity. Guterres acknowledged the seriousness of the issue, and said he was committed to reforming the world body’s current structure to better deal with it.
“There needs to be real consequences for perpetrators and supporters of terrorist acts like the recent suicide bombing carnage at a concert in Manchester, England, and the U.N. must declare that this scourge is a crime against humanity,” Hier said.
There was also some disagreement between the two sides. While Hier noted Hamas’ genocidal founding charter and ongoing terrorist activities as the main roadblock to the peace process—not Israeli settlements—Guterres has opposed the Jewish expansion of West Bank settlements. The Secretary-General, however, did acknowledge that Hamas has succeeded in “leveraging the UN presence in Gaza.”
The Center’s associate dean, Rabbi Abraham Cooper, asked Guterres to speak out against legal and political attacks on core Jewish religious practices. He noted recent unanimous votes in Belgium’s parliament outlaws ritual slaughter, and there are recurring calls in Scandinavia and Germany to ban circumcision of Jewish baby boys.
“We are profoundly impressed by the scope of Secretary General Guterres’ knowledge and interest on issues that impact world Jewry directly,” Hier said in a statement following the meeting. “As an NGO at the U.N. and UNESCO, the Wiesenthal Center is committed to support the secretary general’s efforts to ensure that all members, including the Jewish state, be treated as equals.”