Albanese Likely to Follow Michael Lynk’s Anti-Israel Agenda
One can expect that Francesco Albanese will follow in the footsteps of the outgoing Special Rapporteur, Michael Lynk, who did nothing to advance the peace process, and instead only entrenched the discrimination inherent in the mandate through his one-sided UN reports and statements that gave a free pass to systematic violations by the PA and Hamas.
Though it is rare for Canada to criticize UN appointments, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government had slammed Lynk’s appointment in 2016, saying that UN Special Rapporteurs needed to have a “track record that can advance peace in the region” and to be “credible, impartial and objective.”
Canada’s rebuke came after UN Watch exposed Lynk’s lengthy record of signing anti-Israel petitions, campaigning for Israel to be prosecuted for war crimes, accusing Israel of ethnic cleansing, and addressing conferences promoting a “one-state” solution, which means the end of Israel.
In his application, Lynk deliberately failed to disclose his leadership role in three pro-Palestinian lobby groups, including the National Council on Canada-Arab Relations, where he lobbied against Canada’s free trade agreement with Israel; the Canadian-Palestinian Education Exchange, which organizes “Israeli Apartheid Week” events; and Friends of Sabeel.
During his UN tenure from 2016 to 2022, just as UN Watch predicted, Lynk promoted the same inflammatory agenda.
Key findings in UN Watch’s report:
• As UN Special Rapporteur on Palestine, Lynk published 12 reports and 84 official press releases about the Palestinian territories which systematically ignored human rights violations by the PA and Hamas against both Israelis and Palestinians.
• Lynk justified his omissions by citing the discriminatory 1993 mandate which instructs him to investigate only Israel’s violations. Eventually, in wake of criticism from UN Watch, Lynk’s last three reports to the General Assembly included a handful of sentences on violations by the PA and Hamas, disproving his prior arguments. Still, 97% of the content of these reports related to criticism of Israel, while Lynk continued to ignore Hamas terrorism.
• Out of 84 official UN press releases issued by Lynk between 2016 and 2022, only 12—one seventh—included any criticism at all of the PA and Hamas. These few references amounted to no more than one or two lines mentioning Palestinian violations within a larger context of condemning Israel.
• During his entire six years as Special Rapporteur, Lynk published only one UN statement (out of 84) devoted to human rights abuses by the PA. He failed to issue a single statement about the Hamas regime’s human rights violations against Palestinians.
• Lynk failed to issue a single statement dedicated to criticizing either the PA or Hamas for their gross and systematic violations of freedom of religion, the rights of children, the rights of women, and LGBTQ rights.
• Lynk failed to issue a single statement dedicated to criticizing the PA or Hamas for firing thousands of rockets at Israeli civilians, terrorism targeting Jews, or antisemitic incitement.
• The mandate of Special Rapporteur on Palestine dates back to the pre-Oslo era—before the PA and Hamas ruled millions of Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza—and is inherently discriminatory, creating a protection gap for Palestinian and Israeli victims of violations by Palestinian actors.
• Several of Lynk’s predecessors publicly criticized this discrimination, and called for the mandate to be reformed. By contrast, Lynk pointedly refused do so. To the Canadian media in 2016, Lynk promised that he was “open to looking at expanding the job,” but in the end he did the opposite, embracing the biased mandate. |