Canada joined the United States and Israel late Thursday night in
calling for the resignation of a United Nations official charged with
monitoring and reporting on human rights in the Palestinian territories.
That
official, Richard Falk, the UN's special rapporteur for the Palestinian
Territories, called for a worldwide boycott earlier Thursday of
companies tied to Jewish settlements in the occupied Palestinian
territories.
That recommendation was immediately condemned by the
U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Susan Rice, who called Falk's
call to action "irresponsible and unacceptable," and said it would
"poison the environment for peace."
A spokesman for Foreign
Affairs Minister John Baird, Rick Roth, said Falk's intervention was
"offensive and unhelpful but not overly surprising."
In the past,
Falk, a professor emeritus of international law at Princeton
University, once compared the state of Israel to Nazi Germany, the
Associated Press reported.
He also once wrote on his blog that
there was "an apparent coverup" by the U.S. over the Sept. 11, 2001
attacks. He also once posted an anti-Semitic cartoon on his blog, though
he later removed it.
"Richard Falk has a long history of making
outrageous statements, and frankly, has only tarnished the reputation
and integrity of the United Nations," Roth said.
Falk listed 13
companies that ought to be boycotted -- including Volvo, Caterpillar
Hewlett Packard and Motorola -- in his report to the UN General Assembly
"Mr.
Falk has not only done a disservice to the United Nations, but also to
the Palestinian people," Roth said. "Canada calls on Mr. Falk to either
withdraw this biased and disgraceful report - or resign from his
position at the United Nations."
Caterpillar said in a statement
that Falk's report was inaccurate and misleading, and "reflects his
personal and negative opinions toward Israel." The company said it sells
products to the U.S. government, which are then sent to Israel.
Hewlett
Packard said Falk was "far from an independent and unbiased expert in
this matter," and that the company has a strong human rights policy and
complies with the highest standards in every market in which they
operate.
Let's go to the videotape.
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