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US asks UN Security Council to censure ‘deeply disturbing’ remarks by Abbas

The U.S.-drafted statement would have the council express “serious concern” about Abbas’s remarks, which “included vile anti-Semitic slurs and baseless conspiracy theories, and do not serve the interests of the Palestinian people or peace in the Middle East,” AFP reported.

Then-U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley addresses a Security Council meeting. Credit: U.N. Photo/Rick Bajornas.
Then-U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley addresses a Security Council meeting. Credit: U.N. Photo/Rick Bajornas.

The United States asked the U.N. Security Council on Friday to reject the “unacceptable” and “deeply disturbing” remarks by Palestinian Authority leader Mahmoud Abbas concerning the Holocaust.

The U.S.-drafted statement would have the council express “serious concern” about Abbas’s remarks, which “included vile anti-Semitic slurs and baseless conspiracy theories, and do not serve the interests of the Palestinian people or peace in the Middle East,” AFP reported.

The draft also urges “all parties to avoid provocations that make the resumption of negotiations more difficult.”

Earlier on Friday, Abbas attempted to walk back anti-Semitic remarks made earlier in the week, when he argued that Jewish persecution in Europe had been caused by Jewish social behavior, not by religion.

In his apology, Abbas both condemned anti-Semitism and called the Holocaust “most heinous crime in history.”

In speech on April 30, Abbas told the Palestinian National Council that “the Jewish question that was widespread throughout Europe was not against their religion, but against their social function, which relates to usury and banking and such.”

International leaders, Jewish groups and Israeli leaders widely accused Abbas of anti-Semitism and Holocaust denial.

“These movements don’t stop with a boycott. We know where this is going, and that’s why we are going to get out ahead of it,” an attorney at the center told JNS.
On May 9, vandals spray-painted antisemitic symbols and Bible references on the Waukesha County memorial, which includes a steel beam from the World Trade Center.
“I’m not sure we should make the deal if they don’t sign,” the U.S. president said at a cabinet meeting on Wednesday. “I think they owe that to us.”
The protest was “a powerful show of solidarity,” Jayne Zirkle of the Lawfare Project told JNS. “To condemn people for attending such an event is to condemn the very principles of freedom our nation was founded on.”
“If publicly-funded institutions cannot host such events without folding to pressure, serious questions arise about that funding,” a Jewish House of Lords member said.
The attacks followed Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s announcement on Tuesday that the IDF is deepening its operations in Lebanon.