Home Archive 31/December/2015 10:40 AM

Pillay :Treatment of Richard Falk “Deeply Regrettable”

GENEVA, December 17, 2008 (WAFA)- The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay said, Tuesday, that Israel’s refusal to allow UN expert Professor Richard Falk to transit Israel in order to carry out his officially mandated functions in the Occupied Palestinian Territory (OPT), along with his detention at, and subsequent expulsion from, the country’s main airport, was “unprecedented and deeply regrettable.”

In a press release published by the The Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR), Falk, who was traveling in his official capacity as Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the OPT, was stopped at immigration shortly after arriving at Ben Gurion Airport on Sunday.

 

Following standard practice, Professor Falk traveled to Israel on his US passport and his United Nations Certificate, a document used by independent UN human rights experts during the course of their official missions. His mission was in response to an invitation to visit the OPT, the official trigger required for such a mission, from the Palestinian National Authority.

 

Professor Falk was denied entry to Israel and was subsequently separated from the two UN staff accompanying him. His UN mobile phone was confiscated, making further contact between the UN and Professor Falk impossible until after his subsequent deportation to the United States on Monday. He was kept in a detention facility at the airport, where he spent the night in a small room with several other people who were being denied entry into Israel. In all, he spent more than 20 hours in the airport, before being deposited on a plane to Los Angeles.

 

Special Rapporteurs do not require a formal invitation by the Israeli authorities in order to carry out official missions to the OPT. In the past, the Israeli Government has not prevented Falk’s predecessors or other Special Rapporteurs from transiting Israel on their way to the OPT, which cannot be reached directly from overseas.

 

The Government of Israel was informed in writing on two occasions, October 14 and December 3, that the Special Rapporteur was intending to make his first official visit to the OPT.

 

No written reply was received from the Israeli authorities indicating that they would break with their previous practice of permitting Special Rapporteurs to transit Israel on their way to the OPT, until an email that was sent at 11:09 pm on Saturday to an OHCHR staff member in Geneva. She was not in a position to read this email before leaving with Professor Falk for the airport at 6:00 am the following morning.

 

Pillay said she was taking the matter up directly with the Israeli authorities, including possible breaches of UN privileges and immunities in the treatment and detention of Professor Falk at Ben Gurion airport.

 

“It is the responsibility of states to cooperate with the independent UN experts appointed by the UN Human Rights Council,” Pillay said. “That is an important principle.”

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