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Written by Akiva Eldar Akiva Eldar
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Category: News News
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Published: 18 January 2010 18 January 2010
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Last Updated: 18 January 2010 18 January 2010
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Created: 18 January 2010 18 January 2010
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The request by Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas to the United Nations
Human Rights Council last year to postpone the vote on the Goldstone
report followed a particularly tense meeting with the head of the Shin
Bet security service, Haaretz has learned. At the October meeting in
Ramallah, Shin Bet chief Yuval Diskin told Abbas that if he did not ask
for a deferral of the vote on the critical report on last year's
military operation, Israel would turn the West Bank into a "second Gaza."
Diskin, who reports directly to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu,
threatened to revoke the easing of restrictions on movement within the
West Bank that had been implemented earlier last year. He also said
Israel would withdraw permission for mobile phone company Wataniya to
operate in the Palestinian Authority. That would have cost the PA tens
of millions of dollars in compensation payments to the company.
A PA official close to Abbas told Haaretz that Diskin came to the Muqata
compound in Ramallah in October with a foreign diplomatic delegation,
and that a senior Israel Defense Forces officer made similar threats to
other PA leaders at around the same time.
The Shin Bet said in response that it does not comment on Diskin's
schedule or meetings.
Abbas told a Palestinian commission of inquiry investigating the vote's
deferral that he accepted responsibility for the decision, and denied
that his choice was a result of outside pressure.
Commission chairman and PA legislator Azmi Shuaibi told Al-Watan TV at
the time that in a three-hour session Abbas admitted to the panel that
he had made a mistake in asking the UN body to defer the vote and said
he was sorry that the affair had been exploited for political ends.
Thirty-three of the UN council's 47 members supported the PA's initial
endorsement of the Goldstone report. The matter was slated to be
transferred from the UN General Assembly to the Security Council, when
to the surprise of diplomats on all sides the PA delegation agreed at
the last moment to defer the vote until March 2010.
The Goldstone commission recommended that Israel be given until March to
complete an independent inquiry into its conduct during the offensive
and to try any figures suspected of war crimes. Failure by either Israel
or Hamas to conduct an open inquiry into their conduct would result in
the case being referred to the International Criminal Court.
The United States is now seeking to persuade Israel to conduct such an
investigation, and to release its findings on a number of incidents in
which civilians were killed during the fighting.