What is the UN ‘List of Shame’ and why are Israel and Hamas on it?

What is the UN ‘List of Shame’ and why are Israel and Hamas on it?
What is the UN ‘List of Shame’ and why are Israel and Hamas on it?

Photo credit, Getty Images

Image caption, The United Nations has added the Israeli armed and security forces, Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad to its “list of shame.”
Article information
  • Author, Amira Mhadhbi
  • Role, BBC Arabic
  • 8 hours ago

Israeli armed and security forces, as well as the armed wings of Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad, have been added to the United Nations list of groups “committing serious violations against children” during conflicts, also known as the “list of shame.”

This list is annexed to the annual report of UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on children and armed conflict.

The most recent report, which covers the period from January to December 2023, was made public on June 13.

The UN Security Council will debate the report’s findings on June 26.

“In 2023, violence against children in armed conflict reached extreme levels, with a shocking 21 per cent increase in grave violations,” the latest report says.

“The number of killings and mutilations has increased by a staggering 35%.

The 2024 report cites Israel and the occupied Palestinian territory as one of the regions with the highest number of verified “grave violations” against children.

Most violations attributed to Israel

The United Nations verified 5,698 violations attributed to the Israeli armed and security forces, 116 to Hamas’s Izz al-Din al-Qassam brigades and 21 to the Palestinian Islamic Jihad’s Al-Quds brigades.

The report states that the process of assigning 2,051 other established violations is still ongoing.

According to the UN report, checks were carried out:

  • the killing of 2,267 Palestinian children, mostly in Gaza, between October 7 and December 31: “Most of the incidents were caused by the use of explosive weapons in populated areas by Israeli armed and security forces.
  • 43 Israeli children were killed by live ammunition, most in Israel and during acts of terror on October 7,
  • the kidnapping of 47 Israeli children by Hamas’s Izz al-Din al-Qassam brigades and other Palestinian armed groups
  • the detention of 906 Palestinian children for alleged security offences by Israeli armed and security forces
  • 371 attacks on schools and hospitals attributed to Israeli armed and security forces, Israeli settlers and unidentified perpetrators
  • 17 attacks on schools and hospitals in Israel by Hamas’s Izz al-Din al-Qassam brigades, other Palestinian armed groups and unidentified perpetrators

Grave violations listed in the report also include mutilation of children and denial of access to humanitarian aid.

However, “the information reported does not represent the full extent of the violations committed against children, given that access for observers remains difficult,” notes the UN.

Photo credit, Getty Images

Image caption, Rafah November 2023

What is the “list of shame” and who is on it?

In 2001, UN Security Council Resolution 1379 called on the UN Secretary-General to identify and list “parties to the conflict” who recruit and use children.

Since then, the list has been attached to the UN Secretary-General’s annual report to the Security Council, which includes “trends regarding the impact of armed conflict on children and information on violations committed.”

The mandate of the Special Representative of the Secretary-General for Children and Armed Conflict, established in 1996, to report on the impact of armed conflict on children identifies six grave violations affecting children during conflict.

Five of these violations are automatically placed on the UN’s “list of shame” by any perpetrator who commits them:

  • Recruitment and use of children
  • Killing and mutilation of children
  • Sexual violence against children
  • Attack on schools and hospitals
  • Child abduction

Another violation is the denial of humanitarian access to civilians, including children.

This practice is “prohibited by the Fourth Geneva Convention and its Additional Protocols and may constitute a crime against humanity and a war crime,” the UN says.

The current list includes armed groups such as Boko Haram, the Islamic State and the Taliban.

Last year, the Russian Armed Forces were added to it.

Image caption, Erez, 12, and Sahar, 16, were kidnapped by Hamas and later released.

Israel condemned the IDF list as “immoral.”

While Hamas and Islamic Jihad have yet to comment on the recent UN report, Israel has attacked it as “immoral.”

On June 7, Courtenay Rattaray, chief of staff of the United Nations Secretary-General, informed Israel’s Ambassador to the United Nations, Gilad Erdan, during a “courtesy visit”, that the Israeli Defense Forces ( FDI) would be included on the list.

This call is generally “granted to countries newly included on the list in order to warn them and avoid leaks”, declared UN spokesperson Stéphane Dujarric.

In response to the IDF’s listing, Mr. Erdan posted a video on social media of himself on the phone with Mr. Rattaray, during which he called the decision “immoral and will only help Hamas.

Mr. Dujarric then called the “partial broadcast” of the recording on “.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu issued a statement saying the UN “has added itself to history’s blacklist by joining those who support Hamas assassins.”

“The Israeli army is the most moral army in the world; no crazy UN decision will change that,” he said in response to the list.

Photo credit, Getty Images

Image caption, Palestinian children suffering from malnutrition or chronic diseases wait with their family members at Nasser hospital in Khan Yunis, southern Gaza Strip, June 24, 2024.

While Israel is being added to the list for the first time, the country has already been identified in previous reports on children in armed conflict.

The previous report, published last year, stated that “524 children (517 Palestinians, 7 Israelis) were mutilated and 563 required medical assistance after inhaling tear gas fired by Israeli forces.”

Secretary-General Guterres has previously been heavily criticized by human rights organizations for failing to mention Israel in his previous reports.

The inclusion of Israeli forces on the UN’s ‘list of shame’ is long overdue,” said Jo Becker, children’s rights advocacy director at Human Rights Watch, following the recent publication.

“The Izz al-Din al-Qassam Brigades of Hamas and the Al-Quds Brigades of the Palestinian Islamic Jihad also have their place on this list,” she added.

“It would not have taken 15,000 children to be killed in Gaza for Israel to appear on this shameful list,” Agnes Callamard, secretary general of Amnesty International, wrote earlier this month.

What is the impact of being listed?

Photo credit, Getty Images

Image caption, A Palestinian child mourns the loss of his little sister in Deir al-Balah.

The report aims to highlight the situation of children, but it is not legally binding.

Emanuela-Chiara Gillard, a research fellow at the Oxford Institute for Ethics, Law and Armed Conflict, told the BBC that “the main purpose of putting countries and entities on this list is to naming and shaming them – it has no immediate concrete legal consequences for the parties listed.”

“It may, however, impact states’ decisions regarding arms transfers to Israel if they believe there are concerns about Israel’s compliance with the law, but it does not involve sanctions or sanctions. ’embargoes’.

Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad are already designated as terrorist organizations by Israel, the United States, the United Kingdom and other countries. As non-state actors, the reference to these organizations in the report “does not affect their legal status,” the UN says.

Ms Gillard maintains that listing has practical consequences – in terms of monitoring and reporting on children in armed conflict – as Israel and Hamas will come under greater scrutiny and could be cited in Security Council resolutions.

To be removed from the UN list, the organisations named in the UN report must engage in dialogue with the UN to develop and implement “action plans” to prevent further violations against children of the type cited.

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