The UN Human Rights Council on Wednesday strongly condemned Iran’s “egregious attacks” on Gulf nations and called for full reparations for victims affected by the strikes.
The 47-member body adopted a resolution sponsored by the six Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) states and Jordan, urging Iran to immediately halt all unprovoked attacks.
The resolution was adopted by consensus, though some countries, while backing the text, criticised its scope and the fact that it made no mention of Israel or the United States.
The Middle East war erupted on February 28 when Washington and Israel began their attacks on Iran, with Tehran in turn striking targets in Israel and Gulf nations.
The resolution “condemns in the strongest terms the egregious attacks” by Iran, condemns Tehran’s actions aimed at closing the Strait of Hormuz and voices “grave concerns at the Iranian attacks on energy infrastructure”.
It demands Iran “immediately and unconditionally cease all unprovoked attacks” against the GCC states and Jordan and “provide full, effective and prompt reparation to all victims for the damage and injury caused by its attacks”.
‘Terror waged against civilians’
Bahrain told the council it had been subjected to 26 days of “unprovoked, unjustified aggression”, while Jordan insisted: “These attacks must stop”.
Kuwait cited attacks on civilian infrastructure, including earlier Wednesday when its international airport was struck, saying “all of this amounts to a form of terror waged against civilians”.
Oman – which had mediated talks in Geneva between US and Iranian negotiators two days before Washington and Israel began their attacks – stressed it remained firmly committed “to diplomacy and dialogue”, condemning Tehran’s attacks while also rejecting the “illegal” US-Israeli strikes.
Saudi ambassador, Abdulmohsen Binkhothaila, added that “to target the mediator betrays all efforts aimed at peace”.
“Iran cannot deny responsibility here,” he said.
The United Arab Emirates said it had intercepted more than 2,000 Iranian ballistic missiles and drones, with its ambassador, Jamal Al Musharakh, insisting: “We have never allowed the use of our airspace for attacks against Iran.”
Tehran’s behaviour “undermines international peace and security”, he said.
Iran’s ambassador, Ali Bahreini, said Israel was “dragging the entire world towards chaos and peril”.
And he warned Gulf countries that “those who are today appearing as your friends will cast off their masks tomorrow”.
Bahreini said airfields around the Gulf were “refuelling points of the fighter jets that every day drop their bombs on the Iranian people”.
“Responsibility for these attacks lies not only with those who carried out those attacks but also with those who facilitated, supported and encouraged them”.
“We must unite against the evil plans of our common enemy, Israel,” he said.
“Do not embolden Israel by targeting Iran… It is a historic mistake.”
While backing the consensus, Cuba said the resolution did not deal with the context, saying “these countries should not have to face the consequences of a war that should never have been started” by Israel and the United States.
In a statement, Israel’s mission in Geneva called Iran “the source of this instability in the Middle East” and said Tehran’s regional strikes “underscore the shared threat posed by Iran” to international security.
The UN rights chief, Volker Turk, told the debate that strikes around Iran and Israel’s nuclear sites were “flirting with unmitigated catastrophe”.
The Human Rights Council will hold a second urgent debate on Friday, focused on a deadly strike on an Iranian school.
The debate, requested by Iran, China and Cuba, refers to the airstrike on a school in the southern city of Minab on the first day of the war on February 28 that killed at least 165 people, most of them children.