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U.N. assembly votes for probes of Gaza war charges 

The U.N. General Assembly passed a resolution on Thursday urging Israel and the Palestinians to investigate war crimes charges levelled in a controversial U.N. report on the Gaza war. Skip related content

The vote on the nonbinding resolution was 114 countries in favour with 18 opposed -- including Israel and its ally the United States -- and 44 abstaining. No country has veto power in the assembly.

The Arab-drafted resolution followed up on a 575-page report on the Gaza war commissioned by the U.N. Human Rights Council, written by a panel led by South African jurist Richard Goldstone and published in September.

The report blasted both sides in the December-January conflict, which killed over 1,300 Palestinians and 13 Israelis, but was harsher towards Israel, which refused to cooperate with Goldstone and has reacted with outrage to his findings.

The resolution follows Goldstone in calling on Israel and "the Palestinian side" to undertake within three months credible investigations into the report's charges.

It also asks U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to transmit the report to the Security Council. But diplomats said all five veto-wielding permanent council members opposed council involvement, so it was unlikely the 15-nation body would take action.

Apart from Israel and the United States, a number of European countries including Italy, the Netherlands, Poland and the Czech Republic voted against the resolution. But the European Union was split, with others including Britain and France abstaining. Most developing countries voted in favour.

Israel's Deputy Ambassador Daniel Carmon told the assembly the resolution "endorses and legitimizes a deeply flawed, one-sided and prejudiced report of the discredited Human Rights Council and its politicized work that bends both fact and law,"

U.S. Deputy Ambassador Alejandro Wolff said the resolution was flawed in several respects, including its failure to name the Hamas militant movement that rules Gaza. He also said a demand for international supervision of any Israeli and Palestinian investigations was "unhelpful."

(Reporting by Patrick Worsnip; Editing by Eric Walsh)

 

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