After paragraph 9.1.6, add the following paragraph:
“give even greater priority to humanitarian advocacy, including the collection of data on all incidents relating to violations of humanitarian law;”
After paragraph 9.1.6, add the following paragraph:
“urge both Israeli and Palestinian authorities to re-examine school textbooks in the spirit of the study report initiated by the Council of Religious Institutions of the Holy Land and published on 4 February 2013, with the aim of maximising objectivity and eliminating material which selectively reinforces each community’s national narrative;”
After paragraph 9.2.3, insert the following paragraph:
“refrain from blocking or suspending the transfer to the Palestinian Authority of taxes due and owing to them;”
At the end of paragraph 9.2.5, add the following words: “, consistent with adequate monitoring to ensure that all relevant materials are used solely for the purpose intended;”
After paragraph 9.3.1, insert the following paragraph:
“use their best endeavours to prevent the firing of rockets and construction of tunnels into Israel;”
At the end of paragraph 9.3.4, add the following words: “and gender-based violence”
After paragraph 9.3.4, insert the following paragraph:
“use all possible means to promote women’s sexual and reproductive health and rights, including education on the risks of early marriage and the encouragement of family spacing;”
After paragraph 9.3.4, insert the following paragraph:
“promote women’s social and economic empowerment;”
There must be improved co-ordination of all incidents of such violations in this area in a credible and systematic way in order to bring maximum pressure to bear on the perpetrators.
Using textbook material designed to incite hatred is provocative and has a negative effect on prospects for peace. No peace agreement will be able to guarantee peace in the medium- to long-term if material which selectively reinforces each community’s national narrative is not removed from school textbooks.
There is no case for suspending such payments which can only worsen the precarious financial situation and punish the population of Gaza, as indicated in paragraph 17 of the explanatory memorandum.
The list of permitted materials should be regularly reviewed, but past experience of misuse should lead to adequate monitoring.
The territory of the Gaza Strip is small: no more than 365 km2 [United Nations report of July 2015]. Relying on their professional intelligence services, the authorities in Gaza could surely do more to prevent tunnelling and the firing of rockets.
Unfortunately gender-based violence is still an issue also in Gaza.
Women’s sexual and reproductive health is a human rights issue. Women should have control regarding childbearing. Additionally, women should be warned of the dangers of early marriage and the practice discouraged. The number of children per woman is significantly higher in Gaza than in the West Bank and in the Palestinian population of Israel, so the rise in the population in Gaza can be tackled if the will is there.
The booming population of Gaza is unsustainable in such a small territory and has political consequences. (The population was 250 000 in 1948 at the time of partition and is now at least 1.9 million – see United Nations report of 20 August 2016 “Gaza Two Years After”.)
Economic security is a priority demand by Palestinian women and women’s social and economic empowerment is a major concern of the United Nations authorities.