Israel Considers Response to UNESCO Vote

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is meeting with top advisers Tuesday to weigh a possible response to the U.N. cultural agency’s decision to grant Palestinians full membership.

Officials said the discussion will include possible punitive measures against the Palestinians, who hailed the UNESCO vote as a historic moment.

UNESCO is the first U.N. agency the Palestinians have sought to join since President Mahmoud Abbas applied in September for full recognition of Palestinian statehood by the U.N. General Assembly.

Repercussions

The vote Monday to accept the Palestinians cost UNESCO nearly a quarter of its funding and drew criticism from U.S. and Israeli officials who said the move will hurt Middle East peace chances.

The U.S. State Department said Washington will not make a $60 million November payment to UNESCO because of a longstanding U.S. law that prohibits American support for any U.N.-affiliated body that accepts Palestinian membership.

UNESCO Director-General Irina Bokova said after the vote she is concerned about the financial stability of the agency.

Washington is UNESCO’s biggest funding source, supplying 22 percent of the agency’s budget. The U.S. has reduced its involvement in the agency before, leaving in the 1980s under then-president Ronald Reagan and returning in 2003.

The White House called the UNESCO decision “premature,” saying it undermines the international community’s goal of a comprehensive Middle East peace plan.

Spokesman Jay Carney said the vote is a distraction from efforts to restarting direct negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians, which the Obama administration says is the only way to achieve peace.

Reaction in Israel

Israel’s Foreign Ministry described the move as a “unilateral Palestinian maneuver” that would further harm efforts to secure a peace agreement.

The ministry thanked countries that opposed the measure and said it was “disappointing” that the European Union could not reach a unified position to prevent the decision.

Palestinian Foreign Minister Riad al-Malki said the admission is “not an alternative, not a substitute for something else.”

Palestinian officials say they will call on UNESCO to recognize key monuments in the occupied Palestinian territories as world heritage sites. These include the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem, built over the place where many Christians say Jesus is believed to have been born.

The Paris-based UNESCO voted to approve the Palestinian membership bid by a vote of 107 to 14, with 52 abstentions.

France voted for the motion, along with almost all Arab, African, Latin American and Asian nations, including China and India. Israel, the United States, Canada and Germany voted against it. Japan and Britain abstained. A two-thirds vote was required by the U.N. Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization’s 193 members.

Source: http://www.voanews.com/english/news/Israel-Considers-Response-to-UNESCO-Vote-132985233.html

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Child Porn Found On Murderer Tabak’s Laptop

Tabak

Joanna Yeates’ murderer Vincent Tabak kept images of children being sexually abused on his laptop computer, it has emerged.

The killer was handed a life sentence on Friday – with a minimum 20-year term – after a jury found him guilty of strangling the 25-year-old landscape architect.

It was revealed after his conviction at Bristol Crown Court that Dutch engineer was obsessed with images of women being strangled during sex and had a taste for violent pornography and prostitutes.

The jury was never told about the parallels the material found had with the way Miss Yeates died – including pornography that depicted blonde women being throttled during sex or bundled into car boots.

During the examination of Vincent Tabak’s computer, other material was found. Once referred to the Crown Prosecution Service they will consider a number of criteria before charging someone with an offence. This includes whether it is in the public interest to do so.

Detective Chief Inspector Phil Jones

And it has now come to light that 30 images of youngsters being sexually abused were among those found by police on the hard drives of computers used by 33-year-old Tabak.

An officer involved in the investigation from Avon and Somerset Police, who asked not to be named, told the Bristol Evening Post that officers wanted to clear up speculation surrounding these “other matters”.

“Tabak had 30 images depicting child pornography on his laptop computer at home,” he said.

“They were all category four images.”

Yeates

Joanna Yeates was found strangled with her top pulled over her head

The officer added that Tabak’s conviction for murder and life sentence meant it was unlikely the Crown Prosecution Service would take action.

There are five levels of seriousness for offences involving indecent photographs of children, which start with images depicting “erotic posing with no sexual activity”.

Category four images depict penetrative sexual activity involving a child or children, or both children and adults.

Detective Chief Inspector Phil Jones, who led the murder investigation, confirmed:

“During the examination of Vincent Tabak’s computer, other material was found.

“We have referred this matter to the Crown Prosecution Service for initial guidance.

“Once referred to the CPS they will consider a number of criteria before charging someone with an offence. This includes whether it is in the public interest to do so.”

Source: http://news.sky.com/home/uk-news/article/16100870

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