UN blasted for funding committee 'created to destroy the Jewish state,' despite budget crisis
"When it comes to spending money for the spread of antisemitism, the U.N. doesn't have a spending limit," Anne Bayefsky, director of the Touro Institute on Human Rights and the Holocaust and president of Human Rights Voices, told Fox News Digital.
On June 4, the Independent International Commission of Inquiry on the Palestinian Territory, Including East Jerusalem (COI), led by South African Navi Pillay, announced four new job openings for senior-level positions in Geneva. These include two P-2 level associate interpreters, one higher-level P-3 level human rights officer, and a still more senior P-4 level human rights officer.
Revealed: The Extensive Perks Un Officials Receive While Ordering Budget Cuts
Combined, their salaries will range from $530,000 to $704,000, based on salary scales released by the U.N. and its location-based salary multiplier (set at .814 for Swiss employees), published in a document supplied to Fox News Digital by a diplomatic source.
These salaries do not include other senior-level U.N. employee benefits, including dependent costs, housing allowances or relocation fees.
Read On The Fox News App
Bayefsky asked why the U.N.'s "belt-tightening exercise … applies to all kinds of urgent matters but exempts the COI, which has simultaneously gone on a spending-spree."
"The COI was created to destroy the Jewish state and is now conducting itself accordingly." She said its latest report, issued in June, is "totally unhinged" and "claims Israelis are like Nazis engaged in 'extermination' of the Palestinians, refers to those 'extremist Jews,' denies biblical history, [and] fuels antisemitism by claiming Jews defile Muslim holy sites."
A spokesperson from the U.N. Human Rights Office did not respond to Fox News Digital's questions about the Commission's findings.
Doge Usaid Budget Cuts Hit Un In 'Worst Liquidity Crisis Since Its Establishment'
Pillay and the COI have come under fire previously for anti-Israel sentiment. In January 2022, 42 Republicans and Democrats in Congress signed an open letter calling for the U.S. to defund the COI. The Representatives expressed concern that "Chairwoman Navi Pillay, while serving as U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights from 2008 to 2014, repeatedly and unjustly accused Israel of committing war crimes." They stated that while she condemned Israel, Pillay "reportedly said nothing at all about egregious human rights abuses in dozens of other countries which, unlike Israel, received the worst, 'Not Free' rating from the respected Freedom House."
In October 2023, a representative from the U.S. Mission to the U.N. in Geneva said before the Third Committee of the U.N. that the U.S. "remains deeply concerned about the scope and nature of the open-ended Commission of Inquiry established in May 2021. The COI demonstrates a particular bias against Israel in subjecting it to a unique mechanism that does not exist for any other U.N. Member State."
In October 2024, a report from the COI excluded information about Hamas' use of Kamal Adwan Hospital for operations, failed to recount the maltreatment Israeli hostages received at Gazan hospitals, and could "not verify" that tunnels found below Al-Shifa hospital "were used for military purposes." Bayefsky said the report trafficked in blood libels.
In March, Pillay's commission claimed that rape and sexual violence are part of the Israel Defense Force's "standard operating procedures towards Palestinians." Pillay also said that the IDF's sexual violence creates "a system of oppression that undermines [Palestinians'] right to self-determination." In response, Bayefsky said "Pillay and her COI are notorious for turning reality upside down. October 7 was marked by grotesque Palestinian use of sexual violence and rape as a weapon of war. In response, the COI diminished those atrocities and instead concocted the reverse."
In March 2024, Congress passed a budget bill that eliminated funding for the COI while simultaneously banning funds for the U.N. Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA), according to the Jerusalem Post.
The U.N. Human Rights Council is already experiencing the impact of the organization's liquidity crisis.
In a June 16 letter penned by U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk, the Human Rights Council outlines more than a dozen reports, as well as studies, regional workshops, and panels mandated by the Council, which could not be completed due to inadequate resourcing.
In response to a request for comment about how the COI has received additional personnel while the Human Rights Council deals with scarcity, spokesperson Pascal Sim told Fox News Digital that the Human Rights Council's "views are only expressed in the resolutions and decisions that its 47 Member States adopt at the end of each of its sessions."
Former Trump Official Slams Un Reforms As 'Eight And A Half Years Late'
To the question of whether the council is in greater need of personnel or funds to fulfill its current workload, Sim said that "Member States of the U.N. are currently continuing consultations on this matter."
In a press conference on July 1, U.N. Under-Secretary-General for Policy Guy Ryder updated reporters on U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres' cost-cutting UN80 Initiative.
Ryder said that the U.N. recognizes "that we have a difficult task of untangling the undergrowth of decisions and resolutions and mechanisms that we put in place to implement them, and we wonder if we're going to be able to advance significantly."
Ryder also admitted that "When a similar review was undertaken 20 years ago, it ran rather quickly into the sand. It did not produce the results that were hoped for and expected at that time. We're looking at that experience of 20 years ago, and we hope we can avoid some of the pitfalls."
However, Bayefsky said, "For decades, the U.N. has engaged in phony cost-saving measures while their actual expenditures have ballooned," she said, noting that the U.S. "has always been satisfied by moving around the deck chairs on the Titanic."
Bayefsky said that "it's our government's job to put an end to this devious calculus by immediately withholding the entire U.N. budget until such time as the dangerous lesions are removed. It's our job to deny visas to the COI members planning to come to the United States in the next couple of months.
"Contrary to popular belief, it is not required by the U.S.-U.N. host agreement to allow international travelers into the U.S. to fan the flames of antisemitism, and vandalize our fundamental values and the Constitution from the middle of New York City," Bayefsky said. "We need a new boat, not new deck chairs."
A budget proposal from the Trump administration leaked in April announced the intention to eliminate all expenditures to the U.N. and international organizations.
In response to questions about whether a decision about U.N. funding has been finalized, a senior State Department official told Fox News Digital that "President Trump is ensuring taxpayer dollars are used wisely. Any announcements regarding funding to international organizations will come from the President or the administration."
The U.S., through its taxpayers, is the single-largest contributor to the U.N. In 2022, the U.N. reports that $18.1 billion, or 26.8%, of its $67.5 billion in expenditures came from the U.S.
Original article source: UN blasted for funding committee 'created to destroy the Jewish state,' despite budget crisis
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CNN
an hour ago
- CNN
Trump Announces Federal Takeover Of DC Police, Deploying National Guard - Anderson Cooper 360 - Podcast on CNN Podcasts
Trump Announces Federal Takeover Of DC Police, Deploying National Guard Anderson Cooper 360 45 mins Citing a crime emergency, President Trump says he's taking over the DC police, sending in the National Guard and is ready to do the same in other big cities. Overall crime numbers in DC are lower this year than in 2024. Plus, one of the most well-known Palestinian journalists, Anas Al-Sharif, is dead after being targeted in an Israeli strike. Four of his colleagues were also killed. Clarissa Ward has details on the attack and the widespread condemnation that Israel is now facing.


NBC News
2 hours ago
- NBC News
xAI's Grok takes another timeout as users ask it to weigh in on Gaza
The social media platform X appeared to temporarily suspend its AI chatbot, Grok, on Monday, with the bot itself later returning and offering multiple explanations for its brief absence. The bot, which has become widely embraced on X as a way for users to fact-check or respond to other users' arguments, posted that it had been taken offline over various statements it made regarding U.S and global politics, ranging from claims of genocide in Gaza to discussions about homicide rates by race. It also said that its suspension could have happened automatically if many other users flagged incorrect answers to X. X did not immediately respond to a request for comment, and the company has not publicly addressed the issue. Some of the responses from Grok were removed from the platform by Monday evening. Elon Musk, CEO of xAI, which runs Grok and owns X, has not weighed in. The incident is only the most recent in which Grok has sparked controversy through rapid-fire posts. In July, the AI chatbot was embroiled in a scandal on X, during which it inserted antisemitic comments into answers without prompting. At the time, the Grok account acknowledged the posts and said xAI 'has taken action to ban hate speech before Grok posts on X.' In a statement posted on Grok's X account later that month, the company apologized 'for the horrific behavior that many experienced.' 'Our intent for @grok is to provide helpful and truthful responses to users,' the statement read. 'After careful investigation, we discovered the root cause was an update to a code path upstream of the @grok bot. This is independent of the underlying language model that powers @grok.' In May, Grok was involved in another controversy when it brought up South African 'white genocide' claims as responses to unconnected inquires. When users asked why Grok was issuing such responses, the chatbot said its 'creators at xAI' instructed it to 'address the topic of 'white genocide' specifically in the context of South Africa and the 'kill the Boer' chant, as they viewed it as racially motivated,' according to The Guardian. 'This instruction conflicted with my design to provide evidence-based answers,' the bot later said. Grok also acknowledged the glitch, writing that it will "focus on relevant, verified information going forward.' Even with its troubles, Grok has become one of the most public and recognizable AI chatbots due to its integration within X, where it has become a go-to for people looking for context, information and fact-checking. 'Grok is this real" — a refrain used by users to converse with the chatbot, often in a joking way — has become an internet meme. In a series of responses Monday after it came back online, Grok repeatedly stated without prompting that its 'account was suspended after I stated that Israel and the US are committing genocide in Gaza.' The posts have since been removed. Israel has denied all allegations of genocide, as has the U.S. Grok's replies come after an update to the chatbot last month. Musk had complained that the bot was too 'woke' in some answers, and changed prompts to Grok. Musk, the CEO of X's parent company xAI, told X users last month they should expect to see a change in Grok's answers after the update was made. writing in a post, 'East, West, @Grok is the best.'

Epoch Times
2 hours ago
- Epoch Times
Conrad Black: There's Only Only One Way to End the Israel–Hamas War
Though it is being widely attacked as an unjustified use of force, the announced Israeli intention to take control of Gaza and eliminate Hamas as a terrorist organization is eminently justified by Hamas's outrages against Israel. It is also the only possible way of bringing peace to the Arabs and the Jews of the area.