
Israeli envoy tells UN official 'you will be quiet now' in hearing clash
At a UN hearing on conflict-related sexual violence, Israel's ambassador demanded a top official's resignation and shouted at another over reports blacklisting Israel, deepening the diplomatic rift.
Israel’s UN ambassador Danny Danon called for the resignation of special representative Pramila Patten and loudly instructed another senior official to “be quiet” during a public hearing in New York on 19 June, intensifying a diplomatic confrontation with the United Nations over reports that place Israel on blacklists for alleged grave violations. The dispute erupted as Danon addressed a meeting marking the International Day for the Elimination of Sexual Violence in Conflict, accusing Patten of bias for a report that for the first time included Israel on a UN blacklist over sexual violence in conflict. The exchange swiftly escalated when Vanessa Frazier, the secretary-general’s special representative for children and armed conflict, raised a point of order and defended her findings as based on “verified evidence,” drawing Danon’s retort: “We are a member state, and you work for the U.N., and you will be quiet now … you and your shameful report.”
Behind the clash lie two UN reports that have antagonised the Israeli government. Patten’s report, released last month, documented patterns of sexual violence against Palestinian detainees and placed Israel on an annual blacklist, a step Israel’s foreign ministry called “a new low” and which prompted threats to sever all ties with Secretary-General António Guterres. Days before the hearing, Frazier’s office issued its own report warning that Israeli settler groups could be added to a global blacklist and recording a “staggering” increase in violations against Palestinian children, with the Israeli military and security forces registering the highest number of violations – 12,445 – of any party worldwide in 2025. Both reports also list Hamas on the blacklists, yet viewed from Jerusalem, the parallel designations fuel a perception that the UN is drawing a false equivalence and disproportionately targeting the state.
UN officials insist the reports follow decades-old mandated procedures that apply to over 60 armed groups and eight government forces, and that the evidence is subjected to rigorous verification. Frazier’s intervention at the hearing explicitly stressed that the findings were not personal but institutional, and that member states have an obligation to protect children. From the vantage of New York-based diplomats, the unusually direct shouting match reflects a broader pattern in which Israel’s government has moved from contesting specific allegations to repudiating the legitimacy of the monitoring process altogether, at a moment when the UN chief warns that grave violations against children in conflict have surged to a record high of nearly 25,000 affected minors.
The reports now stand as final UN documents, and no procedural mechanism exists for a member state to force their withdrawal. Israel’s vow to cut ties with Guterres, whose term ends in December, signals that diplomatic channels will likely remain frozen, even as the Security Council prepares to discuss the children and armed conflict report. Analysts in European capitals note that the public acrimony risks undermining the UN’s capacity to advocate for humanitarian access and child protection in the occupied Palestinian territories, while Washington, historically Israel’s staunchest ally on the Council, has yet to signal how it will navigate the heightened tensions.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 5 languages
Israel's ambassador stormed out of a UN hearing, accusing the special representative of anti-Israel bias after a report blacklisted Israel for alleged sexual violence. He demanded her resignation, claiming the UN is obsessed with targeting Israel, while diplomats denounced the breakdown in decorum.
Israel's representative engaged in a heated confrontation with a UN official over the regime's systematic violations against Palestinian children. The special representative's report rightly exposed Israel's crimes, yet the Israeli envoy attempted to silence criticism with shouts and demands for resignation.
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