Another Amnesty Gaza Report Fails All Credibility Tests
Amnesty Internationals report, "Families under the Rubble," is yet another example of the organizations faulty methodology, lack of expertise and anti-Israel bias.
NGOs: | Amnesty International (AI) |
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Other Content Types: | Press Releases, In The Media, Presentations, Posts, , Key Issues |
Publications: | Reports, Books, Academic Publications, Submissions, Resource Pages |
Start date: | 1 Jan 1988 |
End date: | Jul 2024 |
Amnesty Internationals report, "Families under the Rubble," is yet another example of the organizations faulty methodology, lack of expertise and anti-Israel bias.
In advance of a Nov. 5 report to be released by Amnesty International, NGO Monitor emphasizes Amnestys lack of professional investigatory methodology and urges journalists to approach all such factual and legal claims with caution.
Naftali Balanson asserts that humanitarian aid groups, as well as their funders, must establish better practices to minimize the risk of exploitation and prevent material aid from reaching terrorist organizations, including the Islamic State and Hamas.
Despite the faade of professionalism and expertise of Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International, any conclusions of their current investigations should be treated with the skepticism they deserve.
NGO Monitor strongly condemns the appointment of William Schabas to head the new UN Gaza commission and calls on all UN member states to demand his immediate dismissal.
As with all Amnesty Internationals publications on the Arab-Israeli conflict, its Q&A on the Israel/Gaza conflict, July 2014 contains many methodological flaws, under the faade of legal and military expertise.
Prof. Gerald Steinberg addresses an emergency session on antisemitism at the Immigration, Absorption and Diaspora Committee of the Knesset.
Josh Bacon claims that the discovery of a Gaza terror tunnel network should cause NGOs and their European government funders to rethink their ongoing campaigns against Israeli policies.