Expresses the sense of the Senate that: (1) the United States deplores the past and continuing violation of the human rights and religious freedoms of minority populations in Arab and Muslim countries throughout the Middle East, North Africa, and the Persian Gulf; and (2) with respect to Jews, Christians, and other displaced populations from countries in the region any comprehensive Middle East peace agreement must resolve all outstanding issues, including the legitimate rights of all Middle East refugees.
Urges the President to instruct the U.S. Representative to the United Nations and all U.S. representatives in bilateral and multilateral fora that, when the United States considers resolutions that refer to Middle East refugees, the U.S. delegation should ensure that: (1) relevant text refers to multiple refugee populations that have been caused by the Arab-Israeli conflict; and (2) any explicit reference to the resolution of the Palestinian refugee issue is matched by a similar reference to the resolution of the issue of Jewish, Christian, and other refugees from Arab countries.
Urges the President to make clear that the United States supports the position that, as an integral part of any comprehensive peace, the issue of refugees and the mass violations of human rights of minorities in Arab and Muslim countries throughout the Middle East, North Africa, and the Persian Gulf must be resolved in a manner that includes: (1) consideration of the legitimate rights of all refugees displaced from Arab countries; and (2) recognition of the losses incurred by Jews, Christians, and other minority groups as a result of the Arab-Israeli conflict.
[Congressional Bills 109th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[S. Res. 494 Introduced in Senate (IS)]
109th CONGRESS
2d Session
S. RES. 494
Expressing the sense of the Senate regarding the creation of refugee
populations in the Middle East, North Africa, and the Persian Gulf
region as a result of human rights violations.
_______________________________________________________________________
IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES
May 25, 2006
Mr. Santorum (for himself, Mr. Lautenberg, Mr. Coleman, and Mr. Durbin)
submitted the following resolution; which was referred to the Committee
on Foreign Relations
_______________________________________________________________________
RESOLUTION
Expressing the sense of the Senate regarding the creation of refugee
populations in the Middle East, North Africa, and the Persian Gulf
region as a result of human rights violations.
Whereas armed conflicts in the Middle East have created refugee populations
numbering in the hundreds of thousands and comprised of peoples from
many ethnic, religious, and national backgrounds;
Whereas Jews and other ethnic groups have lived mostly as minorities in the
Middle East, North Africa, and the Persian Gulf region for more than
2,500 years, more than 1,000 years before the advent of Islam;
Whereas the United States has long voiced its concern about the mistreatment of
minorities and the violation of human rights in the Middle East and
elsewhere;
Whereas the United States continues to play a pivotal role in seeking an end to
conflict in the Middle East and continues to promote a peace that will
benefit all the peoples of the region;
Whereas a comprehensive peace in the region will require the resolution of all
outstanding issues through bilateral and multilateral negotiations
involving all concerned parties;
Whereas the United States has demonstrated interest and concern about the
mistreatment, violation of rights, forced expulsion, and expropriation
of assets of minority populations in general, and in particular, former
Jewish refugees displaced from Arab countries, as evidenced, inter alia,
by--
(1) a Memorandum of Understanding signed by President Jimmy Carter and
Israeli Foreign Minister Moshe Dayan on October 4, 1977, which states that
``[a] solution of the problem of Arab refugees and Jewish refugees will be
discussed in accordance with rules which should be agreed'';
(2) a statement made by President Jimmy Carter after negotiating the
Camp David Accords, the Framework for Peace in the Middle East, where he
stated in a press conference on October 27, 1977, that ``Palestinians have
rights . . . obviously there are Jewish refugees . . . they have the same
rights as others do'';
(3) a statement made by President Clinton in an interview after Camp
David II in July 2000, at which the issue of Jewish refugees displaced from
Arab lands was discussed, where he said that ``[t]here will have to be some
sort of international fund set up for the refugees. There is, I think, some
interest, interestingly enough, on both sides, in also having a fund which
compensates the Israelis who were made refugees by the war, which occurred
after the birth of the State of Israel. Israel is full of people, Jewish
people, who lived in predominantly Arab countries who came to Israel
because they were made refugees in their own land.'';
(4) Senate Resolution 76, 85th Congress, introduced by Senator Jenner
on January 29, 1957, which--
(A) noted that individuals in Egypt who are tied by race,
religion, or national origin with Israel, France, or the United
Kingdom have been subjected to arrest, denial or revocation of
Egyptian citizenship, expulsions, forced exile, sequestration
and confiscation of assets and property, and other punishments
without being charged with a crime; and
(B) requested the President to instruct the chief delegate
to the United Nations to urge the prompt dispatch of a United
Nations observer team to Egypt with the objective of obtaining a
full factual report concerning the violation of rights; and
(5) section 620 of H.R. 3100, 100th Congress, which states that
Congress finds that ``with the notable exceptions of Morocco and Tunisia,
those Jews remaining in Arab countries continue to suffer deprivations,
degradations, and hardships, and continue to live in peril'' and that
Congress calls upon the governments of those Arab countries where Jews
still maintain a presence to guarantee their Jewish citizens full civil and
human rights, including the right to lead full Jewish lives, free of fear,
with freedom to emigrate if they so choose;
Whereas the international definition of a refugee clearly applies to Jews who
fled the persecution of Arab regimes, where a refugee is a person who
``owing to a well-founded fear of being persecuted for reasons of race,
religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group, or
political opinion, is outside the country of his nationality, and is
unable to or, owing to such fear, is unwilling to avail himself of the
protection of that country'' (Convention relating to the status of
refugees of July 28, 1951 (189 UNTS 150));
Whereas the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), on 2 separate
occasions, determined that Jews fleeing from Arab countries were
refugees that fell within the mandate of the UNHCR, namely--
(1) when in his first statement as newly elected High Commissioner, Mr.
Auguste Lindt, at the January 29, 1957, meeting of the United Nations
Refugee Fund (UNREF) Executive Committee in Geneva, stated, ``There is
already now another emergency problem arising. Refugees from Egypt. And
there is no doubt in my mind that those of those refugee who are not able
or not willing to avail themselves of the protection of the Government of
their nationality, they might have no nationality or they may have lost
this nationality, or, for reasons of prosecution may not be willing to
avail themselves of this protection, fall under the mandate of the High
Commissioner.'' (United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, Report of
the UNREF Executive Committee, Fourth Session-Geneva 29 January to 4
February, 1957); and
(2) when Dr. E. Jahn, for the United Nations High Commissioner for
Refugees, wrote to Daniel Lack, Legal Adviser to the American Joint
Distribution Committee, on July 6, 1967, stating, ``I refer to our recent
discussion concerning Jews from Middle Eastern and North African countries
in consequence of recent events. I am now able to inform you that such
persons may be considered prima facie within the mandate of this Office.''
(United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees Document No. 7/2/3/Libya);
Whereas the seminal United Nations resolution on the Arab-Israeli conflict and
other international initiatives refer generally to the plight of
``refugees'' and do not make any distinction between Palestinian and
Jewish refugees, such as--
(1) United Nations Security Council Resolution 242 of November 22,
1967, which calls for a ``just settlement of the refugee problem'' without
distinction between Palestinian and Jewish refugees, and this is evidenced
by--
(A) a failed attempt by the United Nations delegation of the
Soviet Union to restrict the ``just settlement'' mentioned in
Resolution 242 solely to Palestinian refugees (S/8236, discussed
by the Security Council at its 1382nd meeting on November 22,
1967, notably at paragraph 117, in the words of Ambassador
Kouznetsov of the Soviet Union), which signified the
international community's intention of having the resolution
address the rights of all Middle East refugees; and
(B) a statement by Justice Arthur Goldberg, the Chief
Delegate of the United States to the United Nations at that
time, who was instrumental in drafting the unanimously adopted
United Nations Resolution 242, where he pointed out that ``The
resolution addresses the objective of `achieving a just
settlement of the refugee problem'. This language presumably
refers both to Arab and Jewish refugees, for about an equal
number of each abandoned their homes as a result of the several
wars.'';
(2) the Madrid Conference, which was first convened in October 1991 and
was co-chaired by President of the United States, George H.W. Bush, and
President of the Soviet Union, Mikhail Gorbachev, and included delegations
from Spain, the European community, the Netherlands, Egypt, Syria, and
Lebanon, as well as a joint Jordanian-Palestinian delegation, where in his
opening remarks before the January 28, 1992, organizational meeting for
multilateral negotiations on the Middle East in Moscow, United States
Secretary of State James Baker made no distinction between Palestinian
refugees and Jewish refugees in articulating the mission of the Refugee
Working Group, stating ``that [t]he refugee group will consider practical
ways of improving the lot of people throughout the region who have been
displaced from their homes''; and
(3) the Roadmap to a Permanent Two-State Solution to the Israeli-
Palestinian Conflict, which refers in Phase III to an ``agreed, just, fair,
and realistic solution to the refugee issue,'' and uses language that is
equally applicable to all persons displaced as a result of the conflict in
the Middle East;
Whereas Egypt, Jordan, and the Palestinians have affirmed that a comprehensive
solution to the Middle East conflict will require a just solution to the
plight of all ``refugees'', as evidenced by--
(1) the 1978 Camp David Accords, the Framework for Peace in the Middle
East, which includes a commitment by Egypt and Israel to ``work with each
other and with other interested parties to establish agreed procedures for
a prompt, just and permanent resolution of the implementation of the
refugee problem'';
(2) the Treaty of Peace between Israel and Egypt, signed at Washington
March 26, 1979, which provides in Article 8 that the ``Parties agree to
establish a claims commission for the mutual settlement of all financial
claims'', in addition to general references to United Nations Security
Council Resolution 242 as the basis for comprehensive peace in the region;
and
(3) Article 8 of the Treaty of Peace Between the State of Israel and
the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan, done at Arava/Araba Crossing Point October
26, 1994, entitled ``Refugees and Displaced Persons'', recognizes ``the
massive human problems caused to both Parties by the conflict in the Middle
East'';
Whereas the call to secure rights and redress for Jewish and other minorities
who were forced to flee Arab countries is not a campaign against
Palestinian refugees;
Whereas the international community should be aware of the plight of Jews and
other minority groups displaced from the Middle East, North Africa, and
the Persian Gulf;
Whereas no just and comprehensive Middle East peace can be reached without
recognition of, and redress for, the uprooting of centuries-old Jewish
communities in the Middle East, North Africa, and the Persian Gulf; and
Whereas it would not be appropriate, and would constitute an injustice, were the
United States to recognize rights for Palestinian refugees without
recognizing equal rights for former Jewish, Christian, and other
refugees from Arab countries: Now, therefore, be it
Resolved,
SECTION 1. SENSE OF THE SENATE ON HUMAN RIGHTS AND REFUGEES.
It is the sense of the Senate that--
(1) the United States deplores the past and present ongoing
violation of the human rights and religious freedoms of
minority populations in Arab and Muslim countries throughout
the Middle East, North Africa, and the Persian Gulf; and
(2) with respect to Jews, Christians, and other populations
displaced from countries in the region, for any comprehensive
Middle East peace agreement to be credible, durable, enduring,
and constitute an end to conflict in the Middle East, the
agreement must address and resolve all outstanding issues,
including the legitimate rights of all refugees of the Middle
East.
SEC. 2. UNITED STATES POLICY ON REFUGEES OF THE MIDDLE EAST.
The Senate urges the President to--
(1) instruct the United States Permanent Representative to
the United Nations and all representatives of the United States
in bilateral and multilateral fora that when considering or
addressing resolutions that allude to the issue of Middle East
refugees, they should ensure that--
(A) relevant text refers to the fact that multiple
refugee populations have been created by the Arab-
Israeli conflict; and
(B) any explicit reference to the required
resolution of the Palestinian refugee issue is matched
by a similar explicit reference to the resolution of
the issue of Jewish, Christian, and other refugees from
Arab countries; and
(2) make clear that the Government of the United States
supports the position that, as an integral part of any
comprehensive peace, the issue of refugees and the mass
violations of human rights of minorities in Arab and Muslim
countries throughout the Middle East, North Africa, and the
Persian Gulf must be resolved in a manner that includes--
(A) consideration of the legitimate rights of all
refugees displaced from Arab countries; and
(B) recognition of the losses incurred by Jews,
Christians, and other minority groups as a result of
the Arab-Israeli conflict.
<all>
Introduced in Senate
Referred to the Committee on Foreign Relations. (text of measure as introduced: CR S5257-5259)
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