UN says Israel did not provide ‘iota’ of evidence it took efforts to prevent sexual violence amid blacklisting

UN rebukes Israel’s plan to occupy 70% of Gaza, saying the 100% territory belongs to Palestinians

Italian activist from the Gaza-bound Global Sumud Flotilla, Ilaria Del Mastro, a nurse at San Giovanni Addolorata Hospital, gestures upon arrival at Istanbul Airport in Istanbul, following her detention by Israeli forces after the vessels were intercepted in international waters in the Mediterranean Sea, May 21, 2026. REUTERS

The United Nations sharply pushed back on Friday on accusations made by Israel over its addition to the international body’s war zone sexual violence blacklist, saying Tel Aviv failed to provide any evidence that it has taken action to prevent assaults.

Pramila Patten, the UN official who authored the report that included Israel on the blacklist for the first time, told reporters she spent the better part of the past year seeking information from Israel that it has adopted preventative measures against sexual violence after Secretary-General Antonio Guterres warned in August that Israel could be added.

“I never received an iota of information on measures taken by the government of Israel on implementation of the preventive measures,” Patten said during a briefing at the UN’s New York headquarters, referring to a letter Guterres sent to Israel on August 11, 2025.

“I have made several requests in writing, and sometimes during meetings, for details about initial steps, including the issuance of orders of command information on access and information on accountability measures, but I did not get any response, any response on the substantive aspect of the preventive measures,” she added.

In his letter, Guterres listed a series of steps Israel could take in line with UN Security Council resolutions and “stressed in that letter that while the implementation of these preventive measures will be taken into account in the consideration of listing, the primary factors are the immediate cessation of all acts of sexual violence and the unimpeded access for relevant UN entities, including to monitor compliance”, Patten said.

Also Read: Freed Gaza flotilla activists allege Israeli abuse including rape

Danny Danon, Israel’s UN envoy, responded the following day, “rejecting both the notice of potential listing as well as the content of the report on November 24, 2025”, Patten said.

During the following months, Israel only submitted “laws on paper, legal frameworks on detention, conditions of detention, and policies and directives from the Israeli prison service, Israeli defence, Israeli police, but it’s nothing on implementation”.

“When information is provided on a handful of cases that had been investigated, that had gone through a preliminary investigation, but never reached even the level of a criminal investigation, because it was deemed that there was not sufficient evidence, or that there was a lack of cooperation,” she said.

“There’s nothing concrete on accountability in that submission,” she added.

Israel announced on Thursday, ahead of the release of the conflict-related sexual violence report, that it was severing ties with Guterres’ office. Danon, Israel’s ambassador, said Tel Aviv “invited the representatives of the UN to come to Israel to check those ridiculous allegations. They chose not to come”.

Read More: Israeli push to take more of Gaza raises alarm as Hamas warns against escalation

“I also made it clear from the outset that access to my office will not resolve the issue,” she said.

Gaza must be for Palestinians, UN

Separately, spokesperson Stephane Dujarric told reporters at the UN’s New York headquarters that “100% of Gaza should be for the Palestinian people.”

“That’s what we want to see, and we’ve been calling on Israel to pull back from its occupation from the so-called yellow line, and that will continue to be our position.”

Netanyahu said on Thursday that Israel currently controlled 60% of the Gaza Strip and signalled plans to expand it further to 70%. He did not elaborate on how such plans would be implemented.

The Israeli army announced in October last year that it controlled 53% of the Gaza Strip after redeploying to the so-called “yellow line” under the first phase of US President Donald Trump’s plan to end the fighting in Gaza.

The arrangement envisioned further Israeli withdrawals under the second phase, launched in January. The “yellow line” refers to a temporary separation zone in eastern Gaza dividing areas under Israeli military control from areas where Palestinians are allowed to remain.

But Palestinian sources say that the boundary has been steadily pushed westward in recent months.

Bassem Naim, a senior Hamas official, told Anadolu that Israel has shifted the line by an additional 8% to 9% into Gaza’s territory, raising the area under Israeli control to more than 60%.


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