Saturday, June 20, 2026

Heated Clash At UN Hearing On Children Caught In Conflict

Danny Danon told a senior United Nations official to be quiet. Twice. In public. At a hearing meant to mark progress against sexual violence in conflict. Israel’s ambassador to the U.N. used Friday’s session in New York not to discuss the day’s stated purpose, but to demand the resignation of Pramila Patten, the U.N. envoy who authored a report last month placing Israel on a global blacklist for sexual violence allegations — the first time the country has appeared on that particular list.

The demand alone might have made for a tense afternoon. What followed made it a spectacle.

Vanessa Frazier, Guterres’ special representative for children and armed conflict, rose on a point of order as Danon spoke, demanding he refrain from “personal attacks” and asserting that her own findings rested on “verified evidence.” Frazier had her own reason to feel targeted.

Days earlier, she had issued a separate report warning that Israeli settler groups in the West Bank could be added to a U.N. blacklist for violations against children — a report that, like Patten’s, already lists Israel in its so-called annexes of shame.

Danon did not yield the floor.

“We are a member state, and you work for the U.N., and you will be quiet now,” he said. “You will be quiet … you and your shameful report.”

The exchange capped weeks of escalating friction between Israel and the U.N. human rights architecture, friction that traces back to Patten’s report and the reaction it triggered. When that report surfaced last month, Danon called it “a new low,” and Israel’s foreign ministry announced it would sever all ties with Secretary-General Antonio Guterres — a man set to leave office at year’s end after a decade in the post.

Friday’s hearing gave that promise its first real test, and Danon kept faith with it. He accused Patten directly of bending to institutional pressure rather than evidence. “You caved to the secretary-general’s obsession with targeting Israel,” he told her.

Guterres has not stayed quiet on the underlying issue, either.

In releasing Frazier’s report this week, he described a “staggering” rise in violations against Palestinian children — language that, paired with the settler-blacklist warning, gave Israeli officials fresh grounds to argue the U.N. secretariat has turned against them on two fronts simultaneously, not one.

Both reports complicate any simple narrative of an institution singling out a single party. Patten’s sexual-violence report and Frazier’s children-and-conflict report each blacklist Hamas as well as Israel, placing the Palestinian militant group and the Israeli state in the same annexes for different alleged conduct in the same conflict. Israeli officials have largely declined to dwell on that parallel, focusing instead on the inclusion of Israel itself as the injustice requiring correction.

Read also: Global Child Mortality Fell To 4.9m In 2022 – UN Report

For Patten, Friday’s hearing arrived as her tenure compiling the conflict-related sexual violence mandate draws continued scrutiny from one of the U.N.’s most vocal member states. For Frazier, a former Maltese ambassador to the U.N., it was her first major public confrontation since stepping into a mandate that now sits at the center of Israeli grievance alongside Patten’s.

Neither report was the formal subject of Friday’s session. The day exists on the U.N. calendar to mark progress against sexual violence in armed conflict generally, not to litigate any single country’s listing. That the hearing became a venue for confronting Patten anyway says something about how thin the line has worn between the U.N.’s thematic mandates and the Israel-specific disputes now attached to nearly all of them.

Guterres, departing in roughly six months, leaves his successor an institution where two separate accountability mechanisms have each named Israel in the same year — and where a member state’s ambassador has now told a U.N. official, on the record and in English the transcript will preserve, to be quiet.