U.N. rights chief defends Goldstone Gaza findings By Robert Evans 02/24/2010 Reuters.com Original Source: http://ca.reuters.com/article/topNews/idCATRE61N54G20100224?sp=true GENEVA (Reuters) - United Nations human rights chief Navi Pillay defended on Wednesday the controversial Goldstone investigation into Israel's 2008-2009 military assault in Gaza, saying both its methods and conclusions were sound. The report by a team headed by South African jurist Richard Goldstone was issued last September and found that both the Israeli army and Islamist group Hamas, which controls Gaza, were guilty of war crimes in the conflict but focused more on Israel. Israel, which refused to cooperate with Goldstone, has condemned the report as distorted and biased and rejected the war crimes allegations. Hamas denied its fighters committed war crimes but has said it regrets Israeli civilian deaths. Pillay said U.N. rights missions like Goldstone's were vital for the pursuit of truth, despite attacks by governments and other parties seeking to distract attention from the findings. These vehement arguments tried to shift the focus away from the soundness of the methodology and findings of the mission to plunge the debate into the quick sands of the highly partisan politics of the Middle East conflict, Pillay said in a speech prepared for delivery. The Goldstone mission succeeded in placing the acute need for accountability on the international community's agenda, compelling the sides to take note of the documented facts and the calls for justice from all victims, she said. More than 1,400 Palestinians and 13 Israelis died in the three-week conflict after Israel launched its operation in what it said was a bid to halt Hamas rocket fire on its towns near Gaza. The Goldstone report called on both sides to carry out credible investigations of their own, saying that if they failed, the question should be referred to the International Criminal Court in The Hague. But U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon earlier this month cast doubt on the credibility of investigations by the Israelis and the Palestinian Authority, which has no control over Gaza. The issue returns to the U.N. General Assembly at a session tentatively scheduled for Friday, when the 192-nation body is expected to pass a new resolution calling for independent and credible investigations by both sides of Goldstone's charges. Israel last month handed the United Nations a report on its conduct of the Gaza war, while the Palestinian Authority sent a letter saying it had begun an inquiry. Many U.N. members say the Israeli report was not independent as it was written by the armed forces, which are the target of Goldstone's accusations, while the Palestinian probe had only just started. (Editing by Jonathan Lynn and Eric Beech)