On 11 August 2014, the UNHRC established a committee to investigate alleged war crimes during the
2014 Israel–Gaza conflict.
William Schabas, a
Canadian professor of international law, was named chairman of the committee.
Amal Clooney, from
Lebanon, was selected due to her expertise on international law. She turned down the offer.
Doudou Diène, from
Senegal, was selected due to his expertise on racial discrimination. Mary McGowan Davis, a former New York Supreme Court Judge, was selected on 25 August to be the third member, replacing Clooney.
Schabas controversy Schabas's appointment was criticized by Canada's Foreign Minister
John Baird and the Geneva-based advocacy NGO
UN Watch, who called Schabas anti-Israel. Schabas dismissed Baird's accusation as absurd, noting that he, Schabas, was on the editorial board of the
Israel Law Review. In reply to UN Watch's demand he recuse himself on the grounds that he had once criticized
Benjamin Netanyahu, Schabas said: "Is everyone in Israel who has an opinion about Netanyahu anti-Israel?". Schabas said at the time that there was some merit in comments by critics that Israel was being singled out by the UN for human rights violations, but added that double standards and bias in the UN works both ways, at times to Israel's advantage, citing the fact that the United States almost invariably vetoes resolutions critical of Israel in the
Security Council. The Israeli government condemned the appointment of Schabas, and Israel's Ambassador to the UN,
Ron Prosor, said in an interview "Forming an investigatory committee headed by Schabas is like inviting ISIS to organize religious tolerance week at the UN." On 2 February 2015, Schabas resigned after an Israeli complaint that he had billed the
Palestine Liberation Organization for $1,300 in 2012 for legal advice he gave them at their request, a precedent which might constitute evidence of a
conflict of interest with his position as head of the investigative committee. He stated that he did not want the controversy to overshadow the work of the Gaza inquiry. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called on the UNHRC to shelve its report due to Schabas's resignation.
Avigdor Lieberman attributed Schabas's resignation to Israel's diplomatic work. According to Israeli commentator
Gideon Levy, Schabas had fallen victim to investigative character assassination. ==Investigation==