Gaza: UN chief pushes for truce

July 23, 2014 12:39 am | Updated December 03, 2021 05:13 pm IST - UNITED NATIONS

Israeli soldiers stand behind a tank as heavy smoke rises from the Gaza Strip on Tuesday.

Israeli soldiers stand behind a tank as heavy smoke rises from the Gaza Strip on Tuesday.

The U.N. secretary-general said on Tuesday it is his “hope and belief” that his emergency mission to the Middle East will lead to an end to the fighting between Hamas and Israel “in the very near future.”

Ban Ki-moon told the Security Council by video-conference from the West Bank city of Ramallah that he could not publicly reveal details “at this highly sensitive moment”. As he started to address the council a siren could be heard in the background.

The U.N. chief has also visited Qatar, Kuwait, Cairo and Jerusalem and said he will go on to Jordan and Saudi Arabia on what he called a mission “of solidarity and peace” to quickly end an escalating two-week war between Israelis and Hamas militants who control the Gaza Strip. Their third conflict in just over five years has already claimed the lives of at least 609 Palestinians, the vast majority civilians, and 29 Israelis 27 soldiers and two civilians.

In the last three days Ban has met with the head of the Arab League and Arab, Palestinian and Israeli leaders as well as U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and Norway’s foreign minister. He also spoke to French President Francois Hollande.

“Suffice it to say, it is my hope and belief that these talks will lead to results and an end to the fighting in the very near future,” Ban said.

Ban said “the most promising prospect of a cease-fire” is an Egyptian initiative to return to the cessation of fighting in November 2012 that has been endorsed by Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and the Arab League but not Hamas.

The U.N. chief stressed, however, that a cease-fire without addressing the root causes of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict will only delay the problem for yet another time. “The cycle will continue except the bitterness and hatred will become that much more entrenched each time it comes around,” Ban said. “Quite simply, if a people are left with despair and occupation, the problem won’t disappear, it will only grow.”

U.S. Ambassador Samantha Power told the council that “an immediate cease-fire could not be more urgent or more important” and stressed that the United States “will not rest” until the fighting ends and the underlying issues are resolved leading to a two-State solution.

Riyad Mansour, the Palestinian U.N. ambassador, demanded to know what the Security Council is doing “to stop this bloodletting, to stop Israel’s atrocities” and uphold its responsibility to protect civilians.

“Without decisive action, the council’s resolutions and statements ring hollow as defenceless civilians find no relief from the murderous Israeli war machine,” he said.

Russia’s U.N. Ambassador Vitaly Churkin said a senior Foreign Ministry official is in the region and plans to hold talks with the Israelis, Palestinians and U.N. He said Russia is ready to consider an Arab-supported resolution.

Mansour read the names of 44 Palestinian children killed in the fighting, aged 8 months to 15 years old, and showed council members grim photos of victims and grieving survivors. The U.N. office of humanitarian affairs estimates that at least 75 per cent of the Palestinian deaths were civilians, including dozens of children.

Israel’s Deputy Ambassador David Roet warned that the struggle Israel is facing today from Hamas “is a preview of the struggle that the rest of the civilized world will likely face tomorrow” from the global spread of “radical Islamist terrorism.”

Roet attacked the formation of a unity government in early June between Abbas’ Fatah movement, which controls the West Bank, and Hamas.

“President Abbas has a choice to make,” Roet said. “He can continue to remain silent and stand in support of Hamas, or he can assume the mantle of leadership by dissolving the unity government. The choice is his to be part of the problem or part of the solution.”

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