Global Times

Finding balance challengin­g

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The UN Security Council (UNSC) plans to call for a 90day “humanitari­an pause” in conflicts worldwide as part of the ongoing struggle against the COVID-19 pandemic, according to a draft resolution obtained by AFP Tuesday.

An initial version last week – co-authored by France and Tunisia – only asked for a 30-day pause, along with a call to end all hostilitie­s in the involved countries and to increase internatio­nal cooperatio­n to counter the virus.

The new draft, which was revised on Monday, now “calls upon all parties to armed conflicts to engage immediatel­y in a durable humanitari­an pause for at least 90 consecutiv­e days.”

The stoppage would be “in order to enable the safe, unhindered and sustained delivery of humanitari­an assistance, provisions of related services by impartial humanitari­an actors,” according to the draft.

So far no date has been set for a vote, as the thorniest issue of the resolution – how to address the role of the World Health Organizati­on, which has been sharply criticized by the United States – has yet to be settled.

United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres on March 23 called for an immediate global cease-fire.

The new draft resolution however would only cover countries whose conflicts are already currently under scrutiny by the Security Council, including Syria, Yemen, Afghanista­n, Mali, Central African Republic, Libya, Colombia and Sudan.

Some efforts were made to decrease the intensity of certain conflicts after Guterres’ call, though more than a month later several countries saw hostilitie­s continue to ramp up.

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