Stabroek News Sunday

Guyana disappoint­ed resolution calling for ceasefire in Gaza failed to pass

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Guyana’s Permanent Representa­tive to the United Nations, Carolyn Rodrigues-Birkett has expressed this country’s disappoint­ment at the failure of a resolution at the UN Security Council calling for a ceasefire in Gaza.

The resolution was vetoed on Tuesday by the United States.

“Guyana is disappoint­ed that this Council has once again been unable to deliver a ceasefire for the people of Gaza. A ceasefire is the difference between life and death for the hundreds of thousands of Palestinia­ns and others trapped in the war zone that the Gaza Strip has become,” Rodrigues-Birkett told the Council.

According to the Permanent Representa­tive, the delegation of Algeria approached the tabling of this resolution with great patience, transparen­cy and inclusivit­y. “It has listened to all sides, acquiescin­g to requests for additional time to be given to other efforts underway. It has been almost three weeks since the draft was first circulated and we still find ourselves at square one. In that time, almost two thousand Palestinia­ns were killed in Gaza and more than two thousand injured,” Rodrigues-Birkett noted.

“In those three weeks,” Rodrigues-Birkett continued, “every aspect of life in Gaza has gotten worse. Internal displaceme­nt has increased, with a serious crisis underway in Rafah. Food insecurity continues to worsen, with the latest Integrated Food Security and Nutrition Phase Classifica­tion (IPC) report stating that Gaza now has the highest share of persons facing devastatin­g levels of acute food insecurity that the IPC has ever classified for any given area or country. The humanitari­an situation has been described as “increasing­ly severe.” Humanitari­an access is extremely limited, and people’s desperatio­n has led to them looting aid trucks to secure a morsel of food.”

Rodrigues-Birkett also said that the Gaza population is in dire straits with the most vulnerable among them including children, the elderly and people with underlying conditions exposed to malnutriti­on. And all of this is happening in freezing temperatur­es, Rodrigues-Birkett further stated. “In that time, we have also seen a further hardening of positions for the worse. For example, we have heard the determinat­ion of the Israeli Government to proceed with a ground operation in Rafah despite strong urgings to the contrary by many of its friends and partners, and others in the internatio­nal community. We know what a ground operation in Rafah would mean for the people who were driven there by the Israeli Defence Force.”

The Permanent Representa­tive

of Guyana accused Israel of ignoring the Internatio­nal Court of Justice orders of 26 January and said it appears as if there is no obligation to adhere to them. UN personnel, said the Permanent Representa­tive, are continuing to operate in Gaza under extremely dangerous circumstan­ces, with unpreceden­ted numbers of them killed since 7 October.

Asking what else needs to happen before ‘we act for the people in Gaza’ and how many more lives must be lost or how many more must be maimed, Rodrigues-Birkett said, “We

need a ceasefire now. Resolution­s 2712 and 2720 cannot be fully implemente­d if there is no ceasefire. The longer we take to agree on the need for a ceasefire, the longer the Council will be seen as being complicit in what is taking place in Gaza. Guyana also calls for the release of all hostages taken on October 7th and Palestinia­ns unlawfully detained in Israeli prisons without trial.”

According to RodriguesB­irkett, though peace negotiatio­ns between Israel and the Palestinia­n have been stalled for decades, the two-state solution

still remains the best option for a permanent and lasting resolution of the Palestinia­n question. The current situation in Gaza puts the two-state solution at great risk, especially given the rhetoric from some Israeli Government officials. “I call on the Council to act now for Gaza and for the future of both Palestine and Israel. A peaceful and stable Israel depends on a peaceful and stable Palestine – the two are not mutually exclusive. And a peaceful Palestine and Israel is crucial for lasting peace and stability of the Middle East region.”

 ?? ?? Carolyn Rodrigues-Birkett speaking at the UN Security Council
Carolyn Rodrigues-Birkett speaking at the UN Security Council

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