The Asian Age

UN emergency meet on Gaza

UNGA will vote on Arab- backed resolution condemning Israel Ex- diplomat to face sex abuse trial

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United Nations, June 9: The UN General Assembly will hold an emergency meeting next Wednesday at 19: 00 GMT to vote on an Arab- backed resolution on Gaza, the body’s president Miroslav Lajcak announced Friday.

The resolution will condemn Israel, and will be similar to one vetoed by the United States in the Security Council last week, which called for protecting Palestinia­ns from Israeli aggression, according to diplomats.

It comes as four Palestinia­ns were killed by Israeli fire on the Gaza border on Friday, as weeks of deadly clashes with protesters continued.

Resolution­s adopted by the General Assembly have no binding value, unlike those passed by the Security Council.

“We will work next week to get the maximum number of votes,” a diplomat from a country that supported the measure said.

Arab countries turned to the General Assembly in December after the US vetoed a Security Council vote on a resolution to condemn its decision to move its embassy in Israel from Tel Jerusalem.

Fourteen members of the Security Council backed the December resolution, though the US as well as the council’s four other permanent members retain a right to veto.

The measure then received 128 votes out of 193 in the General Assembly. A diplomatic source said the emergency meeting had been pushed by the Organizati­on of Islamic States and the Arab League. Several European countries have tried to dissuade Palestinia­ns and Arab countries from demanding a vote in the General Assembly after last week’s US veto.

“Everyone told them not to do it,” said a diplomat on condition of anonymity. Aviv to Vatican City, June 9: A monsignor who was a former advisor at the Vatican’s US embassy in Washington will face charges of possessing and exchanging child pornograph­y, the Holy See announced Saturday.

In a statement it said that Carlo Alberto Capella was ordered to face trail on Thursday, with the first hearing set for June 22.

The US State Department notified the Vatican in August through diplomatic channels of a possible violation of child pornograph­y laws.

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