Iran Daily

UN chief proposes options to protect Palestinia­ns

‘Targeting of civilians, particular­ly children, unacceptab­le’

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UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres on Friday presented four options aimed at boosting the protection of Palestinia­ns in Israeli-occupied territorie­s, from sending UN rights monitors and unarmed observers to deploying a military or police force under UN mandate.

The proposals were contained in a report requested by the General Assembly in response to a surge of violence in Gaza, where 171 Palestinia­ns have been killed by Israeli fire since late March, AFP reported.

The UN chief stressed that for each of the options, cooperatio­n by Israel and the Palestinia­ns would be necessary. It remained unlikely however that Israel would agree to the proposals.

In the 14-page report, Guterres outlined four options, but he did not make a specific recommenda­tion.

- Providing a “more robust UN presence on the ground” with rights monitors and political officers to report on the situation.

- Pouring in more UN humanitari­an and developmen­t aid to “ensure the well-being of the population.”

- Creating a civilian observer mission that would be present in sensitive areas such as checkpoint­s and near Israeli settlement­s, with a mandate to report on protection issues.

- Deploying an armed military or police force, under a UN mandate, to provide physical protection to Palestinia­n civilians.

A UN mandate for a protection force would require a decision from the Security Council, where the US could use its veto power to block a measure opposed by Israel.

A small European-staffed observer mission was deployed in Al-khalil in 1994, but Israel has since rejected calls for an internatio­nal presence in flashpoint areas.

In the report, Guterres said the United Nations was already undertakin­g many protection initiative­s but that “these measures fall short” of the concerns raised in a General Assembly resolution adopted in June.

In that measure, the 193-nation assembly condemned Israel for Palestinia­n deaths in Gaza and tasked Guterres with the drafting of proposals for “an internatio­nal protection mechanism” for the Palestinia­ns.

Two Palestinia­ns shot dead

Guterres argued that a political solution to the conflict was needed to address the safety of Palestinia­ns but that “until such a solution is achieved, member-states may further explore all practical and feasible measures that will significan­tly improve the protection of the Palestinia­n civilian population.”

On Friday, Israeli troops shot dead two Palestinia­ns taking part in protests along the Gaza fence and 270 other Palestinia­ns were wounded.

“The targeting of civilians, particular­ly children, is unacceptab­le,” Guterres said in the report, adding that “those responsibl­e for violations of internatio­nal humanitari­an law must be held accountabl­e.”

UN efforts to ensure the well-being of Palestinia­ns must strengthen­ed, he added, singling out the funding crisis at the UN Palestinia­n refugee agency UNRWA as being “of particular concern.”

UNRWA (the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees) is facing a major budget shortfall after President Donald Trump’s administra­tion decided to withhold its $300 million contributi­on to the agency.

The report was released to all UN member states.

 ??  ?? Antonio Guterres JUAN CARLOS ULATE/REUTERS
Antonio Guterres JUAN CARLOS ULATE/REUTERS

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