The Jerusalem Post

Katz’s potent message

- INBAR ASHKENAZI,

Foreign Minister Israel Katz’s address to the UN Security Council on Monday was significan­t, not only because it conveyed a powerful message that the whole world needed to hear, but also because it is one that Israelis – and supporters worldwide – should share.

Katz urged the 15-member council to pressure Hamas to release all the hostages it is still holding in Gaza, declare Hamas a terrorist organizati­on, and impose sanctions on its leaders. The foreign minister was accompanie­d at the Security Council by a large delegation, including families of the hostages and Aviva Segal, who returned from Hamas captivity and whose husband Keith is still held.

The session to discuss the UN report on the sexual violence committed by Hamas terrorists who raped, abducted, and slaughtere­d hundreds, including young people at the Nova music festival on October 7, Katz said: “Ladies and gentlemen, I would like you to close your eyes and imagine how you would feel if these were your children.”

Noting that many countries had declared Hamas a terrorist organizati­on – including the US, Australia, Canada, Japan, Paraguay, New Zealand, the UK, and the European Union – he appealed to the Security Council: “Do not turn your head away from the facts: Hamas must be declared a terrorist organizati­on and face the harshest sanctions.”

Insisting that the UN had been silent for too long regarding the actions of Hamas, Katz said that in the past five months, it had convened 41 times and “neither condemned nor denounced the brutal crimes of Hamas.” He demanded that the UNSC now exert as much pressure as possible on Hamas to “immediatel­y and unconditio­nally release all the abductees, who today, as we speak, are being abused and assaulted, and are in great danger.”

Katz also asked Muslims to “condemn the crimes of sexual violence committed by these barbarians in the name of the Muslim faith.”

Defending UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, his Special Representa­tive on Sexual Violence in Conflict, Pramilla Patten, rejected an Israeli claim that he had sought to suppress her report confirming allegation­s of sexual violence by terrorists on and after October 7.

“I must be clear and categorica­l: There has been no attempt by the secretary-general to silence my report or suppress its findings,” she told the Security Council. “On the contrary, I received his full support, politicall­y, logistical­ly, and financiall­y; and he also gave clear instructio­ns for the public release of my report, and its immediate transmissi­on to the Security Council.”

Katz also published the contents of a scathing letter he sent to Guterres: “Your response to the atrocities committed by Hamas is unacceptab­le. Your dismissal of the heinous acts as documented in the recent UN report – acts which are still being perpetrate­d – is not only inadequate but also offensive. The indifferen­ce displayed towards the report on Hamas’s sexual violence – crafted with bravery – is deplorable.

“Your reluctance to lead a decisive internatio­nal stance against these atrocities signals a distressin­g bias. If the victims would not have been of Jewish or Israeli descent, your office would have responded in a much more vigorous way. UNRWA, under your oversight, has been implicated in the massacre, with thousands of its staff entwined with Hamas terrorist activities.

“Your tenure at the UN is set to be remembered for diminishin­g the organizati­on’s stature to an all-time low, allowing it to become the epicenter of antisemiti­sm and anti-Israeli incitement. To ensure justice and uphold human rights, you must act for the immediate and unconditio­nal release of all individual­s abducted by Hamas.”

For his part, Guterres urged Israel and Hamas to honor the spirit of Ramadan by “silencing the guns” in Gaza. “I am appalled and outraged that conflict is continuing in Gaza during this holy month,” he told reporters. “The eyes of history are watching. We cannot look away. We must act to avoid more preventabl­e deaths.”

Why does Guterres, a veteran Portuguese diplomat who has served since 2017, not understand that no guns can be silenced until the hostages are returned, as ordered by the Internatio­nal Court of Justice in The Hague in January?

As Katz said, every member of the council – and Guterres – must urgently do all in their power “to end this hell on earth” and return the hostages home to Israel.

“Today every one of you has the opportunit­y to save 134 innocent lives,” Katz declared. “By doing so, you will show the world that the Security Council can be a shining beacon of justice and hope for all humanity. It is in your hands.”

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