The Borneo Post

US vetoes UN Gaza truce resolution

- Palestinia­n

Israel kept up its deadly bombardmen­t of wartorn Gaza as Washington vetoed a UN Security Council resolution that called for a ceasefire in the Palestinia­n territory.

Global powers trying to navigate a way out of the spiralling crisis have so far come up short, and mediation efforts have so far failed to secure a truce to halt the fighting.

Adding to Gaza’s woes, the UN’s food agency said Tuesday that it had to stop desperatel­y-needed deliveries to the north of the territory after facing “complete chaos and violence” there -- a decision condemned by Hamas.

The World Food Programme had only just resumed deliveries Sunday but said its convoy was met with gunfire, violence and looting, while a truck driver was beaten.

“We are shocked about this decision by the World Food Programme to suspend the delivery of food aid in northern Gaza, which means a death sentence and death for threequart­ers of a million people,” the Hamas government media office said Tuesday night.

Calling on the agency to “immediatel­y reverse its disastrous decision”, it said “we hold the United Nations and the internatio­nal community responsibl­e”.

Since the start of the war between Israel and Hamas, Gaza has been plunged into a food crisis, with outside aid severely restricted.

The UN has repeatedly sounded the alarm over the dire humanitari­an situation in Gaza, warning that food shortages could lead to an “explosion” of preventabl­e child deaths.

More than four months of relentless fighting have flattened much of the coastal territory, pushing 2.2 million people to the brink of famine and displacing three-quarters of the population, according to UN estimates.

“We can’t take it anymore. We do not have flour, we don’t even know where to go in this cold weather,” said Ahmad, a resident of Gaza city, where streets are strewn with rubble from destroyed buildings and garbage.

“We demand a ceasefire. We want to live,” he said. But in New York, Washington vetoed a UN Security Council resolution drafted by Algeria, which demanded an immediate humanitari­an ceasefire and the “unconditio­nal” release of all hostages kidnapped in the Oct 7 attacks. Linda Thomas-Greenfield, Washington’s ambassador to the UN, called the vote “wishful and irresponsi­ble” as it could put negotiatio­ns to free hostages in Gaza “in jeopardy”.

The veto provoked criticism from countries including China, Russia, Saudi Arabia and even close US allies France and Slovenia. Hamas said the US veto equalled “a green light for the occupation to commit more massacres”.

As world powers voted, Israeli strikes pounded Gaza early Wednesday as fighting on the ground raged on, leaving 103 people dead, according to the Hamas-run health ministry in the territory. Witnesses reported heavy fire in areas around Gaza, including the south of the territory’s main city Khan Yunis and Rafah near the Egyptian border, where around 1.4 million displaced Palestinia­ns have sought shelter.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Thomas-Greenfield casts a veto vote during a UN Security Council meeting on the Israel-Hamas war, at UN Headquarte­rs in New York City.
— AFP photo Thomas-Greenfield casts a veto vote during a UN Security Council meeting on the Israel-Hamas war, at UN Headquarte­rs in New York City.

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