The Guardian (Nigeria)

Palestinia­n envoy seeks immediate end to Israel- Hamas crisis

• U. S., UK others temporaril­y halt humanitari­an funding

- By Gbenga Salau

PALESTINIA­N Ambassador to Nigeria, Abdullah Mohammed Shawesh, yesterday, urged immediate ceasefire to the Israel- Hamas war, saying two women, every hour, and children die daily.

Addressing a media briefing, the envoy demanded investigat­ion into what happened not only on October 7, but also incidents that occurred on October 5 and 6.

Shawesh equally called for humanitari­an aid for Gaza people in the face of humongous starvation.

The diplomat pleaded that all hostages should be freed, imploring that the African Union ( AU) should be made a member of a commission of enquiry to probe the imbroglio.

He maintained that it was erroneous to allude that the crisis has a religious undertone. The ambassador stated that it is in the interest of all for the war to end amid justice and respect for internatio­nal laws.

For him, no one is safe until everyone is made safe. Secretary General of Nigerian Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs, Prof. Is- haq Oloyede, in his welcome address, stated that religion is insignific­ant in the ongoing crisis, advising that the issue should be viewed from the humanity and humanitari­an prisms.

According to him, though NSCIA organised the interactiv­e session due to the humanitari­an crisis that the war has birthed, he maintained that those imputing religious colouratio­n have limited understand­ing of the whole situation.

MEANWHILE, several countries, at the weekend, temporaril­y halted their funding of United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East ( UNRWA) owing to allegation­s that 12 employees were involved in the massacre. Its Commission­er General, Philippe Lazzarini, in a statement, observed: “Nine countries have, as of today, temporaril­y suspended their funding to UNRWA. “These decisions threaten our ongoing humanitari­an work across the region, including and especially in the Gaza Strip.”

The aid organisati­on runs shelter for more than one million internally displaced persons and provides food and basic medical care to most of the inhabitant­s of the Gaza Strip.

“Our humanitari­an operation, on which two million people depend as a lifeline in Gaza, is collapsing,” Lazzari wrote on Saturday evening on the online platform X ( formerly Twitter). He said he was shocked that such decisions were being made based on the presumed behaviour of a few people.

“Palestinia­ns in Gaza did not need this additional collective punishment. “This stains all of us,” Lazzarini added.

Important donors such as the United States, United Kingdom and Germany decided to temporaril­y halt funding because 12 of the organisati­on’s several thousand employees in the Gaza Strip were allegedly involved in the October 7 attacks. They were dismissed immediatel­y.

Lazzarini had announced that Israel had provided his organisati­on with informatio­n implicatin­g UNRWA employees in the attacks.

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