S/PV.3505Resumption1 Security Council
▶ This meeting at a glance
42
Speeches
1
Country
0
Resolutions
Topics
Israeli–Palestinian conflict
Security Council deliberations
Peace processes and negotiations
Global economic relations
General statements and positions
Arab political groupings
Middle East
Mr. Graf zu Rantzau (Germany): The representative
of France, in his capacity as representative of the
presidency of the European Union, will express the concern
of the European Union about the difficulties the Middle
East peace process is currently encountering. We fully
subscribe to his statement. Like our European partners, we
too attach utmost importance to the necessity of
re-establishing the momentum of the peace process.
It is obvious that the peace process cannot be
interrupted for too long without the risk of its being
harmed. Both sides have to understand the other's concerns
and fears. For the Israeli side, the increase in terrorist
attacks on its citizens and the resulting security concerns
are of paramount importance. For the Palestinian side,
Israeli settlement activities in the occupied territories are
one of the major obstacles to the peace process.
The German Government condemns the brutal and
indiscriminate acts of terrorism against Israeli citizens. We
fully understand that these attacks raise serious and
legitimate questions of security. They must be addressed by
the Palestinian Authority. Recent steps taken by the
Authority indicate its increasing understanding of how
important it is to make every effort possible in the attempt
to stem such terrorist attacks. The enemies of the peace
process must not be allowed to succeed in their efforts to
derail the process by violent acts.
At the same time, we are concerned at seeing a
growing feeling of disenchantment within the Palestinian
population. People are disappointed at how little their living
conditions have improved as a result of the peace process.
The repeated closures of the territories have in fact
contributed to a deterioration in the economic situations of
many Palestinian families. Moreover, the confirmation of
Israeli settlement activities in the occupied territories is a
major concern for many Palestinians.
Germany and its European partners have declared, on
numerous occasions - most recently through the statement
of the European Union of 5 January 1995 - that a
cessation of settlement activities is vital to the smooth
functioning of the peace process.
In View of these worrisome developments, it is
encouraging that both parties remain committed to the
peace process. There is no credible alternative.
We call upon Israel and the Palestinian Authority to
redouble their efforts to reach agreement on the most
important and pressing issues of security, redeployment of
Israeli troops, elections, settlements and the question of
the transfer of authority to the Palestinians. The bilateral
negotiations are the appropriate channel for solving these
urgent questions.
Germany, together with its partners in the European
Union, remains committed to supporting the peace
process fully.
Mr. Sidorov (Russian Federation) (interpretation from Russian): The Russian Federation has consistently
pursued a policy of promoting progress in the Middle
East peace process. Our country actively worked for
agreement between the parties on conditions that made
possible the Madrid peace conference and enabled direct
Arab-Israeli talks to be begun. In particular, an
understanding was reached that the most complex and
sensitive issues for a Palestinian-Israeli settlement,
including the question of Jerusalem and the settlements,
would be held over to a subsequent stage, namely, until
the talks on the final status of the Palestinian territories.
At the time, the international community took a very
favourable view of the signing of the Palestinian-Israeli
Declaration of Principles, which marked a long-awaited
breakthrough in the Middle East settlement process. The
Russian sponsor of the peace process in the Middle East
believes in the importance of timely and complete
compliance, in good faith, with the letter and the spirit of
this fundamental document.
In this context, we have learned with regret of the
recent exacerbation of the differences between the
Palestinians and the Israelis over the question of the
expansion of settlements, primarily those around
Jerusalem. There can be no doubt that this problem has
had an adverse effect on the talks, which were already
fraught with difficulties without that, on further steps
towards implementing the Declaration of Principles.
In the terms of that document, as members are
aware, it is considered desirable to avoid bringing up the
sort of particularly sensitive problem that would simply
add fuel to the fire to discuss and lead to an escalation of
tension, all to the detriment of the atmosphere of trust at
the talks.
We would like to take this opportunity to reiterate
our condemnation of the violations of human rights in the
occupied territories and also of the terrorist methods
employed by certain extremist groups. If an end is to be put
to the acts of terrorism and Violence in the Middle East,
which are dangerously destabilizing the situation and
imperilling the entire peace process, drastic steps must be
taken, and by joint effort.
We favour timely and effective measures to maintain
the impetus of the peace process and to ensure that it
continues to make progress. We are certain that a
continuation of concentrated efforts towards implementing
the Palestinian-Israeli Declaration of Principles in full and
towards establishing reliable machinery for coexistence
between the Palestinian and Israeli peoples would be in the
interests of the whole Middle East region. We believe that
it is essential for the parties to refrain from any acts that
would prejudice a Palestinian-Israeli settlement and disturb
the status quo. Avoidance both of practical measures and
public statements that could undermine the atmosphere of
businesslike cooperation between the parties should be
studiously avoided.
We believe that the best way of resolving the
problems that have arisen is through direct dialogue
between the Israelis and the Palestinians using the
machinery that has been set up in the course of the peace
process. For its part, Russia, as a sponsor of the Middle
East peace process, intends to go on actively promoting a
settlement in every detail, in the interests of establishing a
comprehensive and lasting peace in the Middle East and
establishing wide-ranging international cooperation in the
region.
Mr. Al-Khussaiby (Oman): At the outset, my
delegation would like to associate itself with the statement
of the current Chairman of the Arab Group, Ambassador
Olhaye of Djibouti, which he delivered on behalf of the
Group, and, moreover, to echo my delegation's full support
for the position of the Arab Group outlined in that
statement.
The primary purpose of convening this open debate
today is to address a critical and urgent issue regarding the
illegal Israeli settlements in the occupied Arab territories,
including Jerusalem, which are undoubtedly impeding the
efforts that have been made to restore peace and security
through the ongoing peace process in the Middle East.
Israel's policy and practice of building and expanding
the settlements in the occupied Arab territories will have
negative consequences for the ongoing peace process and
undermine Israel's credibility in meeting its obligations. It
is true that there are some stumbling blocks in the
Israeli-Palestinian track, but we would like to emphasize
the fact that the continued construction of such
settlements by the Government of Israel will not only
jeopardize this track, but also threaten and jeopardize the
overall peace process in the region. In our View, there can
be no potential breakthrough in the course of the peace
negotiations between the Palestinians and Israel, nor in
the course of other tracks, unless Israel brings these
practices to an immediate end and resorts to resolving the
question of the existing settlements through peaceful
negotiations.
The Government of Israel, as an occupying Power,
is required today, more than ever before, to take positive
steps towards peace by refraining from constructing new
settlements anywhere in the occupied Arab territories,
including Jerusalem, and by complying with the
provisions of the Fourth Geneva Convention of 1949. We
are of the View that these matters should be resolved
through bilateral negotiations and within the context of
the ongoing peace process. However, and in accordance
with the peace efforts exerted in this regard, my
delegation believes that the Council can play an effective
role in enhancing the ongoing peace process in the region,
particularly given that the Madrid process is based on the
very relevant resolutions of this Council.
In conclusion, my delegation calls upon the
Government of Israel and the Government of Palestine to
accelerate the implementation of the Declaration of
Principles signed by the two parties on 13 September
1993, and to abide by its pertinent provisions.
Mr. Gambari (Nigeria): The Security Council is
deliberating on the situation in the Middle East at a
particularly important and sensitive time in the peace
process. Fully conscious of the sensitivity of the issue
before us today, my delegation none the less remains
convinced that this formal meeting of the Security
Council, by reflecting the objective views and
considerations of all sides in the Middle East, will help
provide the necessary impetus and momentum to the
Middle East peace process. We share the View that the
peace process is the only realistic path towards long-term
security and cooperation in the Middle East, and therefore
deserves the continuing support of the international
community.
During the past few years, we have witnessed
historic progress in efforts to achieve a just, lasting and
comprehensive peace in the Middle East, starting with the
Madrid initiative. During the forty-eighth session of the
General Assembly, my delegation welcomed the historic
signing in Washington of the Declaration of Principles on
Interim Self-Government Arrangements between the
Government of Israel and the Palestine Liberation
Organization (PLO), confident that the agreement would
pave the way for more substantive transformations in the
Middle East.
Since then, events have tended generally to confirm
our optimism that, at long last, the region is on the
threshold of peace and stability. Consequently, within the
framework of the peace process, Israel and the PLO signed
the Agreement on the Gaza Strip and the Jericho Area in
Cairo on 4 May 1994, and an Agreement on early
empowerment on 29 August, both of which have enabled
the establishment of the Palestinian Authority, which is a
crucially important first step in the fulfilment of the historic
aspirations of the Palestinian people for self-determination
and nationhood.
Furthermore, on 26 October 1994, another historic
peace treaty between Israel and Jordan was signed which,
aside from opening a new phase in bilateral relations
between the two countries, also enhanced the possibilities
for progress in the Israeli-Lebanese and Israeli-Syrian tracks
of the peace process.
Regretfully, however, the progress towards peace in
the Middle East has not been entirely hitch-free. Indeed, the
extremists who perpetrated the dreadful and totally
unacceptable bombing incidents at Hebron, Afula, Tel Aviv,
Buenos Aires, London and, very recently, in Gaza, attest to
how far the tiny minority opposed to peace will go in the
bid to reverse the gains of the overwhelming majority
committed to the peace process in the Middle East. Nigeria
commends the vision, courage and determination of the
leaderships of Israel and the PLO, and of the other States
in the region, that have maintained their commitment to
peace regardless of the tragedies that threaten to derail the
peace process.
The Declaration of Principles signed in Washington,
on 13 September 1993 and the Gaza-Jericho Agreement -
which enjoy the full support of the international
community - set out a clear timetable for the negotiations
towards the permanent status of Palestine. They also
indicate the particular rules and modes of behaviour which
should guide all parties in the course of the transition. It is
in this connection that my delegation views with concern
the continued building of new settlements in the occupied
West Bank in recent months. We believe that such activities
not only undermine the spirit of the peace process, but
could lead to the entrenchment of extremist views within
radical sections of Middle East society. It is vital, at this
delicate stage of the peace process, that nothing be done
to undermine the climate of confidence that is badly
needed in order to build and sustain peace in the Middle
East. In this connection, both parties should utilize fully
the bilateral framework in order to resolve these new and
potentially dangerous problems.
Thus far, Israelis and Palestinians have overcome
formidable obstacles in their collective search for peace.
The other parties in the region have also shown courage
and a willingness to work towards peace in the region. In
spite of the fact that some of the most divisive and potent
difficulties involved in the peace process have yet to be
addressed, we hope that the overriding goal of peace will
ultimately transcend the destructive course of warfare and
regional instability. In this connection, the international
community, in particular the United Nations - which has
always played a critical role - will continue to be relied
upon greatly to assist the parties in moving the peace
process forward. The challenges may be great and the
stakes high, but so too are the rewards of peace and the
attendant social and economic development that should
follow for the people of the region - all of them.
Mr. Li Zhaoxing (China) (interpretation from Chinese): The Middle East question - i.e, the most
prolonged regional conflict since the Second World
War - has been a worldwide concern. Recent years have
witnessed the settlement of some regional conflicts, a
trend that has been reflected in the Middle East too. The
Declaration of Principles signed by the PLO and Israel at
the end of 1993 marked a breakthrough in the Middle
East peace process. It was an important step towards a
comprehensive and just peace in the Middle East and
towards harmonious coexistence between the Arab and
Jewish nations. It has paved the way for a final,
comprehensive, just and lasting settlement of the conflict
between Palestine and Israel.
There have been some new developments in the
Middle East peace process since then. Four Middle East
countries held a summit meeting in Egypt not long ago.
The Chinese delegation welcomes and is grateful for these
positive developments, and for the wise and pragmatic
approach adopted by the Palestinian and Israeli leaders in
their search for peace in the region.
It should be pointed out that the Middle East peace
process has recently suffered another setback. The discord
between the parties concerned over Israeli settlements in the
occupied territories has suddenly sharpened. The Chinese
delegation is very much concerned over this development.
The Middle East peace process is now at a very sensitive
and critical moment. We hope that the parties concerned
will exercise restraint, be calm and reasonable and try their
best to create appropriate conditions to continue to promote
the Middle East peace process rather than undermine it.
At present it is essential for Palestine and Israel to
build mutual trust and persist in settling disputes through
consultation and negotiation. The leaders of the two sides
should, proceeding from consideration of the long-term
interests of all nations in the region, continue to remove
obstructions and work together to promote the peace
process in the Middle East. As a Chinese saying goes, the
road to success is strewn with setbacks, and long is the
road to accomplish an arduous task. There will certainly be
many a challenge in the efforts to achieve a comprehensive
and fair settlement of the Middle East question, which has
been with us for several decades. As long as we bear in
mind the philosophy that peace is the most precious thing
and persist in working for peace, it is possible to overcome
all difficulties, setbacks and contradictions. The
international community should make the best of the
situation and work to maintain the momentum of the
Middle East peace process.
China has throughout supported the Middle East peace
process and has stood for the political settlement of the
Middle East question on the basis of the relevant
resolutions of the United Nations. We will, as always,
continue, together with the international community, to
promote the Middle East peace process and make our due
contribution to a happy life of lasting peace for the people
of the region at an early date.
Mr. Kovanda (Czech Republic): The Czech Republic
wishes to reaffirm its attachment to a just, durable and
comprehensive settlement of the Palestinian question and of
the entire Arab-Israeli conflict, on the basis of resolutions
242 (1967) and 338 (1973) and within the agreed
framework of international law. This includes the necessity
of applying the Fourth Geneva Convention of 1949.
In recent years, efforts towards attaining a settlement
of the conflict have resulted in the ongoing peace process.
The Czech Republic accepts and supports it without
reservation. We are heartened by the progress it has
attained since the Washington Declaration of Principles was
signed more than two years ago.
Important steps followed last year: the Gaza-Jericho
Agreement of last May, the Agreement on Preparatory
Transfer of Powers and Responsibilities of last August
and, of course, the Peace Treaty between Israel and
Jordan of last October.
The issue of Israeli settlements in occupied
territories is a difficult and emotionally charged one. The
Czech Government considers settlements to be illegal and
not conducive to the peace process. And yet the Israeli
Government has effected important changes in this policy,
and, whatever reservations one might have about the
current shape of this policy, these changes should be
noted. Even more importantly, though, this issue is just
one aspect of the exceedingly complex web of Israeli-
Palestinian relations, and we believe that this entire web
would be best left to the continuation of bilateral
negotiations, however difficult these are turning out to be,
outside the spotlight of international attention.
We feel that some of the difficulties in the progress
of bilateral negotiations stem from recent acts of brutal
Violence. A year ago, in March, the Council strongly
condemned the slaughter in Hebron. Today it is worth
reiterating that the Czech Republic condemns all
terrorism, whatever its motivation, under any
circumstances.
Mr. Zawels (Argentina) (interpretation from Spanish): Today, in circumstances that are obviously very
different from those in which it has usually considered
this question in the past, the Security Council is
considering the situation in the occupied territories, in
particular the matter of the Israeli settlements in those
territories.
In October 1991, this conflict began to be dealt with
comprehensively, involving all of the parties and the
various and essential bilateral and multilateral
frameworks. The peace process begun in Madrid at that
time has now begun to bear fruit. The first significant
result was the Declaration of Principles on Interim
Self-Government Arrangements, signed by the
Government of Israel and the Palestine Liberation
Organization (PLO) on 13 September 1993. The other,
more recent, was the signing on 26 October 1994 of the
Peace Treaty between the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan
and the State of Israel.
This process is extremely complicated and
necessarily difficult, with its many actors, issues and
variables. However, the international community and, in
particular, the United States and the Russian Federation,
sponsors of the peace process, strongly support this effort,
because they know that a lasting and just solution will
spring only from dialogue and the firm belief of the
concerned parties themselves. More than 40 years of
searching for other means managed only to keep the
conflict alive and, unfortunately, frustrated several
generations in the Middle East. Today, however, we are
walking the path of peace.
The situation created by Israeli settlements in the
occupied territories is a source of concern for my
Government. We believe that the Government of Israel and
the Palestinian authorities should speed up the joint quest
for a solution to this sensitive question. In recent months
there have been some mixed signals; these have confused
and disturbed the Palestinian people, which we find
understandable. I wish to reiterate that the framework for
this action is that stipulated in the Declaration of Principles
on Interim Self-Government Arrangements.
This problem is undoubtedly serious. However, it is
but one of the problems still unresolved and requiring an
active solution by the parties.
The repeated terrorist attacks against both parties, but
especially against Israel, are the barbaric acts of those who
reject peace and seek only destruction and grief, using the
excuse of hatred, the veil of fanaticism or the drug of
resentment. My country has twice been the object of
terrorist attacks related to the Middle East conflict, most
recently in Buenos Aires, on 18 July 1994, when many
Argentines, including, of course, some of Jewish origin,
were killed or wounded. As a result, we are keenly aware
of this scourge and believe that this subject requires the
urgent attention not only of the parties, but also of the
international community in general.
This debate in the Security Council is a good
opportunity to express firm support for the peace process
that began in Madrid in 1991 and to repeat the need for the
parties, with the support of the sponsors and the
international community as a whole, to redouble their
efforts to continue making progress together in this historic
process, which opens up the clear prospect of a time of
peace and prosperity for the Middle East as a whole.
The Argentine Republic, which has a long-standing
relationship of friendship with the Governments and peoples
of the region, supports this peace process strongly and
firmly and believes that it is the right framework, chosen by
the parties themselves, to resolve outstanding questions.
From within the Security Council, Argentina will continue
to see to it that the right conditions prevail for the
continuation of this indispensable dialogue between the
parties. We place all our hopes in the success of this
dialogue.
The President: I shall now make a statement in my
capacity as the representative of Botswana.
Botswana's support for the peace process in the
Middle East is far beyond doubt. We have never wavered
in this support, even when at times in the past, as is the
case at present, clouds of doubt and indecision on the part
of the negotiating partners have descended so heavily on
the process, threatening to dampen and overwhelm it. We
are realistic enough to know that no process of
negotiation can be completely bereft of pain, immune to
obstacles and absolutely impervious to the vicissitudes of
politics, occasional rancour and other conditions of human
frailty. This is particularly true when such negotiations
involve such deep-rooted and complex problems as those
that are the subject of negotiations between Israel and the
Palestinian people.
Of cardinal importance to my country is that the
parties continue to have the patience and fortitude of a
Nelson Mandela and the sacrificial submission of men
and women of peace. Nothing must deflect them from the
path they have chosen. The parties' fidelity to the historic
Washington Declaration of Principles will be tested,
sometimes beyond the capacity of the parties to endure,
but there should be no let-up. In the Declaration may lie
the hope for peace and reconciliation between the people
of Israel and their Palestinian neighbours. What has been
gained so far in the peace process is not to be disparaged,
for not long ago it could have been considered almost
utterly impossible to achieve.
It is our hope, therefore, that whatever action we
take in this debate on an issue so deadly sensitive will in
no way whatsoever accentuate the complications or
difficulties presently encountered by the negotiations.
Everything we do must help the negotiations. My
delegation exhorts the parties to stay the course and try as
much as is humanly possible to remain true to their noble
mission.
For Botswana, I declare to the parties that they will
never find us wanting in our determination to continue to
cheer them up as they struggle to find peace for their
war-weary people.
I resume my function as President of the Council.
Mr. Merimee (France) (interpretation from French):
I have the honour to speak on behalf of the European
Union.
The peace process in the Middle East is at present
encountering serious difficulties. The European Union
attaches the greatest importance to the idea that these
should be overcome by the parties concerned, because the
effort made at the peace Conference inaugurated in Madrid
almost three years ago has produced noteworthy results that
have made it possible to resolve a major portion of the
problems that were impeding reconciliation between Israel
and the Arab world.
The European Union notes that today the most
disturbing problems are those in the negotiations between
the Israelis and the Palestinians. Nevertheless, the
Government of Israel has just categorically reiterated that
it is resolved to continue its discussions within the agreed
framework. The leaders of the PLO, for their part, have
decided to continue to pursue the peace process. None the
less, they have seen fit to draw the attention of the
international community to the current situation. These
attitudes are encouraging. On the other hand, the
disappointing results of the recent Summit meetings at
ministerial level between the Palestinians and the Israelis,
despite the intervention of mediators, shows the seriousness
of the obstacles that the negotiators have encountered.
The Israeli population is disturbed at the increase in
terrorism. The enemies of the peace process are trying to
destroy it and to impose their own logic - that of war -
by trying to convince public opinion in Israel that the path
of dialogue will lead to deadlock. The European Union
most vigorously condemns recourse to blind violence,
which creates innocent victims. The concern expressed by
the Government of Israel over security matters is therefore
quite legitimate.
The Palestinian Authority must provide itself with the
necessary means and take every possible step, while
respecting human rights, to monitor the activities of
extremists in the regions that it administers. The recently
announced decisions regarding the handing over of the lists
of Palestinian police officers to the Israeli authorities and
the creation of a new security court indicate that the
Palestinian leaders have become aware of the crucial
importance of this matter.
But the question of security must not become an
obstacle to progress in the negotiations. The Palestinian
people, which placed great hope in the autonomy
agreements, has the impression that its living conditions
have not substantially changed since. The sealing off of
territories is clearly the most disturbing decision in this
connection, because it deprives numerous Palestinian
families of their income. The delay, in relation to the
initial timetable, in the negotiations on the elections and
in the redeployment of the Israeli army has also
contributed to a feeling of disillusionment noticeable
among the inhabitants of the occupied territories.
The Permanent Observer of Palestine particularly
wished to draw the attention of the international
community to the settlements question. I hardly need go
into any lengthy detail about the position of the European
Union on this topic, as it is based on a number of
Security Council resolutions. These settlements are in
contravention of the provisions of The Hague and Geneva
Conventions governing the occupation regime of occupied
territories. The Israeli Government had taken the
courageous decision to put a freeze on these settlements.
This new departure was in accordance with the
agreements between the Palestinians and the Israelis,
which, inter alia, stipulate that this is a matter that will be
taken up during the final-status negotiations.
The authorization given at the beginning of this year
for new construction on the West Bank and around
Jerusalem is, unfortunately, at variance with the
Declaration of Principles. This is why the European
Union expressed its concern by issuing a declaration in
Brussels on 5 January. Furthermore, it approached the
Israeli Government to alert it to the negative
consequences of this matter. The European Union
reiterates in this meeting of the Security Council its
appeal to the Government of Israel to find ways to settle
this matter, with respect for international law and
commitments solemnly undertaken.
The European Union would like, in conclusion, to
address an appeal to both parties and to all those who
assist them. Courage and political vision have always led
to the most significant results in the region. The European
Union would therefore issue a plea for the prompt
conclusion of the main discussions currently under way
between the Government of Israel and the Palestinian
Authority, whether on security, the redeployment of the
army, settlements, continuing the transfer of authority or
the elections, so important to strengthening the legitimacy
of the peace process by establishing normal democratic
procedures.
The European Union has already given its financial
and political support to the peace process. I would recall
that it has promised 500 million ECU over five years and,
more importantly, it alone has already expended some $100
million to help to finance the administration of Jericho and
the Gaza Strip and to pay the salaries of the Palestinian
police. The European Union will continue to give its
support. It is at the disposal of the parties whenever needed,
as it has always been, to help them overcome any problems
they may encounter in implementing their decisions.
The President: The next speaker is the representative
of Jordan. I invite him to take a place at the Council table
and to make his statement.
Mr. Abu Odeh (Jordan) (interpretation from Arabic):
It is my pleasure, at the outset, to congratulate you, Sir, on
your assumption of the presidency of the Security Council
for this month, which is now coming to an end. Your
diplomacy and experience have undoubtedly contributed to
the success of the Council's work. It is also my pleasure to
congratulate your predecessor, Ambassador Emilio
Cardenas, on his successful handling of the work of the
Council last month.
Our delegation, fully aware of the tremendous
importance of settlements in the occupied Palestinian
territories, and fully aware that this matter is closely linked
to the achievement of a just and lasting peace and is a very
sensitive matter, with an effect on the peace process as a
whole, would like to thank you, Mr. President, and the
other members of the Council for your prompt response to
our request for this meeting. It was indeed a very timely
response, made in full awareness of the situation, fully in
keeping with the Council's knowledge, and the knowledge
of the international community, of the need to maintain the
momentum of the peace process and to ensure its success.
The Jordanian delegation is participating in this debate
because of our firm belief in this concept, and because we
deem it essential to achieve a comprehensive peace in the
region. We wish to participate in any effort to eliminate all
obstacles to peace. Israel's reactivation and resumption of
its settlement policy, as well as its insistence upon it at this
stage, when the States of the region and the partisans of
peace have been attempting to maintain the momentum of
peace and to accelerate the peace process and ensure its
success, undoubtedly constitute a very curious development,
one that is very dangerous for the peace process and its
credibility vis-a-vis the peoples and States of the region.
We know that the topic of settlements was included
in the Oslo Declaration as one to be discussed in the final
stage of the Palestinian-Israeli negotiations and left to the
people concerned. But we are sure that it was put back to
the final stages because of its tremendous importance, and
because it is fundamental and central to the peace process
in the region, just as the questions of Jerusalem, refugees
and sovereignty are. Hence, we assume that postponing
discussion upon it was intended to preserve the peace
process and keep it going smoothly in its early stages in
order to build more confidence among the negotiating
parties so that the peace process could be strengthened in
the face of the tremendous challenges presented by the
questions of Jerusalem, the settlements and sovereignty.
We did not expect Israel to disregard this concept
and resume the establishment of settlements or resort to
new concepts that must destroy the very foundations of
the peace process on the Palestinian-Israeli track after the
process had become a palpable reality and its two main
protagonists had shared the Nobel Peace Prize. The
resolution adopted by the Israeli cabinet on
24 January 1995 to resume the establishment of
settlements can be explained only as a deviation from the
declared Israeli commitment to ensure the success of the
faltering peace process.
The Security Council has discussed the question of
settlements before. It is not a new question, but emerged
in 1967. Many resolutions have been adopted declaring
these settlements null and void and an obstacle to peace
efforts and mediation aimed at achieving a
comprehensive, just and lasting peace. The Council's
resolutions have called upon Israel to implement in detail
the Fourth Geneva Convention of 1949 relative to the
Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War, article 49
of which, in its sixth paragraph, prohibits the occupying
Power from deporting or transferring parts of its own
civilian population into the territory it occupies. The
importance the Council has attached to the matter is very
clear in the light of the fact that resolution 446 (1979)
established a Commission of members of the Council to
examine the situation relating to settlements in the Arab
territories occupied since 1967. That Commission, despite
the difficulties it faced, was able to submit its report to
the Council. In the light of that report, the Council
adopted the well-known resolution 465 (1980), which not
only strongly deplored the settlement policies, but also
expressed its deep concern over the consequences for the
local population and the need to protect their interests. The
Council considered such policies to have grave
consequences for peace efforts and called for an end to
such activities and even for the dismantlement of the
settlements. Paragraph 7 of the resolution also called on all
States not to provide Israel with any assistance in
connection with the settlements.
If I recall these matters, it is because I am certain of
the Council's position concerning the Israeli settlements, a
position based on international consensus at the level of
experts, politicians, legal scholars and even Governments,
and of the entire United Nations system. It has also been
agreed that the Fourth Geneva Convention relative to the
Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War is the
instrument that governs the situation and the Israeli
presence in the occupied Palestinian territories. I also recall
these matters because I believe that the Council bears a
historic responsibility to save the peace process on the
Palestinian-Israeli track, and consequently on all tracks,
from complete collapse as a result of Israel's resumption of
its activity in establishing settlements. Such a collapse
could also result from the failure of all efforts and
mediation to persuade Israel to give up this formal
establishment of settlements, a practice that has indeed
surprised us. It constitutes a tremendous stumbling block to
the progress of the ongoing bilateral negotiations and could
even threaten the peace process at a time when it has
inspired hope throughout the world.
The greatest threat to the peace process is the illusion
on the part of the stronger party that genuine peace can be
established on the basis of imbalance between the
negotiators, and that the Middle East peace process
demands clever, cunning negotiators able to wrest the best
possible deal from their interlocutors. All efforts based on
such assumptions are futile and are doomed to failure, for
they can never lead to a just peace or, hence, a lasting one.
What peace in the Middle East needs is statesmen and
leaders with vision, not mere technocrats with clever
linguistic traps and an ability to take advantage of the
weaker party.
Because of its desire and hope for a just, lasting and
comprehensive peace, my delegation calls on Israel to put
an end to all settlement activities in the occupied Arab
territories, first and foremost in Arab Jerusalem. This would
restore credibility to the Israeli Government's utterances.
We hope that the Security Council will take a clear position
in response to this blatant Violation of the Geneva
Conventions and of Security Council resolutions, and will
adopt measures that will put the peace process back on
track.
The President: I thank the representative of Jordan
for the kind words he addressed to me.
The next speaker is the representative of Japan. I
invite him to take a place at the Council table and to
make his statement.
Mr. Owada (Japan): As I address the Security
Council for the first time this month, Sir, the Council has
reached the final day of your presidency. Rather than
offering you the congratulations of my delegation on your
assumption of that high office, therefore, permit me to
commend you on the exemplary manner in which you
have led the work of the Council this month. Thanks in
large part to your wise guidance and evident diplomatic
skill, the Council has discharged its many important tasks
most effectively in the course of the month. I should like
also to take this opportunity to express my appreciation to
your predecessor, the Permanent Representative of
Argentina, for the wisdom and insight he brought to the
presidency during January.
We have witnessed dramatic breakthroughs in the
Middle East peace process over the last two years. The
agreement signed in 1993 in Washington by the leaders
of the PLO and the Government of Israel and the Israeli-
Jordanian peace agreement of 1994 were truly epoch-
making events that engendered cautious but nevertheless
genuine optimism throughout the international community.
Needless to say, we all understood that with these
achievements the process had by no means reached its
ultimate goal, but was, rather, setting out upon a fresh
path, one that would be marked by myriad dangers and
challenges.
Indeed, in the ensuing months we saw truly
disturbing developments, including terrorist activities, the
expansion of settlements and the redeployment of Israeli
forces. The parties directly involved, as well as the
broader international community, are now challenged to
ensure that the peace process remains Viable and
continues to make progress.
The peace process depends primarily, of course, on
the efforts and the political will of the parties concerned.
Thus, we welcomed the meeting in Washington on
12 February in which the representatives of Israel, Egypt,
Jordan and the Palestinian Authority reaffirmed their
determination to consolidate the breakthroughs achieved
in the Arab-Israeli peace process, to overcome obstacles
and disputes, and to push forward towards a just, lasting
and comprehensive peace in the region. Japan was
heartened by United States Secretary of State Christopher's
statement that same day, in which he affirmed that the
Israelis and Palestinians were committed to a real
partnership to reach real peace. He assured us that both
parties were clearly determined to fulfil all elements of
their agreements and to ensure their implementation. We
commend this firm determination by the parties and
strongly encourage them to maintain their resolve to reach
genuine peace in the Middle East.
The debate in the Security Council today provides us
with the chance to send a clear and decisive signal that the
international community is also committed to the peace
process. Indeed, it is incumbent upon the international
community to demonstrate to the parties concerned that
they have its full and steadfast support as they strive to
advance the peace process.
Among the gravest threats to that process are the
terrorist activities of those who are the enemies of peace.
Japan strongly condemns terrorism or violence which is
aimed at thwarting the peace process. It extends its
sympathy to the victims of terrorism and fully understands
the concerns of the Israeli people for their security. Japan
also understands that the security needs of the Israelis are
inseparable from the political and economic needs of the
Palestinian people. The peace process cannot be said to be
genuinely making progress unless all the people in the
region are able to pursue their lives in a safe and secure
environment, and in the knowledge that tomorrow will
bring a more stable life. To that end, it is necessary that the
international community strengthen its social and economic
development assistance to the region.
Job-creation for the Palestinians is an area to which
Japan attaches particular importance. Japan has already
disbursed $100 million out of the $200 million it pledged
in September 1993 for the Palestinian people, and it has
allocated $10 million to be expended through the United
Nations Development Programme for the creation of job
opportunities for Palestinians in Gaza.
The United Nations has been involved in the Middle
East situation almost since its inception. The multiple
problems in the region are deep-seated and complex; we
have learned that there are no easy answers, and that for
every two steps forward there may be one and a half steps
backward. But we must not allow ourselves to be
discouraged. I remain firm in my conviction - and recent
events confirm this conviction - that the path ahead
leads inexorably to the establishment of peace throughout
the Middle East.
The President: I thank the representative of Japan
for the kind words he addressed to me.
The next speaker is the representative of Algeria. I
invite him to take a place at the Council table and to
make his statement.
Mr. Lamamra (Algeria) (interpretation from Arabic): Mr. President, it is a pleasant duty for me to
address you on behalf of the Algerian delegation and to
convey my sincerest congratulations on the way in which
you are directing the work of the Security Council this
month. I am quite sure that under your wise guidance the
Council will be able to fully discharge its responsibilities
with respect to the very delicate situation prevailing in the
Palestinian territories.
We should also like to take this opportunity to thank
your predecessor, the Permanent Representative of
Argentina, for the very skilful way in which he conducted
the Council's work last month.
The representative of Djibouti has set forth the
position of the Arab Group, and I will therefore confine
myself to noting certain general points.
In September 1993 the Declaration of Principles was
agreed between the Palestine Liberation Organization
(PLO) and the Israeli Government. Despite the obstacles
which thus far have made it impossible to fully and
effectively implement the agreement in accordance with
the timetable which was established, the international
community was won over by the promise of peace in the
Middle East. It had expected the Israeli Government to
take confidence-building measures instead of continuing
practices which are contrary to the Fourth Geneva
Convention - collective punishment, sealing off occupied
territories and isolating Jerusalem, setting up new
settlements and enlarging existing settlements -
particularly since the Security Council had reiterated on
a number of occasions that the Fourth Geneva Convention
was fully applicable to the occupied Palestinian territories,
including the Holy City of Jerusalem. Consequently,
Israel's continuing to change the nature of the city of
Jerusalem, its establishment of settlements surrounding it
and its isolation of the rest of Palestinian territory all
destabilize the peace process and contribute to worsening
the situation.
The massive presence of settlers in the Gaza Strip,
protected by the Israeli army, also destabilizes the peace
process, because it is liable to give rise to acts of Violence
and retaliation. The presence of settlements in occupied
Palestinian territories is, to a certain extent, a kind of bomb
which may explode at any minute. The most recent acts of
Violence have played into the hands of the extremists in
Israel, who are asking that the settlers be armed, that the
occupied territories be sealed off and that the armed
protection of the settlements be strengthened.
None of these factors give grounds for optimism;
rather, they make us believe that the intervention of the
international community has become necessary to prevent
a deterioration of the situation as well as its escalation and
confrontation between the parties. Therefore, we fully
appreciate the importance of the Security Council's
studying the negative developments in the Palestinian
territories as well as their negative impact on the
possibilities of peace.
The success which we so earnestly desire for the
peace process in the Middle East requires that we should
control any factors which might help to poison the
atmosphere or thwart the effective implementation of the
agreements between the parties concerned. Consequently,
the question of the settlements is the real litmus test of
whether the Israelis are really anxious to reach a genuine,
lasting and just peace with the Palestinians. It was the
settlements which gave rise to the massacre in the Al-
Haram Al-Ibrahimi mosque a year ago and the acts of
Violence and retaliation which have resulted in numerous
Victims. Since the same settlements are currently impeding
the peace process, the Security Council should consider this
question very seriously and utilize its mandate to serve
peace in this very delicate period.
The President: I thank the representative of Algeria
for the kind words he addressed to me.
The next speaker is the representative of Tunisia. I
invite him to take a place at the Council table and to make
his statement.
Mr. Abdellah (Tunisia) (interpretation from French):
Mr. President, allow me at the outset to congratulate you on
your assumption of the presidency of the Security Council
and on your exemplary performance at its helm this month.
We should also like to congratulate your predecessor,
Ambassador Cerdenas, on his excellent work last month.
It is now a year to the day since the Security
Council met to debate the situation in the occupied
territories following the horrible massacre perpetrated by
an Israeli settler in the Al-Haram Al-Ibrahimi mosque in
Al-Khalil. Many delegations, including mine, drew
attention then in this very Chamber to the real dangers
that the Israeli settlements presented to the peace process
in the Middle East.
The question of settlements is certainly not new. In
fact, the international community has consistently
emphasized the illegality of this practice, which the
Israelis have turned into a consistent policy, in defiance
and denial of international law and legality, in particular
of relevant resolutions of the Security Council and the
General Assembly, as well the Geneva Conventions.
The advent of the Middle East peace process
launched in Madrid made it possible to open the way to
what became a tuming-point in the history of the region
following the signing of the Israel-Palestinian accords and
the Peace Treaty between Israel and Jordan. A peace
dynamic thus began, quite rightly giving rise to the
highest hopes throughout the world for an overall, just
and final settlement of the question of the Middle East as
a whole. However, it is obvious that any peace
agreement, no matter how important, presupposes good-
faith implementation, an open mind and willingness for
compromise, as well as the will to achieve peace and the
right attitude. Unfortunately, the opposite has occurred
with the persistence of an attitude comprising lack of
understanding and rejection.
Israel has not stopped the settlements being built as
it ought to have, prior to dismantling the existing ones
completely. Not at all: it is going on building, extending,
developing, although its commitments require it to do the
very opposite without further delay with a view to re-
establishing the normal status quo that prevailed before
the occupation. That was what it was supposed to do in
fulfilment of its commitments within the framework of
the peace agreements and in accordance with international
treaties. And yet, assurances that have been given out by
authorized spokesmen to the effect that colonization
activities have been halted, unfortunately all too soon
contradicted by government decisions that must certainly
pander to the wishes of the very people who are opposed
to peace.
The settlements are a major but not the only obstacle
in the way of tangible progress towards the desired goal.
Others include the withdrawal of Israeli troops scheduled
to begin last April and the establishment of arrangements
for holding elections in the self-governing Palestinian
territories that were intended to provide them with the
necessary political institutions for civilized life. These are
the same elections that were supposed to be held last July
too.
What we have seen instead is a succession of reports
that never fail to disturb international public opinion.
Moreover, for over a month now Israel has kept its borders
with the self-governing regions of Gaza and Jericho closed,
thus imposing a veritable blockade. The closure has once
again sank the territories back into despair, with the
concomitant gloomy procession of dire effects on the
economy of the occupied territories and consequently for
the Palestinian attitude towards the peace process.
Reasons of security are adduced and who could fail to
understand such concerns, which are of course legitimate
ones for any State? However, we could well ask ourselves
whether this really is the best way to combat violence and
bring about its end. The most apt answer to this question is
provided by the developments now taking place in the
occupied territories, where the stubborn economic and
social difficulties the Palestinians must wrestle with -
aggravated by the cordon round the territories and by
continued settlement activities, are currently gelling into
frustration, bitterness and disenchantment for the people
there, opening up fertile ground for the extremists opposed
to the peace process.
In any case, the Palestinian Authority has taken
effective steps, thereby showing its determination to
shoulder its responsibilities in the struggle to combat
violence. However, that does not change the fact that the
problems must be tackled right at their roots by putting a
full and final stop to settlement activities, withdrawing the
Israeli troops from the self-governing territories, holding
elections to ground the Palestinian Authority on institutional
foundations, lifting the blockade against the territories and
freeing the political prisoners - in brief, by the
implementation of the agreements between the two parties,
all fair, square and above board. The international
community has every right to demand that Israel meet its
obligations pending an agreement on the ultimate status of
the occupied territories.
International donors and financial institutions are
obliged for their part to honour their commitments to the
Palestinians by stepping up the pace of their economic
assistance to the self-governing territories; in the short term,
this would ease the suffering of the Palestinian people and
allow them in time to lay the foundations for their
economy, the sine qua non for consolidating self-rule and,
later, independence.
Tunisia, a peace-loving country, supported the
Madrid process then and continues to do so now. It has
already hosted several meetings of working groups as part
of the multilateral negotiations in which it has been
participating actively. Like all nations, it had great hopes
for this process, in that it opened a new chapter in the
history of the region. Important gains have been made
that must not be lost. Nevertheless, the path to peace is
strewn with obstacles and the process now under way is
meeting various kinds of opposition that can be
neutralized only by speeding up the process towards a
comprehensive, just and lasting settlement soon. The
Council and the sponsors of the peace process share the
paramount responsibility for getting it back on track in
order to safeguard the future of peace and stability in the
region.
The President: I thank the representative of Tunisia
for his kind words addressed to me.
The next speaker is the representative of the United
Arab Emirates. I invite him to take a place at the Council
table and to make his statement.
Mr. Samhan (United Arab Emirates) (interpretation from Arabic): Sir, allow me first of all, on behalf of the
delegation of the United Arab Emirates, to take this
opportunity to congratulate you on your election to the
presidency of the Security Council for this month. It is
also my pleasure to express our sincere thanks to your
predecessor, the Permanent Representative of Argentina,
for his work as President of the Council last month.
Despite the rather positive developments in the
question of Palestine - developments that are embodied
in the Declaration of Principles and subsequent
agreements between the PLO and Israel - we and the
international community must admit that the process that
began in Madrid is going through a very rough patch as
a result of the pretexts and other excuses advanced by
Israel in order to avoid implementing its commitments
and abiding by them. Indeed, Israel is continuing its
practices of violence and terrorism, and is imposing
famine on the population by besieging their territory,
annexing their land and destroying their homes.
Furthermore, the Israeli Government has recently begun
work again on building new settlements and expanding
existing ones, particularly in the holy city of Jerusalem
and its suburbs. This must be considered a flagrant
violation of the Fourth Geneva Convention, and of the
relevant Security Council resolutions, particularly resolution
465 (1980).
The Israeli cabinet recently adopted a decision giving
the go-ahead to the construction of 4,500 units in East
Jerusalem, its eastern suburbs and on part of the Golan
Heights. This is above and beyond the recent plan to build
15,000 new units in certain areas of Jerusalem as homes for
approximately 80,000 settlers by end 1997, on the pretext
of ensuring those settlers' security and stability. Israel's
security pretexts should not become the principal factor in
the peace process because otherwise, unless Israel follows
through on its commitments and lays all its cards on the
negotiating table, the peace process could stumble over
pitfalls of every sort.
The Israeli settlement schemes reveal once again that
the Israeli Government has no sincere or serious intentions
regarding the ongoing Middle East peace process. They also
show that Israel is following a policy of imposing a fait
accompli and causing material, historical, cultural and
demographic changes to the city of Jerusalem by attempting
to Judaize it before the final stage of the negotiations on
Jerusalem with the Palestinian party. Israeli practices, in
fact, are in flagrant violation - and threaten the
credibility - of the agreements between the Palestinians
and the Israelis, and they are an obstacle to the achievement
of a comprehensive, just and lasting peace in the Middle
East.
We should like once again to state that we totally
reject these activities by Israeli settlers, and lay the
responsibility for these practices, that cannot but hinder the
ongoing peace process, at the door of the Israeli
Government. Our delegation wishes to express its full
support for the position of the Palestinian people, who day
in, day out reject the activities by the Israeli settlers in their
territories as they reject other practices that are in
contravention of international legitimacy and law. We look
forward with impatience to seeing the Council take into
account all its previous resolutions, particularly resolution
465 (1980), which calls for an immediate end to the
building and expansion of such settlements for the existing
settlements to be dismantled and any plans to building any
further settlements in the occupied Arab territories,
including the holy city of Jerusalem, to be halted. The
Council must deal with this matter and all its political
dimensions in a constructive fashion that will enable the
peace process to continue.
Given the international changes now prevailing, it
has become very important to keep up the responsibility
of the international organizations and that of the Security
Council in particular, with respect to all aspects of the
Palestinian question, so that we can achieve real peace.
In conclusion, our delegation wishes once again to
state that the achievement of a peaceful, just and lasting
settlement of the Palestinian question and the Arab-Israeli
conflict must be based on the principles of the Madrid
Conference, on the principle of land for peace, and
Security Council resolutions 242 (1967), 338 (1973) and
425 (1978). All those resolutions call for the legitimate
rights of the Palestinian people to be safeguarded and for
a total Israeli withdrawal from all the occupied Arab
territories, including the holy city of Jerusalem, the Golan
Heights and southern Lebanon. Unless Israel respects
those principles and those foundations for peace, there
will be no progress on any other negotiating tracks of the
peace process, for the peace process is a whole that
includes the implementation of rules of strategic security
in the region.
Of course, to this very day Israel refuses to
implement such measures, as is seen in its aggression
against and siege of areas of Lebanon, including attacks
on the Lebanese coast, its refusal to respond to requests
to accede to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of
Nuclear Weapons and to make the Middle East a zone
free of weapons of mass destruction. It must do all those
things it now refuses to do so that the Palestinian people
can realize their aspirations for a dignified and free life
on an equal footing with all the peoples of the world and
so that we can move the peace process forward and
strategic security returns to the Middle East.
The President: I thank the representative of the
United Arab Emirates for his kind words addressed to me.
The next speaker is His Excellency Mr. Keba Birane
Cisse, Chairman of the Committee on the Exercise of the
Inalienable Rights of the Palestinian People. I invite him
to take a place at the Council table and to make his
statement.
Mr. Cisse (Chairman, Committee on the Exercise of the Inalienable Rights of the Palestinian People)
(interpretation from French): I congratulate you warmly,
Sir, on your assumption of the presidency of the Council.
I am certain that your great experience and diplomatic
skill will contribute to the success of the Council's
deliberations.
I should also like to take this opportunity to warmly
congratulate your predecessor, Ambassador Emilio
Cardenas, Permanent Representative of Argentina, for his
exemplary guidance of the Council's work during the month
of January.
I am also grateful to the members of the Council for
allowing me, as Chairman of the Committee on the
Exercise of the Inalienable Rights of the Palestinian People,
to participate in the important debate on the question of the
establishment of Israeli settlements in the territories
occupied since 1967, including Jerusalem, and the
dangerous consequences they could have for the Palestinian
people and the Middle East peace process.
The issue before us is as complex from the political,
diplomatic standpoint as it is painful and emotional from
the human. I am speaking of Israel's continued construction
and progressive expansion of settlements on Palestinian
land. For many years the Committee I represent has tried,
as have other United Nations bodies, to make the
international community aware of the illegality of those
actions.
Israel, the occupying Power, continues to implement
the unlawful policy of establishing settlements in occupied
Palestinian territory and authorizing more and more Israeli
settlers to move into them, in the most direct and serious
contravention of article 49 of the Fourth Geneva
Convention relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons in
Time of War of 12 August 1949, and also in Violation of
many Security Council resolutions, including resolutions
446 (1979), 452 (1979) and 465 (1980).
Not only that, even more Palestinian land is being
confiscated, existing settlements are constantly expanding
and ever more buildings are being put up while yet more
settlements are being established, particularly in and around
the occupied city of East Jerusalem. Since September 1994,
several announcements by high-level Israeli officials have
indicated a toughening of Israel's position on this key issue,
and Israeli policies and other goings-on have caused serious
friction.
Even as recently as 19 February 1995 the Israeli
Government, in a vote that showed how divided it is,
approved the expansion of three Jewish settlements in the
West Bank, near Jerusalem. This decision cannot but have
an adverse impact on the peace talks with the Palestinians.
The plan in question, under which 500 homes would
be built in Maaleh Adumin, 800 in Givat Zeev and at least
500 in the religious settlement of Bitar, was met with
immediate criticism from the Palestinians, who hope to
gain self-rule in the occupied West Bank through the
negotiations now under way.
It should be noted that the Israeli decision comes at
a time when the implementation of the second stage of
the 13 September 1993 Declaration of Principles has been
delayed for seven months, including the redeployment of
the Israeli forces away from populated areas in the West
Bank and the election of the Palestinian Council. Clearly,
this decision further undermines the current peace process
and exacerbates the already fragile, tense and dangerous
atmosphere in the occupied territory.
It is well known that the Israeli settlements are
contrary to the Fourth Geneva Convention of 1949, which
is applicable to all the territory occupied since 1967,
including Jerusalem. The Council has repeatedly
reaffirmed this fact in several resolutions. Moreover,
settlements are a very serious obstacle to peace, and the
continuing settlement activity violates the letter and the
spirit of the agreements reached between the Government
of Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization, as
well as threatening the integrity of the peace process at
this critical stage.
These developments have also triggered widespread
demonstrations by Palestinians and Israeli peace activists,
highlighting the importance of the settlement issue for the
future exercise of Palestinian rights and the peace process
itself.
On behalf of the Committee, I should like to recall
that the Security Council, in its resolution 465 of 1 March
1980 and other resolutions, determined that all measures
taken by Israel to change the physical character,
demographic composition, institutional structure or status
of the Palestinian and other Arab territories occupied
since 1967, including Jerusalem, have no legal validity,
are in violation of the Fourth Geneva Convention, and,
furthermore, constitute a serious obstruction to the
attainment of a comprehensive, just and lasting peace in
the Middle East.
The Committee considers that the increasing
expansion and consolidation of settlements create facts on
the ground inconsistent with Security Council resolutions
242 (1967) and 338 (1973) - which the current peace
process seeks to implement - and seriously compromise
the agreements between Israel and the Palestine
Liberation Organization. Noting the similar concerns
expressed by the Council of the Arab League in its
resolution of 5 January 1995 and by the Permanent
Observer of Palestine in his letters to the Secretary-General
of 9 and 31 January 1995, the Committee wishes to join
them in appealing to the Security Council, to the sponsors
of the peace process and to all others concerned to exert
their influence on the Israeli Government to end its
settlement policy, as an indispensable step towards the
attainment of the just and lasting peace we are all working
for.
The Committee believes that only rapid and consistent
progress in the peace process, leading to a comprehensive,
just and lasting peace in the Middle East, will prevent the
current situation from deteriorating even further. The
Committee calls on all concerned to do everything possible
to surmount the current obstacles and to advance towards
full implementation of the agreements that have been
reached thus far.
The convening of today's meeting of the Security
Council indicates that the continuing deterioration of the
situation in the occupied Palestinian territories has become
a matter of major concern to the members of the Council
and to the international community as a whole. The
Committee on the Exercise of the Inalienable Rights of the
Palestinian People therefore hopes that this debate will
culminate in a clear demonstration of the Council's
determination to find ways and means to reinvigorate the
peace process. The international community must assist the
parties to proceed rapidly along the road towards a
negotiated peace, on which they have embarked together -
the only road that can ensure a lasting peace in the region.
The President: I thank the Chairman of the
Committee on the Exercise of the Inalienable Rights of the
Palestinian People for his kind words addressed to me.
The next speaker is the representative of Malaysia. I
invite him to take a place at the Council table and to make
his statement.
Mr. Razali (Malaysia): At the outset, let me
congratulate you, Mr. President, on the very able way in
which you have presided over the affairs of the Council
during the month of February.
The last time the Security Council pronounced on this
issue was in 1980 - almost 15 years ago. Many milestone
events and developments have taken place in that time, but
the issue of illegal Israeli settlements has remained an
obdurate stumbling-block to the many initiatives for a
durable solution to the Middle East problem.
Eighteen months ago, many believed that the signing
of the Declaration of Principles marked a fresh beginning
in the efforts to resolve this conflict. Regrettably, this has
not come to pass. The international community has yet to
see the seeds of peace take deep root in the Middle
East - in particular, in the occupied Palestinian
territories.
One of the salient characteristics of the peace
process so far has been its apparent disregard of
deadlines: although the Declaration of Principles was
signed on 13 September 1993, the implementation
agreement, known as the Cairo Agreement, was not
concluded until 4 May 1994; although the implementation
accord was signed last May, the Palestinian National
Authority, scheduled to be put in place in December
1993, did not actually happen until July of last year,
while troop redeployment, and the elections in the rest of
the West Bank due last July, have yet to have any
credible timetable.
While recognizing that there has been some progress
in some areas, we have to say that the situation on the
ground remains far from satisfactory. The lack of political
will and commitment on the part of the occupying Power
to implement the provisions of the peace accord
complicates and delays the peace process.
My delegation is deeply concerned about the
continuing policy and practices adopted by Israel
regarding its settlement activities in the occupied
territories, especially in the West Bank. My delegation is
disturbed to learn from official sources and media reports
that the Israeli Government is still actively pursuing its
settlement policy in the occupied territories.
According to the November issue of Settlement
Report, a Washington-based bi-monthly publication of the
Foundation for Middle East Peace, the settler population
of the West Bank and Gaza Strip has increased by
28,000 - from 112,000 to 140,000 - while that of
Jerusalem has grown by 22,000- from 148,000 to
170,000. This represents an overall settler increase of
50,000, or about 20 per cent over two years since July
1992. The report also indicated that the settler population
was increasing faster than the rate anywhere in Israel
itself.
The expansion of Israeli settlement policy is also
substantiated by facts and figures provided by the
representative of Palestine in his letters to the Chairman of
the Committee on the Exercise of the Inalienable Rights of
the Palestinian People and to the Secretary-General
(S/49/50 and S/1995/95).
Given the importance of the issue for the future of the
peace process itself, my delegation would like to urge the
Israeli Government immediately to cease such a policy and
practices for the following obvious reasons.
Legally, such a policy and practice of settling parts of
its population and new immigrants in the occupied
territories constitute a violation of the Fourth Geneva
Convention relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons in
Time of War of 12 August 1949. Article 49 of that
Convention, among other things, stipulates that
"The Occupying Power shall not deport or
transfer parts of its own civilian population into the
territory it occupies."
The policy also violates numerous resolutions of the
Security Council - resolutions 446 (1979) and 452 (1979)
and 465 (1980), which, among other things, called upon the
Government and people of Israel to cease the establishment,
construction and planning of settlements in the occupied
territories, including Jerusalem. Members will recall that
one of those resolutions, resolution 465 (1980), was
unanimously adopted.
Politically, the settlement issue would further
complicate and undermine the peace process. The Special
Committee to Investigate Israeli Practices Affecting the
Human Rights of the Palestinian People and Other Arabs of
the Occupied Territories reported to the General Assembly
late last year that the existence of the settlements, the
persistently violent behaviour of the settlers and the
presence of the Israeli Defence Forces constituted the
principal source of tension in the occupied territories.
Furthermore, it violates the spirit and letter of the
Declaration signed in Washington on 13 September 1993.
My delegation is of the View that a resolution from the
Council reaffirming its earlier decisions as reflected in the
resolutions that I have mentioned would be timely and
would facilitate the peace process. The argument by some
that the United Nations has no role to play on central issues
such as the legality of Israeli settlements, the status of
Jerusalem, Palestinian refugees and Palestinian sovereignty
is unjustifiable and unacceptable. The United Nations - in
particular this Council, which is charged with primary
responsibility for international peace and security - has
an important role to play in the peace process in the light
of current developments. It was a Security Council
resolution that rejected the Israeli policy and practice of
establishing settlements; it was this Council which called
upon Israel to respect the Geneva Convention and
reaffirmed that settlements in the occupied territories were
illegal and an obstacle to peace. The Council is being
called upon again to live up to its responsibilities on this
1ssue.
It is the View of my delegation that the successful
progress of the peace process very much depends on the
sincerity and willingness of both parties to implement all
the provisions that they have agreed to. At this very
critical juncture, when the situation is delicate and fragile,
it is vital for the success of the peace process to make
every effort to remove the climate of distrust and
suspicion. The leaders who were bold enough to forge a
historic breakthrough for peace must not allow extremism
or a shortsighted policy to prevail. The international
community opposes all forms of extremism and the
recourse to terror tactics by extremists. For Israel in
particular, it would be delusory to conclude that an
improvement of relations, even cooperation, with some
other Arab countries would permit it to equivocate on the
settlement issue. The hard, critical choice has to be made
in a timely, decisive manner, or the conflict will continue
and worsen. For countries looking at Israel, encouraged
by the signing of the Declaration of Principles, efforts to
join in the momentum for peace by normalizing relations
with it remain in abeyance, given the uncertainty over its
commitment and sincerity to move critically on the
remaining central issues, including the settlement issue.
The President: I thank the representative of
Malaysia for the kind words he addressed to me.
The next speaker is the representative of the Islamic
Republic of Iran. I invite him to take a place at the
Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Kharrazi (Islamic Republic of Iran):
Mr. President, first of all, I wish to congratulate you on
your assumption of the presidency of the Security Council
for this month. I should also like to pay tribute to the
Permanent Representative of Argentina for the excellent
manner in which he guided the work of the Security
Council last month.
The Security Council is once again meeting to discuss
the deteriorating situation in the occupied territories and
another instance of the violation of international law by the
Zionist regime. The sacred land of Palestine and its holy
centre of Al-Quds continue to suffer under aggression and
occupation, and the people of Palestine are continuously
subjected to inhumane treatment by the occupying forces,
including the frequent imposition of curfews, the sealing or
closing of the occupied territories, the confiscation of land
and the expansion of settlements.
Numerous United Nations documents and various
reports of different United Nations agencies regarding the
very critical situations in the occupied territories indicate
that practices by the Zionist regime in the field of land
confiscation and the expansion of Jewish settlements,
particularly in Al-Quds, have gained momentum since
September 1993.
According to the latest report of the Special
Committee to Investigate Israeli Practices Affecting the
Human Rights of the Palestinian People, 40 per cent of the
territory in the Gaza Strip is still taken up by settlements,
military installations and so-called security zones, and the
recent decision of the Zionist regime to continue housing
construction in settlements around the Jerusalem area
reveals the true intention of that regime to persist in its
occupation policies.
The imposition of curfews on Palestinian cities and
refugee camps, the sealing off or closing of areas and the
killing and detention of Palestinians have continued since
September 1993, and more than 5,000 Palestinians are still
held in jail by the occupying forces. On the other hand, the
tightening of existing restrictions during recent months has
aggravated even further the already critical economic
situation prevailing in the occupied territories. Israel's real
and ultimate objective has been, and continues to be, the
prolongation of its occupation, and today, under the
disguise of the peace process, this policy is being pursued.
Furthermore, it should be noted that whenever the
Zionist regime intends to divert the attention of the
international community from its own expansionist policies,
it depicts some countries as threats to the region. This old,
obsolete policy will not succeed, because the very nature of
the Zionist regime is becoming clearer to the countries of
the region.
The Zionist crimes are being committed at a time
when Israel is claiming to seek peace in the Middle East.
The continuation of the occupation of Palestine, the Syrian
Golan Heights and southern Lebanon and the violation of
human rights in those territories, as well as Israel's
intransigence in not allowing the International Atomic
Energy Agency (IAEA) to inspect its nuclear facilities,
have escalated the tension in the region.
In our View, the current process and the recent
agreements will not lead to the full restoration of the
rights of the Palestinian people. The comprehensive and
just solution of the question of Palestine lies in the full
realization of all the rights of the Palestinians, the
liberation of all occupied territories and the return of the
more than 50 per cent of Palestinians who live outside
their own land as Stateless refugees.
It is incumbent upon the Security Council to deal
effectively with Israel's continued violation of
international law and its threat to peace and security in
the region. The people of Palestine, including all
Palestinian refugees, are entitled to be protected against
continuous oppression and the occupation of their
homeland.
The President: I thank the representative of the
Islamic Republic of Iran for the kind words he addressed
to me.
The next speaker is the representative of Pakistan. I
invite him to take a place at the Council table and to
make his statement.
Mr. Marker (Pakistan): On behalf of the Pakistan
delegation, I should like to convey our warm
congratulations to you, Sir, on having so successfully
carried out the responsibilities entrusted to you as
President of the Security Council for the month of
February.
I should also like to convey our profound
appreciation to Ambassador Cardenas of Argentina for the
excellent manner in which he guided the deliberations of
the Council last month. His personal involvement in
providing frequent briefings to the General Assembly
membership was an extremely useful step in furthering
the transparency of the work of the Council.
It is with a sense of deep concern that the Pakistan
delegation addresses the important item under
consideration by the Council. As has been pointed out in
Vivid and graphic detail in two letters from the Permanent
Observer of Palestine, the situation in the occupied
territories of Palestine is most disturbing. The continued
practice of the Israeli authorities of building settlements in
the occupied Palestinian territories - in particular, in and
around Jerusalem - and their permission to the new wave
of Israeli settlers to occupy those settlements, not only are
a grave Violation of article 49 of the Fourth Geneva
Convention but also put the Middle East peace process in
serious jeopardy.
The massive expansion and consolidation of
settlements creates a situation on the ground that is
inconsistent with resolutions 242 (1967) and 338 (1973),
which the current peace process seeks to implement.
Furthermore, it seriously compromises the recent
agreements reached between Israel and the Palestine
Liberation Organization.
The international community viewed the historic
Declaration of Principles reached in Oslo between the
Palestinian and Israeli leadership as paving the way for a
comprehensive, just and lasting peace in the Middle East.
The signing of that Declaration in Washington in September
1993 was a further step in consolidating the process of
peace. The recent Israeli moves, therefore, are in direct
contradiction of the spirit of the Declaration, which was to
form the basis for an overall durable peace in the Middle
East.
It is imperative to maintain the present momentum that
has been attained in the negotiating process. We share the
expectation of the international community that there should
be no delay in the implementation of the agreements
reached so far, and that the provisions of those agreements
should be fully complied with by all parties, both in letter
and in spirit. A sincere and concerted effort needs to be
made to achieve peace and stability in Palestine. We urge
all the parties concerned to demonstrate the requisite
flexibility and accommodation as well as a sincere
commitment to the vision of lasting peace in the Middle
East. To achieve this noble objective, which has for so long
defied a solution, it is essential that all new settlements
should be stopped forthwith. It is only by taking such an
obvious and imperative measure that true peace in the
Middle East can be achieved.
The President: I thank the representative of Pakistan
for the kind words he addressed to me.
The next speaker is the representative of Morocco. I
invite him to take a place at the Council table and to make
his statement.
Mr. Snoussi (Morocco) (interpretation from French): Let me begin, Sir, by congratulating you on your
assumption of the presidency of the Security Council and
on having guided the work of this important body with
such wisdom and effectiveness during the month of
February 1995. I must also convey sincere congratulations
to Ambassador Cardenas of Argentina on having served
as last month's President with such talent and ability.
The current Chairman of the Group of Arab States,
Ambassador Olhaye, has already stated the views of that
Group on the matter before the Council. I wish, however,
to add a few thoughts.
The international community welcomed with great
joy the signature by the Palestine Liberation Organization
(PLO) and Israel, at Washington nearly two years ago, of
the Declaration of Principles, and the ensuing agreements.
It has provided ongoing, sustained support for the peace
negotiations between the two parties to help them
surmount difficulties in those negotiations. Each time they
occurred, we welcomed the regular meetings between
Palestinian and Israeli authorities on implementing the
agreements.
The parties must not turn back or slacken the efforts
they have made to date - much less allow the paralysis
of a process that has become irreversible. That is no
longer the will of Palestinians and Israelis alone; it is now
the will of the entire international community. Continuing
the peace negotiations is no longer optional; it is a firm
obligation that the parties are duty-bound to honour with
a View to bringing about the peace which we have
awaited so long.
But if they are to be successful, the negotiations
must continue in the framework of the commitments
undertaken by the parties and of a continuous,
constructive dialogue carried out in good faith. That will
make it possible to overcome the difficulties, to hasten
the process and to protect the region against the actions
of the enemies of peace.
Israeli settlements in the occupied territories,
including Al-Quds Al-Sharif, constitute one of the most
serious of those difficulties, which must be overcome at
all costs. We welcomed the statements by Israeli
authorities that they would no longer authorize new
settlements. We would have liked those statements to
have been implemented on the ground, which would have
bolstered trust between Palestinians and Israelis and
improved the chances of a positive outcome of the
negotiations on final status.
But the Palestinians, so happy one day, were deeply
disappointed the next, when they saw settlements
continuing apace - with or without authorization. They felt
frustrated because, in their eyes and in the eyes of the
world, the settlements reflect a state of mind. It was
necessary, perhaps more than ever, that statements be
unambiguous, because it was a question of the trust that
had been established, and was growing, between
Palestinians and Israelis.
This is a serious problem because it has enabled the
opponents of peace to demonstrate that there is good or bad
faith in trying to take back with one hand what is given
with the other.
Effectively stopping the policy of building settlements
in the occupied territories, including Al-Quds Al-Sharif, is
a determining factor in this process and, like it or not, it
will facilitate or hinder future negotiations towards a final
solution of the question.
Our words, which are addressed to all sides, are
designed to be, first and foremost, words of peace and
friendship, as has always been the case.
My country has invested a great deal in the peace
process, and we cannot close our eyes to the dangers which
lurk behind the magnificent achievement begun on 13
September 1993.
There is no doubt that our optimism has been
somewhat diminished. The difficulties in implementing the
accords as concluded have been greater and more numerous
than expected.
The Palestinians continue to have hopes, but they now
want to see an end to their daily social and economic
problems. They also wish to see quick progress through the
various stages, to which they see no end. The political
settlement must also be swift; there must be no delays.
No pretext must be given to extremists of any kind to
engage in violence. The time has come to take a clear and
responsible attitude in the face of the deterioration of the
situation, which threatens the loss of the amazing
achievements for which we have waited for decades.
It must be recalled that the advent of a just and lasting
peace in Palestine hinges on respect for United Nations
resolutions, which are the foundation of international
legality, as well as on solid socio-economic foundations
for such peace. Improvement of the well-being of the
population in the context of mutually advantageous
cooperation will help peace take root and create
conditions of safety and security in the region. Improving
the well-being of the population and developing the
region were the primary objectives of the economic
conference held in Casablanca.
The results achieved thus far in the peace process
are by and large positive, but there is still a long road
ahead and it is strewn with obstacles. Israel and Palestine
have demonstrated such wisdom and courage that we feel
that they will be able to overcome the obstacles and, if
need be, hurry through some of the mutually agreed
stages now at risk with the passage of time.
Our hope is that Israelis and Palestinians will
continue their dialogue in order to iron out the many
thorny problems remaining and that the problem of
establishing settlements will be faced with courage and
determination. We also hope that, for our part, we will do
all in our power to remain faithful to the promise made.
So much remains to be done that we might run out of
time.
The international community must therefore
encourage the parties to demonstrate goodwill and a
constructive spirit to settle the remaining problems in
order to achieve the positive peace so eagerly awaited,
based on mutual understanding, cooperation, security,
dignity and respect for the legitimate rights of all.
The Security Council has deemed it necessary to
arrange this debate and thus remind Israel and the
Palestinians that the international community is interested
in the continuation of this process and the avoidance of
any action that will derail it.
Morocco, for its part, will spare no effort to act
accordingly.
The President: I thank the representative of
Morocco for the kind words he addressed to me.
The next speaker is Mr. Ahmet Engin Assay,
Permanent Observer for the Organization of the Islamic
Conference to the United Nations, to whom the Council
has extended an invitation under rule 39 of its provisional
rules of procedure. I invite him to take a place at the
Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Assay: Mr. President, I thank you for giving me
the opportunity to address the Council on a matter of
extreme gravity and concern to the Organization of the
Islamic Conference.
At the outset, I would like to extend to you my
warmest congratulations on your assumption of the
presidency of the Security Council this month. I would also
like to take this opportunity to thank your predecessor, the
Permanent Representative of Argentina, for his able
performance in steering the work of the Council during
January.
The Middle East peace process, in particular the
negotiations on the Palestinian-Israeli track, has entered a
new turning-point following the signing and implementation
of the Declaration of Principles regarding the interim
home-rule arrangements in the occupied Palestinian
territories and the withdrawal of Israeli troops from the
Gaza Strip and the Jericho area, and the transfer of the
President of Palestine to the city of Gaza. Indeed, the
Declaration constituted a serious start to the realization of
a just and comprehensive peace which will enable the
Palestinian people to regain their rights and restore the
occupied Arab lands to their lawful owners.
The agreement came within the framework of the
peace process which started in Madrid, based on the
resolutions of international legality, particularly resolutions
242 (1967), 338 (1973) and 425 (1973). It constituted an
important step towards a comprehensive solution, which
involves a just resolution of the question of Palestine,
Al-Quds Al-Sharif, the occupied Syrian Golan, and the
occupied Lebanese and Jordanian territories.
As regards the peace process on the other tracks, a
notable development occurred on the Jordanian-Israeli
situation with the signature by the Hashemite Kingdom of
Jordan and Israel in Washington on 25 July 1994, of an
agreement ending the state of war between them. We have
indeed welcomed the progress achieved on the Jordanian
track following the signature of this declaration between the
Jordanian and the Israeli parties as a step towards the
desired peace. In this framework, we also stress the need
for substantive progress on the Syrian and Lebanese tracks,
guaranteeing complete Israeli withdrawal from the occupied
Syrian Golan and Southern Lebanon.
Regrettably, the positive developments which have
taken place on the Palestinian question during this past
period are not really reflected in the field. Israel is still
establishing and expanding settlements in all the occupied
territories, and around Al-Quds Al-Sharif in particular; it
is still pursuing its repressive measures and practices
against the Palestinian people, sealing off towns and
villages and depriving citizens of the freedom of
movement, in blatant violation of Palestinian human
rights.
Instead of taking steps that would contribute to a
confidence-building atmosphere, and begin reversing their
expansionist settlement policies, the Israeli authorities are
continuing with their policy of establishing settlements as
well as expanding existing ones in the occupied
territories, in general, and around Al-Quds Al-Sharif, in
particular, in flagrant violation of the international
resolutions which oppose the establishment of Israeli
settlements, consider them illegal, call for their removal
and consider them an obstacle to the progress of the
peace process.
In spite of continuing to implement the home-rule
agreement and hold without further delay the eagerly
awaited Palestinian elections, the Israeli occupation troops
are still laying siege to Al-Quds Al-Sharif and denying
access of Palestinian people from other occupied
Palestinian territories to Al-Quds, aimed at isolating it
from the rest of these territories and creating new
obstacles in the path of the peace process.
The Seventh Islamic Summit Conference, held in
Casablanca recently under the chairmanship of His
Majesty King Hassan II, the King of Morocco, discussed
the cause of Al-Quds Al-Sharif and Palestine in great
detail and passed several relevant resolutions. It adopted,
inter alia, a resolution expressing its solidarity with the
Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) in its just
struggle to remove the consequences of Israeli occupation
and establish Palestinian national institutions. It called on
member States to continue strengthening their solidarity
with the Palestinian people. It affirmed that a
comprehensive and just peace cannot be realized without
total and unconditional Israeli withdrawal from all the
Palestinian territories occupied since 1967, including
Al-Quds Al-Sharif, the occupied Syrian Golan and the
occupied Lebanese and Jordanian territories.
The Summit Conference expressed its support for the
peace process and emphasized resolutions of international
legality, including Security Council resolutions 242 (1967)
and 338 (1973), and the restoration of Al-Quds Al-Sharif
to Palestinian sovereignty as capital of the State of
Palestine. It called for the dismantling of the settlements
already established, since they are unlawful, and for a halt
to further Jewish settlements in occupied Palestinian and
Arab territories, including Al-Quds Al-Sharif and the Syrian
Golan, as required under the relevant resolutions.
It also called on the international community and the
Security Council to compel Israel to comply with United
Nations resolutions, particularly resolution 487 (1981); to
accede to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear
Weapons; to implement the resolutions of the International
Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) calling for the subjection
of all Israeli atomic facilities to the IAEA comprehensive
safeguards system; to proclaim its renunciation of nuclear
armaments; and to submit a full report on its stockpile of
nuclear weapons and materials to the Security Council and
the International Atomic Energy Agency, as those steps are
essential for the establishment of a just and comprehensive
peace in the region.
I would like to assure the Council that the
Organization of the Islamic Conference has made immense
efforts on the road to peace in the Middle East and in
Palestine, and stands ever ready to assist the United Nations
and all other bodies in their quest to bring a just and
honourable peace to the region.
We believe that, by adopting a new series of measures
of determination, the Council can help all the parties
involved in the peace process, but it can especially assist
Israel to take the required bold measures conducive to
accomplishing an honourable and lasting peace in the
region. Otherwise, the thorny issue of the settlements,
involving a few thousand, with many criminal-minded
fanatics among them, will continue to mortgage the entire
peace effort in the area for an indefinite period. The area in
question is occupied Palestinian and Arab territory to which
Israel has no legitimate claim whatsoever, as declared
repeatedly in numerous resolutions of the body most
responsible for global peace and security, the Security
Council, over the past 28 years. The occupying Power,
Israel, before anything else and without further delay,
should remedy and legitimize this illegal situation.
In conclusion, as I have previously told the General
Assembly, the Organization of the Islamic Conference
yearns for the day when the flag of Palestine will be
unfurled over its own territory and will proudly wave here
also, amidst those of the other Member States of the United
Nations. When that day comes, Israel will also be able to
savour the sweet taste of full recognition and cherish all the
blessings of peace.
The President: I thank Mr. Ansay for his kind
words addressed to me.
The next speaker is the representative of Brunei
Darussalam. I invite him to take a place at the Council
table and to make his statement.
Mr. Jemat (Brunei Darussalam): First, may I offer
my congratulations to you, Sir, on your assumption of the
presidency of the Security Council for the month of
February.
Although Brunei Darussalam sees many of the recent
changes in the Middle East as a welcome sign of long-
overdue progress, we are concerned by reports of new
programmes of Israeli settlement in the occupied
territories. Such moves can only increase tension by
heightening animosity between Palestinians and Israelis,
with possible grave potential consequences.
We understand that achieving a comprehensive peace
will be a difficult task. We therefore urge the Israelis to
stop the establishment, construction and planning of such
settlements anywhere in all the occupied territories,
including those in and around Jerusalem. We believe that
it is as much in the interest of Israel as of Palestine to see
that the peace process be implemented in full and without
delay. For this reason, we feel that the settlements serve
to undermine not only the confidence of the Palestinian
population in general, but the whole peace process.
We encourage all parties to proceed in the spirit of
the Madrid Conference and the Declaration of Principles
on Interim Self-Government Arrangements signed
between the PLO and Israel, and to commit themselves
resolutely to the challenge of peace throughout the Middle
East.
The President: I thank the representative of Brunei
Darussalam for his kind words addressed to me.
The next speaker is the representative of Turkey. I
invite him to take a place at the Council table and to
make his statement.
Mr. Batu (Turkey): It gives me great pleasure to
congratulate you, Sir, even on this last day of February,
on the able manner in which you have conducted the
deliberations of the Security Council this month. I would
also like to pay tribute to your predecessor, Ambassador
Cardenas, for his very capable and skilful work as
President of the Council last month.
The historic agreements reached in 1993 and 1994
have raised hopes and great expectations for the beginning
of a new era in the Middle East. However, the situation on
the ground continues to be a cause of concern. It is obvious
that, while much has been achieved, far more remains to be
done. After decades of bloodshed and mistrust, the process
of building confidence between Palestinians and Israelis is
not only arduous but painful. There is much more work to
be done to ensure that Palestinian autonomy can really start
functioning.
It is disturbing that the implementation of the second
stage of the Declaration of Principles has been delayed for
almost six months. We urge the parties to strive for further
progress in the negotiations leading to final peace. These
negotiations require patience, perseverance and a spirit of
compromise at every turn. They must be carried out in
good faith. In this framework, the continuation of the Israeli
settlement activity not only undermines the patience of the
Palestinian side, but also threatens the already tense and
fragile situation in the occupied territories. Moreover, these
settlements also violate the letter and spirit of the
agreements reached between the parties.
We believe that a positive step to bring an end to the
settlement activities would guarantee the successful
progression of the process towards the achievement of a
just and lasting peace in the region.
Finally, I should like to reiterate that we still have full
confidence in the Palestinian and Israeli leadership's
wisdom, Vision and common sense. We urge them to
reaffirm their willingness to pursue the peace process
currently under way, especially at this critical stage. It is
my sincere hope that these stages will be followed by the
full implementation of the Declaration of Principles. The
great hopes generated by this historic agreement should not
be allowed to give way to despair.
The President: I thank the representative of Turkey
for his kind words addressed to me.
The next speaker is the representative of Sudan. I
invite him to take a place at the Council table and to make
his statement.
Mr. Eltinay (Sudan) (interpretation from Arabic): In
addressing the Council for the first time this month, I have
the pleasure to congratulate you, Sir, first, on your
presidency of the Council in the month of February and,
secondly, on the wisdom and dynamism with which you
have performed the duties of President. Allow me also,
through you, to congratulate Ambassador Cardenas,
Permanent Representative of Argentina, on his
outstanding leadership of the work of the Council in
January.
Today we are discussing a matter of the greatest
importance for the peoples whose fate it has been to
become victims of the colonialism of foreign settlers. The
world has witnessed a number of cases of attempted
colonialism by settlers, but those cases disappeared,
thanks to international resolve and the resolve of peoples.
Only the Israeli settlement colonies have remained a case
apart, defying international will and all the instruments
and principles at the foundation of international relations.
The practices of Israel as an occupying Power in the
Arab territories seem to stem from Israel's conviction that
such practices are the legitimate right of an occupying
Power. On the pretext of protecting Israeli security, these
practices violate all instruments and humanitarian
principles. Supported either overtly or covertly by certain
Powers, Israel has defied all the resolutions of
international legitimacy adopted by the United Nations,
thus enjoying an immunity that seems to erase its
obligations under any resolutions or principles.
There can be no doubt that international instruments
and the resolutions of the Organization have rejected the
annexation of territory by force and have prohibited
changing the nature of occupied land in the interest of the
occupying Power. This includes the building of settlement
colonies, which is one aspect of colonialism through
settlers. The Fourth Geneva Convention of 1949 is clear
in expressing this principle, but the Israeli occupying
authorities do not take into account such instruments or
conventions except within the framework of their own
interests. Thus, they blatantly defy international
humanitarian law and all resolutions having international
legitimacy, including resolution 465 (1980) and the
relevant resolutions of the General Assembly, the latest of
which is resolution 36/49 C.
The pretext that the protection of the security of the
State of Israel allows everything prohibited by
international instruments and principles is not acceptable.
It is not surprising that this has become the only pretext,
for Israel has no other justification for continuing to build
and expand its settlements. We wonder, as do others,
what the relationship is between implanting immigrants
from other countries in the midst of a people whose
territories have been occupied and surrounding their cities
and towns with such settlements.
Ever since the signing of the Declaration of Principles
between the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) and
Israel in September 1993, Israel has attempted by all
possible means to use the peace process to its own
expansionist ends and has violated many of the provisions
of the agreements. For example, it has not respected the
deadline for redeploying its forces in the occupied
territories and initiating negotiations concerning the future
of the settlement colonies. The settlements have been
expanded, and new ones have been built, around the city of
Jerusalem, which is supposed to become the subject of
negotiations at a later stage.
It cannot be denied that Israel wants peace in
exchange for nothing at all on its part. For Israel, peace
means imposing its own criteria. It does not really mean a
comprehensive and just peace, which is the only acceptable
kind. When Israel speaks of a wave of violence, it is
attempting to hide the truth. Israel's prevarication in the
peace process and its obduracy over accepting legitimate
resolutions reveal its intentions. The State terrorism
practised by Israel reveals its intentions towards the
Palestinian people, whom it wants to liquidate and to
prevent from establishing its independent State, with
Jerusalem as its capital.
Our delegation wishes to reaffirm its full belief in a
just, comprehensive and lasting peace, which cannot
become a reality as long as Israel continues to view the
whole matter so narrowly, and in the absence of any serious
steps towards such a peace. Israel should respect all
resolutions, and we call upon the Security Council to adopt
practical measures to ensure the implementation of its
resolution 465 (1980) and to guarantee that Israel meets its
commitment to cease building settlements and changing the
demographics of the occupied Arab territories.
The President: I thank the representative of Sudan for
the kind words he addressed to me.
The next speaker is the representative of the Syrian
Arab Republic. I invite him to take a place at the Council
table and to make his statement.
Mr. Awad (Syrian Arab Republic) (interpretation from Arabic): On behalf of the delegation of the Syrian
Arab Republic, I would like to extend to you our sincere
congratulations, Sir, on your assumption of the presidency
of the Security Council for this month. I would also like to
take this opportunity to extend to your predecessor, the
Ambassador of Argentina, thanks for his efforts during his
presidency of the Council last month.
Syria has already stated that the Oslo agreement was
concluded in isolation from the peace process and outside
the framework of the talks and their terms of reference.
However, Israeli officials insisted on promoting that
agreement as if it were the promised one that would
finally take the region to the threshold of peace and
stability.
Israel launched an unprecedented campaign to
convince international public opinion that the conflict in
the Middle East was over and that peace had been
restored to the region. The Israeli mass media targeted
Arab consciousness in order to delude the Arabs into
believing that the question of Palestine had been resolved,
that there was no longer any reason to continue the Arab-
Israeli conflict and that therefore the Arab boycott of
Israel should be immediately halted and relations between
Arabs and Israel should be normalized.
Syria has also stated that the Oslo agreement would
not achieve the desired, just solution to the question of
Palestine and that it would provide the Palestinians with
only a vague, limited self-rule, which, in the interests of
Israel, would be wide open to interpretation in the future.
This agreement made the Palestinian future the
subject of a vague expression - "final status". It did not
touch upon the most critical issues in the Israeli-Arab
conflict, such as borders, the right of return, Jerusalem
and the future of the settlements. In spite of the
agreement's drawbacks, Syria did not oppose it. Rather,
we left to the Palestinian people and their institutions the
responsibility for judging it and for choosing what they
deemed fit. Our position stemmed from our interest in the
peace process and its objective of the establishment of a
comprehensive and just peace, in addition to our keen
interest in achieving solutions that are self-sustaining and
in steering away from those solutions and agreements that
bear the seeds of future conflicts.
Our expectations have proved to be correct. Ever
since the signing of the Oslo agreement, Israel has tried
to strip this modest instrument of its content. It refused to
withdraw from the occupied Palestinian territories and to
allow democratic Palestinian elections, insisting that
elections should be conducted at the point of Israeli
bayonets. Israel resumed the building of settlements in the
occupied Arab territories, in contravention of resolution
465 (1980) and despite the assurances by the Government
of Mr. Rabin that such building would be ceased.
The main equation on which the Madrid peace process
was based was "land for peace". It is only natural to say
that by resuming the building of settlements Israel indicates
that it does not want to give up the occupied Arab
territories. This leads us to state that Israel does not want
peace for land; rather, it wants peace while keeping the
land, under the pretext of its security and so-called Arab
terrorism, disregarding Israel's terrorism and its daily cruel
practices in the West Bank and Southern Lebanon, to such
an extent that it recently imposed a military siege on the
Lebanese ports of Sidon and Tyre and, today, on Al-
Darnour.
Israel is trying to thwart the peace process, which is
based on the principles of international legitimacy and
United Nations resolutions. Hence it tries to deal separately
with each Arab party, with the aim of weakening the Arab
position and bringing about incomplete settlements that do
not achieve peace or justice but, rather, circumvent the
objectives of the peace process in order to avoid genuine
peace.
On Sunday 26 February The New York Times
published an article about the appointment of Mr. Avraham
Burg, the well-known Labour Member of the Israeli
Parliament, as the Acting Chairman of the Jewish Agency,
which oversees Jewish immigration to Israel. The
newspaper published excerpts from Mr. Burg' s statement to
the board of directors of the Jewish Agency, reporting:
"And if real peace does come to Israel, he added,
'The question will be asked: can we, and how do we,
survive without an external enemy?"
The major question now is: does Israel, in fact, want
genuine peace with the Arabs, or did it simply bow its head
before the storm and agree to participate under pressure
from the United States of America and international public
opinion? We in Syria still hope for, and seek to achieve, a
comprehensive and just peace between Arabs and Israel.
Syria has declared at the highest levels its determination to
establish normal relations with Israel, in return for full
withdrawal from the Golan Heights, Southern Lebanon and
the other occupied Arab territories. However, during three
years of negotiations Israel has been stalling. It has not yet
announced its intention to effect a full withdrawal from the
Golan Heights.
A few days ago, at a meeting with the delegation of
the European group, headed by the Foreign Minister of
France, His Excellency President Hafez Al-Assad said:
"Although Israel's conduct does not give rise to
optimism, Syria will not give up the objective of
peace."
The President: I thank the representative of Syria
for his kind words addressed to me.
The next speaker is the representative of Lebanon.
I invite him to take a place at the Council table and to
make his statement.
Mr. Moubarak (Lebanon) (interpretation from Arabic): On behalf of the delegation of my country, I
have pleasure in extending to you, Mr. President,
congratulations on your conduct of the work of the
Security Council during the month of February.
Once again the Council is obliged to consider a most
sensitive question that has a great impact on the future of
peace in the Middle East. I refer to the question of
creating Israeli settlements in occupied Arab territories.
The long-hoped-for peace - and my country has
associated itself with this peace process within the
framework of the Madrid Conference - now faces a
serious threat because of the intransigence of the Israeli
Government, its categorical refusal to implement the
relevant United Nations resolutions concerning that
region, notably in particular, those relating to the
settlements, and its flouting of the provisions of
international law and relevant international conventions,
including the Geneva Conventions of 1949.
The Fourth Geneva Convention forbids occupying
forces to violate the demographic integrity of occupied
territories. The Security Council, the General Assembly
and the Commission on Human Rights have on numerous
occasions emphasized Israel's duty to implement and
respect the Geneva Conventions, but Israel has not
recognized the relevant resolutions and has defied the will
of the international community. It is up to its old tricks
and is intensifying its practice of expanding and
establishing new settlements, particularly around the city
of Jerusalem, which highlights the fact that Israel in no
way intends to implement a genuine, comprehensive and
lasting peace in accordance with the Madrid framework.
The Israeli settlement policy in the occupied
territories is not new, but is an integral part of an already
established policy based on the fact that Israel does not
recognize itself as an occupying Power. It is continuing
the annexationist policy proclaimed by past Israeli
Governments. This policy is in flat contradiction to the
concept of peace and the will of the international
community to stop the settlement policy.
Reality has proven that what is put out on television
and through the media is nothing but propaganda, and that
settlements have now become extremely numerous: their
number as increased by 5-10 per cent since the beginning
of the peace process, while the settler population has gone
up by about 15 per cent. The Israeli Government has
proclaimed that the city of Jerusalem is exempt from any
limits on the number of settlements, and has extended the
city limits until they take in about a quarter of the West
Bank which, for practical purposes, reaffirms the
continuation of the settlement policy.
A governmental commission has adopted
recommendations requesting an intensification of settlement
activity. The Government has rejected all attempts to move
a limited number of settlers, no more than 400, from the
Hebron area - which now has more than 80,000
inhabitants - although their presence gives rise to security
risks and human rights violations are proliferating from one
day to the next. The most striking example of this was the
massacre at the Al-Ibrahimi Mosque, which claimed many
innocent victims who had gone to that holy place to pray.
Lebanon has on many occasions reaffirmed its respect
for the Madrid framework for establishing peace in the
Middle East, but we have always emphasized that any
settlement not based on Israel's withdrawal from the
occupied Arab territories will never lead to a just and
lasting peace in the region.
There can be no doubt that the crisis in which the
peace process now finds itself derives from the fact that
Israel is insisting on acting within the framework of a
policy aimed at maintaining its hold over the territories and
maintaining peace at the same time. The difficulties being
put forward by Israel over its withdrawal from the occupied
Arab territories, the continuation of its campaign of arrests
and the intransigent policies it is pursuing - whether in the
Palestinian territories lying to the south of Lebanon or in
the indiscriminate bombing of cities and villages within
Lebanon itself and the blockade of Lebanese ports - all
reaffirm this policy, which we categorically reject.
For two weeks now, Israel has been imposing a sea
blockade against the ports of Tyre, Sarafund, Sidon and Al-
Darnour and is terrorizing citizens, particularly fishermen,
who have been deprived of their sole source of income.
Israeli sea patrols operate daily in Lebanese ports and Israel
is engaged in continuing aggression against the region also
through the use of heavy weapons and air power. Such
acts of aggression have caused a great deal of damage
and claimed a great number of innocent victims among
civilians, as well as causing considerable economic
damage.
The continuation of these violations of Lebanese
territorial integrity is part of an Israeli practice aimed at
imposing Israeli hegemony over its neighbours and at
totally rejecting resolution 425 (1978), which demanded
that Israel withdraw to its internationally recognized
boundaries. This resolution has not yet been implemented.
The Israeli rejection of this resolution on various pretexts
has led to a situation in southern Lebanon that was tense
then and continues to be so now. Citizens in the occupied
areas suffer under constant daily bombardment and as a
result of types of activity that are becoming characteristic
of Israeli practices in the countries of the region, and will
never lead to the peaceful coexistence to which the
peoples of the region aspire.
The continuation of the Israeli settlement policy in
the Palestinian territories and the explosive situation in
southern Lebanon confirm the presence of a major threat
to the peace process. We hope to see the Security Council
play a decisive role by taking the necessary measures to
put an end to Israel's settlement policy, and to the
intransigent Israeli measures aimed against Lebanon so
that the peace process can be resumed and all Members
of the United Nations can reaffirm their commitment to
international law, the Charter of the United Nations and
the principles of the Madrid Conference.
The President: I thank the representative of lebanon
for the kind words he addressed to me.
The Permanent Observer of Palestine to the United
Nations has asked to speak. I call on him.
Mr. Al-Kidwa (Palestine) (interpretation from Arabic): It is obvious that we are now moving towards
the end of this part of the Security Council's work without
the Council's adopting any specific measure. In view of
this, I should like to make the following remarks.
At the outset, we would like to extend our thanks to
you, Mr. President, and to the other members of the
Security Council. We extend our thanks also to all the
members of the Council and observers who have made
statements at this meeting today. This meeting and those
statements clearly demonstrate that the international
community is concerned at the dangerous situation in the
occupied Palestinian territories and throughout the region.
We have made serious efforts to ensure that the
outcome of this meeting would be the adoption of clear and
specific measures. We were supported by the Arab Group
in the United Nations and by the Movement of Non-
Aligned Countries in the Council, along with other Council
members. We extend our appreciation to them all.
Unfortunately, that outcome was not achieved, for
reasons to do with the situation in the Council and,
probably, I should say, with the position of one of its
permanent members. The outcome we did achieve seems
to have to do with a fear of repercussions on the ongoing
contacts aimed at achieving the desired progress in the
peace process. It is our understanding also that the
sponsors of the peace process - particularly the United
States of America - plan to intensify their efforts to
achieve the desired results.
We hope that this progress will occur: specifically,
that there will be an end to settlements and, that there will
be implementation of the agreements between the two
sides. In that event, we would be extremely happy and
would certainly not have further recourse to the Security
Council. But, if the current situation continues, and if the
ongoing efforts do not yield tangible results, we cannot
but turn to the Council once more in the hope of an
outcome different from today's.
I reiterate our thanks to all concerned.
The President: I thank the Permanent Observer of
Palestine for the kind words he addressed to me and to
the Council.
There are no further speakers. The Security Council
will remain seized of this matter.
The meeting rose at 6.55 pm.
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