S/PV.4506Resumption1 Security Council
▶ This meeting at a glance
67
Speeches
0
Countries
0
Resolutions
Topics
Security Council deliberations
Israeli–Palestinian conflict
Peace processes and negotiations
War and military aggression
Arab political groupings
Diplomatic expressions and remarks
Middle East
The President (spoke in Russian): I should like
to inform the members of the Council that I have
received letters from the representatives of Argentina,
Bahrain, Bhutan, Canada, Costa Rica, Cyprus,
Djibouti, India, Iraq, Lebanon, Morocco, New Zealand,
Qatar, Sudan and the United Republic of Tanzania in
which they request to be invited to participate in the
discussion of the item on the Council's agenda. In
conformity with the usual practice, I propose, with the
consent of the Council, to invite those representatives
to participate in the discussion, without the right to
vote, in accordance with the relevant provisions of the
Charter and rule 37 of the Council's provisional rules
of procedure.
There being no objection, it is so decided.
At the invitation of the President, Mr. Listre
(Argentina), Mr. Buallay (Bahrain), Mr. Pradhan
(Bhutan), Mr. Heinbecker (Canada), Mr. Niehaus
(Costa Rica), Mr. Zackheos (Cyprus), Mr. Olhaye
(Djibouti), Mr. Gopinathan (India), Mr. Al-Kadhe
(Iraq), Mr. Diab (Lebanon), Mr. Medrek
(Morocco), Mr. MacKay (New Zealand),
Mr. Al-Nasser (Qatar), Mr. Erwa (Sudan) and
Mr. Mwakawago (United Republic of Tanzania)
took the seats reservedfor them at the side of the
Council Chamber.
The President (spoke in Russian): The next
speaker inscribed on my list is the representative of
Cuba. I invite him to take a seat at the Council table
and to make his statement.
Mr. Requeijo Gual (Cuba) (spoke in Spanish):
Allow me to express our pleasure at seeing you,
Mr. President, presiding over the work of the Security
Council during the month of April, precisely at a time
when the situation in the Middle East is undergoing an
almost unprecedented deterioration. My delegation
trusts in your experience and wisdom in leading the
work of the Council in an expeditious and resolute
manner.
The news that continues to arrive from the
occupied Palestinian territories remains horrifying. Not
even censorship and the ham-fisted manipulation by
those who control the media at the global level have
prevented the daily arrival of some of the horrible
scenes of destruction and death that appear as if they
were already something usual in our lives.
Unfortunately, we the Member States of the United
Nations remain aware of the inability of the Security
Council to carry out the functions so clearly ascribed to
it in the Charter of the United Nations with regard to
the maintenance of international peace and security.
The situation is deteriorating moment by moment,
and nothing happens. Bombs and bulldozers are being
used to destroy the headquarters of the presidency of
the Palestinian National Authority inch by inch, and
nothing happens. Dignity is trampled underfoot and the
physical integrity of President Yasser Arafat is placed
in danger - someone whom for many years we have
hosted in the Organization and to whom we have
accorded the well-deserved rank of head of State -
and nothing happens. There are emergency closed-door
meetings in the Security Council to try to resolve the
situation, and nothing happens. Early in the morning of
Saturday, 30 March, the Council adopted resolution
1402 (2002) - a resolution pallid and ambiguous as
few others have been. Despite the emergency nature of
the situation, the timid provisions of the resolution
continue unimplemented, and nothing happens. It looks
as though resolution 1402 (2002) will suffer the same
sad fate of earlier resolutions - such as resolutions
242 (1967), 338 (1973) and 425 (1978) - whose full
implementation has been pending for many years
without the Council adopting the necessary measures to
insure full compliance with their provisions.
The pretexts and justifications being brandished
to justify that situation clearly indicate the moral
duplicity of those who threaten, or use, paralysing
vetoes. Those of us who are here have seen how the
double standard is applied in the Council, as well as the
different degrees of emergency and speed in the
adoption and subsequent implementation of
resolutions, as if the lives of some human beings were
less valuable than those of others.
In recent days, we have been listening to how the
issue of terrorism is manipulated and how oppression
and the illegal occupation of territories are justified
under the right of self-defence. This must be
denounced and rejected as firmly as possible. There are
no valid pretexts to justify massacres, selective
assassination, mass detention, extrajudicial execution,
the forced exile of Palestinians from the land of their
birth, attacks on religious sanctuaries that serve to
provide refuge to threatened civilians, torture and
denigrating and inhuman ill-treatment. Nothing can
justify an entire people being denied the full enjoyment
of its most elementary rights as a nation.
The Security Council, and its permanent members
in particular, must put an end to the ongoing policy of
the Government of Israel to ignore the Council's
resolutions, including an end to the illegal occupation
of Arab territories. Nothing will ever be resolved if we
do not act with firmness, courage and resolve. The
world cannot remain a passive spectator of the tragedy
that continues to unfold day by day in the Middle East.
Never before has there been greater justification
for the demand for the immediate deployment of an
international force mandated by the Security Council to
ensure effective compliance in the field with
resolutions that have been adopted after strenuous
efforts to overcome the veto barrier. The policy of
aggression against the Arab peoples, the Palestinian
people in particular, must cease. The illegal occupation
of Arab territories must cease. The disproportionate
and desperate use of violence against civilians,
Palestinians and Israelis alike, must cease. The
language of force and terror, be it expressed in isolated
incidents or through state terrorism under a different
name, must be silenced.
Cuba believes that the only path towards the
genuine and lasting peace that all desire is negotiation,
mutual respect and the effective support of the entire
international community for those efforts. My
delegation reiterates its support for the legitimate
struggle of the Arab peoples and for that of the
Palestinian people in particular towards the realization
of its aspirations as a people and a nation, including its
inalienable right to build its sovereign and independent
State with its capital in East Jerusalem.
At the same time, Cuba demands that the Security
Council fully assume its obligations in order to prevent
once and for all the consummation of the genocide that
is unfolding behind walls of silence and in the absence
of the delegation that should be here listening to these
words and taking them carefully into consideration.
The President (spoke in Russian): I thank the
representative of Cuba for his kind words addressed to
me.
The next speaker on my list is the representative
of Jordan. I invite him to take a seat at the Council
table and to make his statement.
Mr. Al-Hadidi (Jordan) (spoke in Arabic): I
should like to thank you, Sir, for your rapid response
and for your interest in holding this emergency meeting
to consider the ongoing crisis and the deteriorating
situation in the Middle East.
My delegation forcefully condemns the recent
Israeli operations against Palestinian President Yasser
Arafat. We believe that these Israeli measures represent
a dangerous development that is threatening the
security of the region as a whole and is likely to sow
chaos and collapse. Such acts of aggression -
including physical liquidations, the destruction of
homes and national institutions, the invasion of camps,
arbitrary mass arrests, threats against the security of
villages and the victimization of large numbers of
civilians - will not guarantee security for Israel and
never have guaranteed it. Moreover, this aggression is a
flagrant Violation of agreements concluded between the
two parties and of the fundamental principles of
international humanitarian law and relevant
international instruments and norms. We condemn and
reject these entirely unjustified acts. We also condemn
the targeting and killing of civilians by both parties.
The Jordanian trade office in the Palestinian Authority
area has been attacked and destroyed by Israeli forces.
That, too, we vigorously condemn.
We urge the Security Council to discharge its
responsibilities under the Charter of the United Nations
by dispatching international forces to protect the
Palestinian people, its legitimate leadership and its
national institutions. In the light of ongoing Israeli
aggression against the Palestinian Authority and the
occupied territories, we urge the Security Council to
demand that Israel immediately withdraw from the
territories it has occupied and implement Council
resolutions 1397 (2002) and 1402 (2002). Israel must
also be urged to respect the 1949 Fourth Geneva
Convention relative to the Protection of Civilian
Persons in Time of War. We also call on the Council to
ensure Israel's respect for resolutions 242 (1967) and
338 (1973) by allowing the establishment of an
independent State on Palestinian national territory with
Al-Quds Al-Sharif as its capital.
The President (spoke in Russian): I thank the
representative of Jordan for his kind words addressed
to me.
The next speaker on my list is the representative
of Kuwait. I invite him to take a seat at the Council
table and to make his statement.
Mr. Abulhasan (Kuwait) (spoke in Arabic): I
warmly congratulate you, Sir, on your assumption of
the presidency of the Council for this month. I also
wish to praise you for your guidance in this difficult
time as we seek international unity. Moreover, I cannot
fail to pay tribute to your predecessor, the
representative of Norway, for his important efforts and
for the manner in which he guided the work of the
Council. I also thank Secretary-General Kofi Annan for
his sincere personal efforts to find a lasting solution to
the problem in the Middle East, to achieve peace and
harmony in that region and to put an end to the
suffering and tragedy of the defenceless Palestinian
people.
It is regrettable that the Security Council should
be meeting today not to consider positive developments
such as stability in the Middle East, as we might have
expected following the Council's adoption of
resolutions 1397 (2002) and 1402 (2002). On the
contrary, the Council finds itself compelled to meet on
short notice to consider the Israeli Government's public
refusal to implement those two recent resolutions.
Israel continues unremittingly to carry out barbarous
acts as the result of the policy of a Government that
acts under the flag of democracy and waves the flag of
anti-terrorism in order to further personal ambitions
that have led to military and political repression. These
personal ambitions involve targeting the Palestinian
people as a whole and, in particular, the Palestinian
Authority and its leader, unambiguously elected in a
democratic manner.
Kuwait, along with all of the other countries in
the area, is aware of the importance of respecting and
strengthening international law, and that is why it felt
hopeful when the Council recently adopted two
resolutions - 1397 (2002) and 1402 (2002) - calling
on Israel to withdraw from the occupied Palestinian
territories and to put an end to the Violence.
The two resolutions, adopted unanimously,
represented a positive step, because they showed that
the Council members realized the scope of the tragedy
of the Palestinian people, whose blood is being spilled
in vain.
Mr. Sharon will not even allow the defenceless
Palestinian people to defend themselves. He is
violating the most elementary rules of international
law- rules that today are recognized by all. He is
turning his back on the most elementary principles of
humanitarian law at a time when Council members
have tried to emphasize the importance of these rules
in preserving human dignity.
This tragic situation is daily escalating, and only
God knows the outcome. To avert a full-blown
conflagration, the Council must take resolute measures
on three important issues.
The first issue relates to Israel's pursuit of a
policy of barbaric violence against the Palestinian
people. Israel must be urged in the strongest possible
terms to put an immediate end to this violence; to
withdraw unconditionally from the Palestinian
territories; to lift the siege on the Palestinian Authority
and on its legitimate elected President, Yasser Arafat;
and to lift the siege also on civilians, because this is
without a doubt a form of State terrorism, in clear
contravention of the Fourth Geneva Convention.
To besiege Mr. Arafat does not serve the interests
of peace, and Sharon and the Israeli authorities should
not delude themselves: it is futile to try to bring a
people to its knees by humiliating and detaining their
leader. The Israeli Government must stop flouting the
resolutions of the Security Council. It must be ordered
to respect the will of the international community, as
expressed in these resolutions. Israel must bow to the
will of the international community.
Article 25 of the Charter states that the Members
of the United Nations agree to accept and carry out the
decisions of the Security Council. An international
observation force must be sent to the area as soon as
possible to calm things down and bring about peace,
and stability, and to put an end to Israel's inhuman and
barbaric practices.
The Security Council, today more than ever, must
play its rightful role and implement the message of
peace announced by the Arab Summit in Beirut
through Prince Abdallah - an initiative that shows
that the Arab world rejects war and seeks peace.
However, as is its usual practice, the Israeli
leadership has rejected this initiative, not through
internationally recognized channels but through its
favourite method, which is war, bloodshed, killing and
violent attacks. This comes as no surprise if we look at
the dark past of this individual who is no friend of
peace and who, in fact, detests it.
If the members of the Council do not act
decisively and put an end to this situation, the
consequences will be inconceivable. It may become
impossible to solve the problem if this goes on any
longer. The Council is no doubt aware that large
popular demonstrations are taking place in the capitals
of the Arab world calling for an end to the violence
against Palestinians.
The Kuwait Council of Ministers has adopted two
declarations condemning Israel's dangerous actions and
calling on the international community and the Security
Council to take serious concrete measures to put an end
to Israeli actions and to allow the Palestinian people to
enjoy their legitimate rights, in keeping with
international law.
In conclusion, we must insist that the Council
address the underlying core of the conflict. Its source is
obvious: the illegal occupation by Israel of Arab land.
That is why this problem cannot be resolved unless the
Security Council plays its part and compels Israel to
withdraw, immediately and unconditionally, from all
occupied Arab territories, including the Syrian Golan;
move back to the line of 4 June 1967; and evacuate
every inch of territory it holds in southern Lebanon, in
keeping with all relevant internationally binding
resolutions, in particular Security Council resolutions
242 (1967) and 338 (1973).
We urge the international community, especially
the co-sponsors of the peace process, and those who
cherish peace to act in order to put an end to these
massacres and this barbaric behaviour and to bring
Israel back to the path of peace. They must create
conditions that will give the Arab peace initiative a real
chance of succeeding. It has elicited the support of the
world and deserves our support. It is now up to the
Council to cooperate in this final stage of this process.
The President (spoke in Russian): The next
speaker inscribed on my list is the representative of
Namibia. I invite him to take a seat at the Council table
and to make his statement.
Mr. Andjaba (Namibia): At the outset, Sir, I
wish to extend my warm congratulations to you on
your assumption of the presidency of the Security
Council for the month of April. We also express our
appreciation to your predecessor, the Permanent
Representative of Norway, for the able manner in
which he conducted the work of the Council in March.
I wish to associate myself with the statement
made by the Permanent Representative of South Africa
on behalf of the Non-Aligned Movement.
Sir, you deserve our further appreciation for
scheduling this important meeting so early in your
presidency, in particular at a time when it appears to
the outside world that the Security Council is either
unable or unwilling to carry out its Charter
responsibilities and ensure that its resolutions and
decisions on the Middle East are implemented fully.
The perceived inaction of the Council and the
selectivity with which it enforces its resolutions are
damaging its credibility and need to be addressed. The
list of decisions and resolutions of the Council
regarding the situation in the Middle East and the
occupied Palestinian territory is growing longer.
However, what is important is not their number but
their implementation. In particular, we urge the
Security Council to ensure the immediate and
unconditional implementation of resolution 1402
(2002).
I wish to recall that the latest aggravation of the
crisis in the Middle East was caused on 28 September
2000, with the provocative Visit of the present Prime
Minister of Israel to Al-Haram Al-Sharif. Today it is
clear that he has succeeded in eroding most
achievements towards peace and preventing further
progress in the peace process.
It is of great concern that Israel is expanding its
illegal occupation with the reoccupation of Palestinian
land. In this process, massive violations of human
rights and international humanitarian law are being
committed, including grave breaches of the Fourth
Geneva Convention. Furthermore, extrajudicial killings
by the Israeli occupying forces are continuing, as well
as the large-scale destruction of Palestinian homes and
other properties. The international community, in
particular the Security Council, should not turn a blind
eye to this and should exert all pressure on Israel to
ensure that these illegal acts are stopped. A11 acts of
violence, including suicide bombings and the use of
military forces against innocent civilians, must be
condemned.
The Palestinian people have the inalienable right
to self-determination. They have the right to establish
their own viable State, just as Israel claims the right to
its existence and wishes to live in peace with its
neighbours within secure and internationally
recognized borders. The Palestinian people also have
the right to choose their own leaders, and the present
attempts by Israel to force President Arafat, who is the
legitimate leader of the Palestinian people, to leave
Palestine should be rejected with the contempt they
deserve.
My delegation calls on both parties to comply
with Security Council resolution 1402 (2002) and to
implement it without further delay. The longer the
current violence continues, the more difficult it will be
to build the confidence necessary for negotiations. We
also call on Israel to embrace the initiative of Crown
Prince Abdullah of Saudi Arabia, which was adopted
by the Arab League. It provides the light at the end of
the tunnel in the current circumstances.
My delegation strongly believes that international
observers in the region would be a valuable mechanism
to monitor the situation and ease tension between the
parties. The Council should therefore continue to
explore that option.
In conclusion, my delegation wishes to reiterate
that the only way to solve the crisis in the Middle East
is through a negotiated peace settlement on the basis of
Security Council resolutions 242 (1967) and 338
(1973). The international community, and in particular
the Security Council, should take all concrete actions
necessary to achieve this goal. The continued
humiliation of a people under occupation and the
relegation of its legitimate fight against foreign
occupation to the status of mere terrorism, are not in
the interest of any Viable peace in the Middle East.
Instead, the occupation of Palestine, which is at the
core of the current crisis, should be ended.
The President (spoke in Russian): I thank the
representative of Namibia for his kind words addressed
to me.
The next speaker inscribed on my list is the
representative of Algeria. I invite him to take a seat at
the Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Benmehidi (Algeria) (spoke in French):
Allow me first of all, Sir, to express the Algerian
delegation's pleasure at seeing you preside over the
Security Council for the month of April. Let me also
express our satisfaction, which I am certain is shared
by all Member States, at the praiseworthy manner in
which you have always conducted the presidency in all
respects.
I also wish to thank you for the promptness with
which you responded to the requests of the Arab Group
and of the Non-Aligned Movement to convene an
emergency meeting on the critical situation in
Palestine. I wish further to thank Ambassador Kolby of
Norway for the outstanding skill with which he
presided over the Council's work during the month of
March, which was a particularly busy month.
Last week's failed assassination attempt on
President Yasser Arafat revealed the true intentions of
the political heirs of the assassins of Prime Minister
Yitzhak Rabin: they are attempting to kill the peace
process and its outcome, the creation of a Palestinian
State.
Algeria vehemently condemns the Israeli military
escalation against the Palestinian people and the
Palestinian Authority. It hails the heroic resistance of
the Palestinian people and of its legitimate leadership,
headed by President Arafat, whose steadfastness and
endurance in the face of the criminal conduct of the
Israeli occupation forces deserve the support and
admiration of all.
International public opinion can no longer remain
indifferent to the tragedy of the Palestinian people,
who have been left defenceless before the bloodthirsty
onslaught of an adversary of superior military power
acting with total impunity and in manifest contempt for
international law.
The Security Council, in particular, is called upon
today to take a stance on its own decisions and on the
lawless actions of Israel. How much longer must we
wait before the Council decides to renounce the
practice of double standards, which prevents it from
taking the urgent and immediate action that is its duty
on issues of international peace and security? The very
credibility of the Council is at stake, as is the moral
authority of the co-sponsors of the peace process.
On several occasions in recent months, Algeria,
speaking here in the Council, has described the
situation in Palestine as one of war, demanding the
implementation of the relevant provisions of
international humanitarian law, in particular the Fourth
Geneva Convention relative to the Protection of
Civilians in Time of War. Given that the head of the
Israeli Government recently declared publicly that his
country was at war, it is necessary for urgent measures
to be taken to end the ongoing genocide of the
Palestinian people and to set out, on a legal basis -
which has now been clearly established - the facts
surrounding the war crimes carried out by the Israeli
occupation forces.
As for the future of Palestine and of the region, it
is now clear that Ariel Sharon wishes to erect a barrier
of blood and hatred between Israeli and Palestinian
society. Furthermore, through his unsavoury
manoeuvres, carried out with international support, he
is also trying to put up a barrier of misunderstanding
between the Arab peoples and the people of the United
States of America. The Council must question the aims
and objectives of that plan.
Algeria calls upon the international community to
acknowledge the exceptional seriousness of the
situation in Palestine and to reject the linkage that the
Israelis are trying to establish between the liberation
struggle of the Palestinian people and international
terrorism. The fundamental difference between those
two situations lies in the fact that young Palestinians
who have chosen to confront Israeli State terrorism by
giving up their lives for their country have died on
their own occupied soil.
In conclusion, the international community has,
on many occasions, proclaimed that weapons of mass
destruction should not fall into irresponsible hands.
Today, Algeria would like to express its profound,
legitimate and well-founded concern regarding the
possession of a formidable nuclear arsenal by Israel,
which surely does not deserve to be described as a
responsible State. In the light of the events that the
world has witnessed in recent days, the risk of that
arsenal being used against the Arab nation is no longer
merely a matter of academic speculation.
The President (spoke in Russian): I thank the
representative of Algeria for his kind words addressed
to me.
The next speaker inscribed on my list is the
representative of Bangladesh. I invite him to take a seat
at the Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Chowdhury (Bangladesh): Even as we
speak, war rages unabated in Palestine. It is a war
unleashed by a mighty military machine against an
entire civilian population. It is a war that is inflicting
horrific carnage, exacerbating occupation and
compounding pain.
Bangladesh is gravely concerned, as, indeed, is
the rest of the world. We are concerned that Security
Council resolutions are being ignored, even flouted. It
is to the Council that people subjected to aggression
turn for protection. For this Council to fail them when
such appeals are made will surely erode faith in the
system; it will redound to no one's benefit.
We are also concerned that continued bloodletting
could further inflame passion, in the region and
beyond. It could lead to a slide towards crisis over
which the major protagonists would have lost control.
Stability in societies far removed could also be
threatened. We are concerned about all of this, and
more. We are deeply disturbed that United Nations
institutions, in which our peoples place great store, are
unable to cut the Gordian knot of an intractable
impasse.
We are all the more saddened because, now more
than ever, there is broad agreement on the vision of an
ultimate solution. It includes the creation of two
separate States for the Israelis and the Palestinians. Yet
a consensus on the vision has not advanced the cause
of peace. Israel's latest invasion of Ramallah and other
towns threatens to destroy all the progress that has
been made. It is in that spirit that the Prime Minister of
Bangladesh, Begum Khaleda Zia, called for an
immediate withdrawal of Israeli forces from Ramallah
and other occupied territories.
The time has surely come for us to go beyond
mere platitudes and to put in place effective
mechanisms for implementing international decisions. I
refer to Security Council resolutions 1397 (2002) and
1402 (2002). The concept of an international force to
that end merits serious consideration. The Tenet plan
and the Mitchell recommendations must be followed.
That remains the only path for the movement towards
durable peace. The Council and the "quartet" should
intensify efforts towards those goals. As stated by
South Africa in its capacity as Chair of the Non-
Aligned Movement, we believe that a special mission
of the Security Council to Israel and Palestine could
significantly contribute to stabilizing the situation. Or
perhaps we could consider a visit by the
Secretary-General to the area, under the Council's
mandate. We have reached a stage where we cannot
afford the luxury of discarding any alternative.
It is heart-rending for us to see the trampling of
the mores of humanitarian law in the region from
which emanated the three great models of humane
conduct - Islam, Christianity and Judaism. What is
happening there today is contrary to all acceptable
values. It militates against everything that the United
Nations Charter and its principles stand for. This
cannot - must not - be allowed to go on. The world
can, and must, now intervene.
In the language that I am speaking - English -
the expression "new Jerusalem" has always implied a
renaissance of hope. Could we not keep it that way?
The President (spoke in Russian): I thank the
representative of Bangladesh for his kind words
addressed to me.
The next speaker inscribed on my list is the
representative of Indonesia. I invite him to take a seat
at the Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Widodo (Indonesia): Let me begin by
extending to you, Sir, my congratulations and those of
my delegation on your assumption of the presidency at
a time when the Council is considering an issue of
critical importance to all of us. Your proven diplomatic
skills assure us that our deliberations will result in a
positive outcome.
I should also like to extend to your predecessor,
His Excellency Ambassador Ole Peter Kolby of
Norway, our deep appreciation for the exemplary
manner in which he guided the work of the Council last
month.
This meeting has been convened to address a
situation that has resulted in an intolerable state of war
in the occupied Palestinian territory. Such
developments cannot but have dire consequences for
the region in particular, as well as repercussions for the
world at large.
Yesterday, the Government of Indonesia issued a
statement strongly condemning Israel's military
aggression against Palestine and the person of
President Arafat. Indeed, these untenable policies pose
a grave threat to the personal safety and security of
President Arafat and to the very future of the entire
Middle East peace process. Furthermore, Indonesia
finds it unacceptable that the occupying Power justifies
its military action by using the issue of terrorism as a
pretext to subvert the legitimate Palestinian cause.
In responding to this situation, the Council
adopted resolution 1397 (2002), which rightly
addressed the very core of the problem, namely the
creation of peace and the recognition of the inalienable
right of the Palestinians to self-determination, through
a vision of a region where two States, Israel and
Palestine, live side by side within secure and
recognized borders. That resolution has been
strengthened by the adoption of Security Council
resolution 1402 (2002). Regrettably, those resolutions
remain unimplemented. It is therefore my delegation's
firm View that the Security Council must take
necessary and immediate measures to establish a clear
mechanism to guarantee their full implementation.
Peace is a challenging and uphill task indeed,
given the course of recent tragic events and a military
option that can never lead to lasting peace. Therefore,
my Government reaffirms its support for all diplomatic
efforts towards resuming political dialogue and
reviving the peace process between the concerned
parties. In that regard, we extend our full support to the
message of peace emanating from the 14th Arab
League Summit, held in Beirut. It bears further
reiteration that a lasting peace requires the
implementation of Security Council resolutions 242
(1967) and 338 (1973) and of the principle of land for
peace. That is the only Viable path to ending the Israeli
occupation of Arab territories.
Given the critical developments on the ground
and the ongoing deliberations in the Council, the whole
Middle East region is facing a serious test: either it will
move forward to end the violence and to begin the
process of peace, or it will fall further into an abyss of
violence. The most urgent option at this stage,
therefore, is for the Security Council to take all
possible steps, especially by mandating the urgent
deployment of an international security force to the
occupied Palestinian territories, to bring this conflict to
a speedy end.
In conclusion, let me reaffirm the imperative need
to address simultaneously the political and security
dimensions in order to achieve a comprehensive, just
and lasting peace in the Middle East.
The President (spoke in Russian): I thank the
representative of Indonesia for his kind words
addressed to me.
The next speaker inscribed on my list is the
representative of Morocco, whom I invite to take a seat
at the Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Medrek (Morocco) (spoke in Arabic): I
should like to congratulate you, Sir, on your
assumption of the presidency of the Council for this
month. I should also like to congratulate your
predecessor, the representative of Norway, for his
efforts during the month of March.
The Security Council is holding this meeting four
days after its adoption of resolution 1402 (2002).
During those four days, the situation in the occupied
Palestinian territories has worsened and has become
more tragic. Israel has carried out the collective murder
of Palestinians, encircling them and their families. The
Palestinians have been forced to bury their dead in
hospital courtyards. The situation has become such that
no human being, regardless of affiliation, can accept it.
It has now reached a level of danger that is threatening
international peace and security.
The Security Council must finally shoulder its
responsibilities in this regard. The Council must
demand of Sharon that he stop the killings, his
Government's use of force and its policy of vengeance,
which can only lead to further suffering for all the
region's peoples, beginning with the Israeli people
itself.
The current situation is testing the credibility of
the United Nations, and in particular that of the
Security Council. Is it reasonable for a resolution
adopted with the approval of all permanent members of
the Security Council to remain a dead letter? Israel is
refusing to implement that resolution or to abide by it.
Is it reasonable that international humanitarian law, in
particular the Fourth Geneva Convention, is being
flouted by the Israeli occupying forces? How can we
ignore - or accept - the policy of collective
punishment that Israel is carrying out to the extreme
against the defenceless Palestinian people? Such a
practice is unacceptable, and the tens of thousands who
are protesting daily throughout the world are voicing
that sentiment.
Yesterday, His Majesty King Mohammed VI, as
Chairman of the Jerusalem Committee of the
Organization of the Islamic Conference, appealed to
the international community to intervene quickly to put
an end to the deteriorating situation. The best way to
achieve that result is to send a force to separate an
army that has sophisticated military equipment from
the Palestinian inhabitants, who have as their weapons
only the determination to continue their struggle
against occupation. Such an international presence has
become an urgent necessity to put an end to the
ongoing policy of assassination and the vicious circle
of violence and counter-violence.
Many voices have been raised throughout the
world requesting the intervention of a third party to
ensure the separation of the Israeli forces from the
Palestinian people in order to find a way out of the
current deadlock. I recently took the floor before the
Council on behalf of the Group of Arab States to
condemn terrorism, regardless of its origin. Today I
again reaffirm that position, because it is not dictated
by the current situation. It flows from Arab civilization
and the precepts of tolerant Islam, a religion that
rejects violence and gives precedence to the logic of
dialogue, negotiation and coexistence among human
beings.
To deprive a people of its basic daily needs and to
deprive its children of the right to attend school and to
receive basic medical care and to trample its dignity
can only lead young people to sacrifice everything,
including their lives.
We should not be surprised that Yasser Arafat -
President of the Palestinian Authority, the symbol of
the Palestinian national identity, whom Israel is using
every means to isolate from his people and from the
outside world, including cutting off his electricity, food
supplies and access to medical care - should be ready
to sacrifice himself to preserve his dignity and that of
the Palestinian people. The present situation, which is
extremely dangerous for all of us, is humiliating for all
nations and peoples that have committed themselves
under the United Nations Charter to save succeeding
generations from the scourge of war.
The world cannot stand idly by in the face of a
policy aimed at silencing the entire Palestinian people
and depriving it of its legitimate rights. The entire
world cannot stand by in the face of Israeli practices -
namely, killing innocent people and the mass arrest of
hundreds.
Today's Council meeting is of great importance.
Indeed, it is of historic importance. In the light of the
aspirations of all peoples of the region - in particular
the Palestinian people, which is daily suffering from
the occupation and the agony it has imposed - the
Kingdom of Morocco calls upon the Security Council,
the principal organ of the United Nations entrusted
with the maintenance of international peace and
security, and urges it to take concrete measures
necessary to put an end to the arbitrary and
irresponsible policy of the Israeli Government in the
Palestinian territories. Israel must withdraw its forces
immediately, must lift its siege of President Arafat and
begin a dialogue between him and the Israeli Prime
Minister, Ariel Sharon, to put an end to violence and to
resume negotiations with the aim of achieving a just,
lasting and comprehensive solution to the situation in
the Middle East, in accordance with international law.
Morocco remains ready to participate in any and
all efforts or initiatives aimed at extricating the region
from the present deadlock. The objective would be to
give the peoples of the region hope that their legitimate
rights, security, peace and understanding can be
guaranteed.
The President (spoke in Russian): I thank the
representative of Morocco for his kind words addressed
to me.
The next speaker inscribed on my list is the
representative of Iraq, whom I invite to take a seat at
the Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Al-Kadhe (Iraq) (spoke in Arabic): Once
again, Mr. President, I would like to thank you for your
prompt response in holding this emergency meeting of
the Security Council to consider the increasingly grave
situation in the occupied Palestinian territories,
including Jerusalem.
On 30 March 2002, the Council adopted
resolution 1402 (2002). Despite the fact that the
resolution was weak and not commensurate with the
war crimes and other inhuman crimes committed by the
Zionist entity against the Palestinian people, the
representative of that entity criticized the resolution
and publicly rejected it as soon as it had been adopted
by the Council. Later that day, the Zionist forces of
occupation launched a wide-scale offensive, which is
still continuing, against the Palestinian people and its
leadership. It has also detained a large number of
Palestinian leaders and other Palestinians. It has
launched aggression against Christian and Islamic holy
places.
The theoretical position of the representative of
the Zionist entity towards the Security Council
resolution and the bloody practical position of
aggression by his Government reflect the following:
the Zionist entity's lack of respect for Security Council
resolutions; a lack of commitment to the provisions of
Article 25 of the United Nations Charter; total
disregard and disrespect for all appeals addressed to it
by numerous States to put an end to its acts of
aggression; total disrespect for commitments and
international agreements and lack of commitment to
any form of civilized moral behaviour; the total
exposure of its real face as a terrorist, racist entity.
The Zionist entity and the United States of
America attempt to justify the criminal actions of the
Zionist entity by claiming the right of self-defence.
That ill-informed justification does not have any legal
basis and runs counter to International Court of Justice
interpretations of the conditions under which that right
can be exercised by States individually or collectively.
By this attempt, they seek to transform this legal
principle into a political means to justify acts of
aggression, which are exactly what is daily committed
by the Zionist entity with total insolence, in front of the
eyes of the entire world. It continues killing,
butchering and starving the Palestinian people, on the
pretext of self-defence. The result is that the entity is in
fact destroying the basic legal principles set out in the
United Nations Charter and other established principles
of international law.
Certain Western countries, foremost among them
the United States of America, have for three years put
forward the idea of humanitarian intervention to justify
their military actions in a number of areas in the world,
with or without the approval of the Security Council.
They justify such action as protecting human rights and
the basic rules of international humanitarian law.
Today, the Zionist entity is violating all
international human rights instruments and is crushing
with its tanks the Fourth Geneva Convention of 1949
and its two Additional Protocols of 1977. That entity
has murdered hundreds of civilians, has executed
scores of others in cold blood and has detained
thousands of Palestinian youths, the fate of a large
number of whom is still unknown. It has imposed a
siege on Palestinian civilians to starve them and to
launch a war. It has also totally destroyed the
infrastructure of the Palestinian Authority. It has
persisted in its recklessness, met with total silence on
the part of the international community. It has gone so
far as to destroy hospitals and places of worship,
Muslim and Christian alike, to the extent that
Palestinians cannot even bury their martyrs.
The question that arises now is why those
countries have not intervened in order to protect the
basic rules of human rights and international law that
have persistently been violated in Palestine. Is this not
categorical proof of the policy of double standards
adopted by those States - the same policy that is
adopted by the Security Council?
The Zionist entity is a selfish and racist regime
that is not interested in world peace. It seeks to destroy
what human civilization has built at all levels - legal,
economic and social. It bears the historic responsibility
for having planted the seeds of terrorism in the Middle
East since the beginning of the last century. It persists
to this day in a policy of terror in all its forms.
There is a historic opportunity for the Security
Council to prove that it can force the Zionist entity to
show respect for the Charter. The Council is
therefore called upon today to shoulder its
responsibility vis-a-Vis that entity with a View to
implementing resolutions of international legitimacy
and putting an end to the escalating Zionist aggression
and immediately and unconditionally to lift the siege of
the Palestinian people and its struggling President,
Yasser Arafat.
The President (spoke in Russian): I thank the
representative of Iraq for his statement and his kind
words addressed to me.
The next speaker on my list is the representative
of Mauritania. I invite him to take a seat at the Council
table and to make his statement.
Mr. Ould Deddach (Mauritania) (spoke in Arabic): I start my statement by extending to you, Sir,
on behalf of my delegation, our congratulations on
your assumption of the presidency of the Security
Council for this month. We thank you for convening
this open meeting. We would also like to thank your
predecessor, Ambassador Ole Peter Kolby of Norway,
for his excellent conduct of the work of the Council
during the month of March.
A few days ago, the Council considered the
serious situation resulting from the reoccupation by
Israeli forces of the territories of the Palestinian
Authority, their barbaric practices and their siege of the
resistance hero, President Yasser Arafat. It was
possible to adopt resolution 1402 (2002), which called
for Israeli withdrawal from all territories under the
authority of the Palestinian Authority, in accordance
with agreements signed between the Israeli and
Palestinian parties. It also called upon Israel to lift the
siege on President Yasser Arafat and to return to the
negotiating table. That was an expression by the
Council of its responsibility to play its full role in the
maintenance of international peace and security. Now
more than ever before it must shoulder its
responsibility and fulfil its duty in accordance with its
Charter mandate.
The stifling siege of the Palestinian people in the
occupied territories exposes the lives of innocent
women, children and elderly people to a tragic
humanitarian catastrophe that should be rejected and
resisted by all possible means. My country demands a
full and immediate withdrawal by Israeli forces, a
return to the Madrid framework and the unconditional
implementation of all resolutions of international
legitimacy, particularly Security Council resolutions
242 (1967) and 338 (1973).
I would also like to reiterate the need for
international observers to protect the unarmed
Palestinian people. The Government and the people of
Mauritania express their total solidarity with the
brotherly, heroic people of Palestine, which is
struggling for its legitimate inalienable rights, and with
the Palestinian Authority under the leadership of
President Yasser Arafat - may God protect him.
President Arafat has repeatedly been asked to
take further measures while he is under siege and
without water or power; this represents total disregard
for Arab and Islamic feelings. This seriously
deteriorating situation, which threatens peace and
security in the entire region, requires immediate
Security Council measures to implement its
resolutions, particularly resolution 1402 (2002), which
the Council adopted last Saturday.
The President (spoke in Russian): I thank the
representative of Mauritania for the kind words he
addressed to me.
The next speaker inscribed on my list is the
representative of India. I invite him to take a seat at the
Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Gopinathan (India): Ambassador Kamalesh
Sharma, Permanent Representative, would have very
much liked to have delivered the statement made by us
under this item on 29 March. He was indisposed that
evening, and as he is out of town today he has
authorized me to make the statement on his behalf.
I would like to begin by expressing our
delegation's deep appreciation at seeing you, Sir,
preside over the deliberations of the Security Council
this month. We wish you every success in your
presidency and assure you of the fullest cooperation of
our delegation. We would also like to thank the
delegation of Norway for the effective manner in which
it guided the work of the Council in March.
My delegation associates itself with the statement
made in the Council earlier today by Ambassador
Kumalo, Permanent Representative of South Africa, in
his capacity as Chairman of the Non-Aligned
Movement. We had already intervened in the Council
debate on this item during the emergency session
convened on 29 March. Our statement today seeks only
to provide additional elements with regard to our
position on the crisis in the Middle East.
The Honourable Jaswant Singh, External Affairs
Minister of India, has spoken to President Yasser
Arafat and Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign
Minister Shimon Peres of Israel during the last two
days. Expressing India's deep distress at the recent
events, he called upon both to implement Security
Council resolution 1402 (2002), which enjoins both
parties to a meaningful ceasefire and withdrawal, the
immediate cessation of all acts of violence and full
cooperation with United States Special Envoy Zinni.
Minister Jaswant Singh told Deputy Prime
Minister Peres that by incarcerating President Arafat
by virtually imprisoning him, Israel was compounding
difficulties, rather than lessening them, making the task
of bringing peace that much more difficult. The
External Affairs Minister conveyed to President Arafat
that India considered him the symbol of Palestinian
nationhood and was concerned about his safety and
well-being. The situation needed to be contained and
controlled. Already a large number of innocent
civilians on both sides had been killed, and this needed
to be stopped. The situation was distressing and it was
not acceptable that it had come to such a pass. India
stood by the people of Palestine in their hour of need.
The External Affairs Minister conveyed to both
President Arafat and Deputy Prime Minister Peres that
India stood ready to do anything to bring peace back to
West Asia.
President Arafat's Special Envoy, Hani al-Hassan,
called on Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee this
morning in New Delhi. President Arafat conveyed his
appreciation for India's consistent support to him and
to the Palestinian cause and the Palestinian people.
Prime Minister Vajpayee expressed concern about
President Arafat's health and well-being. He stressed
that India is deeply troubled at the current situation and
stands ready to do whatever it can to work for peace in
the region.
In conclusion, I would like to quote from Jaswant
Singh's statement in Shanghai on 1 April, during his
recent Visit to China. Referring to the situation in the
Middle East, the External Affairs Minister said:
"President Arafat represents the authority of the
Palestinian people. To subject President Arafat to
this treatment is to denude the Palestinians of the
sense of their nationhood. This must stop. What
must also stop are acts of terrorism. Violence
begetting violence is not an answer. United
Nations Security Council resolution 1397 (2002)
enjoins Israel and Palestine to maintain peace.
That is mandatory. Equally, all other agreements
in this regard, the Tenet plan, the Mitchell Report,
United Nations Security Council resolutions 242
(1967) and 338 (1973) and land for peace can
bring the peace process on the raise. This is not
just a concern for the Middle East, but is a much
larger global concern."
To this I would only add the immediate and
effective implementation of resolution 1402 (2002),
adopted by the Council in the early hours of the
morning of 30 March. We call upon the Security
Council to work together with the parties concerned in
order to bring an end to violence and work towards the
immediate resumption of dialogue and negotiations so
as to achieve lasting peace and security for all in the
region.
The President (spoke in Russian): I thank the
representative of India for his kind words addressed to
me.
The next speaker inscribed on my list is the
representative of Costa Rica. I invite him to take a seat
at the Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Niehaus (Costa Rica) (spoke in Spanish):
Allow me to begin my statement by congratulating
you, Sir, on your assumption of the presidency of the
Council at such an important time for international
peace and security.
I have the honour of addressing the Council on
behalf of the 19 member States of the Rio Group in my
capacity as pro tempore Secretary.
The member States of the Rio Group note with
deep concern the recent developments in the Middle
East. In this regard, the Group that I represent, firmly
convinced that peace between the Palestinian and the
Israeli peoples can be attained only through the
peaceful means for the settlement of disputes enshrined
in international law, has declared, first, that it
welcomes the adoption by the Security Council of
resolutions 1397 (2002) and 1402 (2002), in which,
recalling all previous relevant resolutions, the Council
reaffirms its vision of the Middle East as a region
where two States, Israel and Palestine, will live
peacefully side by side within safe and recognized
borders.
Secondly, the Rio Group has expressed its
satisfaction with the peace initiative of His Royal
Highness Crown Prince Abdullah Bin Abdul Aziz,
which provides fresh hopes for peace and signals the
advisability of all the countries in the region
normalizing relations.
Thirdly, it has called vehemently upon the States
involved in the process for a lasting peace in the
Middle East to make the greatest political efforts
possible to implement the Security Council proposal.
Fourthly, it has appealed to the parties in conflict
to cease immediately all acts of violence and
harassment, whatever their origin, including all
terrorist acts and all types of provocation, incitement to
violence and destruction.
Under the present circumstances, it is
indispensable that the parties to the conflict
immediately and unconditionally comply with the
recent Security Council resolutions, that they take the
first steps to stop the spiral of Violence and destruction,
that they take concrete measures to re-establish
confidence and that they cooperate fully with the
efforts of the Secretary-General and the four special
envoys responsible for reactivating the peace process.
As the Secretary-General wisely said: Today it is
indispensable that the parties forgo the logic of war and
destruction and embrace the logic of peace and
progress.
The President (spoke in Russian): I thank the
representative of Costa Rica for his kind words
addressed to me.
The next speaker is the representative of Oman. I
invite him to take a seat at the Council table and to
make his statement.
Mr. Al-Hassan (Oman) (spoke in Arabic): The
Permanent Representative of Oman was to have
spoken, but unfortunately, he had to leave for a few
minutes. He will be back soon.
Allow me at the outset, and on behalf of my
delegation, to warmly congratulate you, Mr. President,
on presiding over the Council this month. We have
confidence in your diplomatic skill and in the positions
adopted by your friendly country, the Russian
Federation, which will enable the Council to attain its
intended objectives, primarily, the maintenance of
international peace and security. I cannot fail to
congratulate your predecessor, the Ambassador of
Norway, Mr. Peter Kolby, and the members of his
delegation for the exemplary manner in which they
guided the work of the Council during the previous
month.
My delegation also thanks you, Mr. President,
and the other members of the Council for heeding the
request of the Arab Group and convening this
emergency meeting to examine the situation in the
occupied Arab territories, and in Palestine in particular.
We trust that this meeting will lead to concrete results
and the adoption of resolutions that will be possible to
implement.
It goes without saying that the holding of this
meeting has not come about by chance. It is in response
to the extremely dangerous situation that is developing
in the occupied Arab territories. This meeting has also
come about as a result of Israel's refusal to implement
the recent Security Council resolutions 1397 (2002)
and 1402 (2002) and to respect a ceasefire, withdraw
from the occupied territories and lift the siege on
President Arafat. This comes as no surprise; it is not
the first, second or even the third time that the
Palestinian people have had to appeal to the
international community for protection from Israel's
brutal practices. The Council's past inability to respond
has made it necessary to hold this meeting today.
Under the Charter, the Security Council is responsible
for containing the current situation that has led to
towns and villages being besieged, people being killed
and an entire people being plunged into a state of fear
and isolation.
Two important resolutions have recently been
adopted, 1397 (2002) and 1402 (2002). By those
resolutions, the two parties concerned have been asked
to refrain from violence and to return to the negotiating
table.
As usual, Israel has turned its back on the
resolutions. In fact, as soon as resolution 1402 (2002)
was adopted, Israel escalated its effort to reoccupy
Palestinian territories and deployed even more forces
to other parts of the West Bank, including Bethlehem,
Qalqiliyah, Tulkarm, Nablus, Jenin and other
Palestinian areas that have become battlefields in the
theatre of confrontation between Israeli forces and an
unarmed, besieged people whom Israel is trying to
eliminate by any means at its disposal. That is Israel's
response to the Council's resolutions. What is the
Council going to do about the situation? What is it
going to do when a State does not comply with its
resolutions, when, in fact, it ignores them, flouts them
and turns its back on them?
We once again appeal to the Security Council to
fully shoulder its responsibilities, face up to the
situation as a threat to international peace and security,
take its responsibilities seriously and truly seek to
implement its resolutions with the same resolve it has
displayed in other situations that have given rise to
other resolutions and that have led to follow-up,
monitoring mechanisms and the establishment of
committees. We ask the Council to heed the request of
the valiant Palestinian people, who are so bravely
holding off the Israeli occupier and who are the victims
of brutal practices such as collective punishment and
attempts to physically liquidate them. We therefore ask
the Council to ensure the genuine implementation of all
the resolutions that have been adopted against Israel's
activities and to look into the possibility of finding
concrete measures that will genuinely protect the
Palestinian people from the abuses perpetrated by
Israeli forces.
The credibility of the Council is being tested
today more than ever before. Israel must be held to the
same standards as others: otherwise we are looking at a
situation in which there are two completely different
ways of acting - a phenomenon that is becoming
habitual and which has seriously damaged the
Council's credibility.
One thing must be made clear: Palestinian
territory is being occupied and the Palestinian people
are bearing the burden of occupation and must be
protected by international law, including the 1949
Geneva Conventions and resolutions 242 (1967) and
338 (1973). All those international instruments and
resolutions have in fact been adopted; they exist. But
what is the result today? Where does a people's right to
self-determination and to live in peace stand today? We
appeal to the Council, and to the permanent members
in particular, to discharge their responsibilities and to
address a message to Israel with one voice to tell it that
it is not above the law or international legality. Israel
must withdraw from all occupied Palestinian towns and
villages. It must immediately end its siege of the
Palestinian Authority and of Mr. Arafat, who is the
symbol and highest representative of the Palestinian
people and their heroic struggle. That is the only way
to truly implement the resolutions of international
legitimacy.
My country will be speaking in the name of the
friendship and candour that characterize its relationship
with the United States. We are worried about the
United States position. The United States is not
condemning Israel with the same severity with which it
condemns Palestinian acts. The leaders in the United
States continue to call upon Mr. Arafat to exert greater
effort to condemn acts of violence and terror, whereas
his freedom of movement is severely curtailed by
Israel's security forces and their barbaric acts. How is
he expected to put an end to acts that have been
unleashed by the sense of despair felt by the
Palestinian people when confronted by Israeli
occupation? We call upon the international community,
the Security Council, and the United States of America
in particular - with all the influence it has on Israel -
to bring all their influence to bear, in the interests of
both the Palestinian and the Israeli peoples, in order to
make the realities on the ground understood clearly,
publicly and in a balanced manner. The option of peace
is, and remains, the only viable path towards a
settlement of the problem in the region. Political
solutions must be implemented in the context of
respect for international legality and existing peace
processes, in particular the peace initiative announced
most recently at the Arab summit in Beirut.
In conclusion, my delegation, along with those of
all peace-loving States, hopes that the Security Council
will be able to put an end to narrow political thinking
and live up to its responsibility to protect international
peace and security. The Council's efforts must be
invested in protecting the safety and security of peoples
who are occupied and subjected to arbitrary behaviour.
The President (spoke in Russian): I thank the
representative of Oman for his kind words addressed to
me.
The next speaker on my list is the representative
of Bahrain. I invite him to take a seat at the Council
table and to make his statement.
Mr. Buallay (Bahrain) (spoke in Arabic): At the
outset, I am pleased to congratulate you, Sir, on your
assumption of the presidency of the Council for this
month. We wish you every success in your work. We
also wish to thank your predecessor, the Ambassador of
Norway, who guided the Council's work with great
wisdom.
The situation in the Palestinian territories
continues to deteriorate daily. Israel has stepped up its
aggression against the Palestinian people and invaded
most of the territories of the Palestinian Authority in
order to destroy their infrastructure, which had cost
immense amounts of money to build. Furthermore, ever
more victims are being claimed among young people,
women, children and the elderly through arbitrary
bombing and the excessive use of force against a
defenceless people whose only weapon is its resolve to
end Israeli occupation. Israel continues to besiege
Palestinian cities and to starve and kill their people
without trials. This policy of aggression also targets the
headquarters of Yasser Arafat, President of the
Palestinian Authority and living symbol of the
Palestinian people. No one knows how these terrorist
acts of Israel, the occupying Power, will come to an
end.
The Israeli forces have prevented the wounded
from reaching hospitals and have shot at ambulances
and prevented them from reaching their destination, in
contravention of the 1949 Geneva Convention relative
to the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War,
which is the basis of international humanitarian law. In
its article 3 (1), that Convention provides that
"Persons taking no active part in the hostilities,
including members of armed forces who have laid
down their arms and those placed hors de combat
by sickness, wounds, detention, or any other
cause, shall in all circumstances be treated
humanely."
Worse yet, Israel is preventing inhabitants from
burying their dead, some of whom were martyred
several days before. This is in contravention of Islamic
precepts and constitutes a flagrant violation of all
international humanitarian laws and norms.
The Israeli occupying forces have been
committing acts that can only be described as war
crimes of the twenty-first century. At the Millennium
Summit, the heads of State and Government sought to
make this century an era of peace, security and calm.
However, the current Israeli Government has sent all
those dreams up in smoke and made the language of
violence and state terrorism an organized policy and
way of life of the Israeli occupying State.
The Israeli Prime Minister could not find in his
behavioural vocabulary a way to cooperate with the
Arab peace initiative adopted at the Beirut summit. He
could only find State terrorism, which he is using to
subvert the peace process. Israeli practices against
President Arafat, the symbol of the Palestinian struggle
and the elected President of the Palestinian people, are
highly dangerous. State terrorism carried out by Israel
can only bring destruction upon the entire region. That
is what the Israeli Government is attempting to do. The
international community must put an end to the Israeli
aggression so as to avert a catastrophe whose
repercussions for the region and the entire world would
be irreparable and incalculable.
In conclusion, we call on Israel, the occupying
Power in the Palestinian territories, to do the following.
First, it must respect the provisions of the 1949 Fourth
Geneva Convention and the principles of international
humanitarian law, international law of human rights.
Secondly, it must withdraw immediately and
unconditionally from all Palestinian cities and villages,
including Ramallah, the provisional headquarters of the
Palestinian Authority, and lift the siege imposed on the
Authority's President. Thirdly, it must lift the blockade
against the Palestinian people in all the occupied
territories, including Islamic and Christian holy sites
and houses of worship. Fourthly, it must implement all
relevant resolutions of the Security Council, in
particular resolutions 1397 (2002) and 1402 (2002).
This will require the Council to take effective
action to make Israel respect its resolutions, which
remain dead letter. The Council must reaffirm that, if
the Israeli occupation of the Palestinian and other
occupied territories does not end, the region will never
be able to enjoy calm or peace. International peace and
security will be constantly threatened. Thus, the
Security Council must discharge its responsibilities
under the United Nations Charter. The Council is
obligated to use all possible means to exert pressure on
the aggressor State, Israel, to put an end to its
occupation of the Arab territories.
We call on the Security Council immediately to
dispatch international observers to guarantee protection
for Palestinian civilians. History will not acknowledge
the Council's due role unless it fulfils its
responsibilities. Moreover, it is unacceptable for the
Council to remain paralysed while international peace
and security are threatened, for it is the Council's duty
to preserve international peace and security.
The President (spoke in Russian): I thank the
representative of Bahrain for his kind words addressed
to me.
The next speaker on my list is the representative
of the Sudan. I invite him to take a seat at the Council
table and to make his statement.
Mr. Erwa (Sudan) (spoke in Arabic): I am
pleased, Sir, to congratulate you and your friendly
country on your assumption of the presidency of the
Security Council for this moonth. We also welcome the
good work done by Ambassador Peter Kolby of
Norway and his delegation during his presidency of the
Council last month.
This is the second meeting held by the Security
Council in less than five days to consider the critical
situation, which is daily deteriorating, in the various
Palestinian territories. These territories are witnessing
a dangerous escalation of the situation. Israel, the
occupying Power, is continuing to massacre and
commit war crimes and genocide against the
defenceless Palestinian people. This is taking place in
full view of, and with the knowledge of, the entire
world, which is witnessing on its television screens the
excessive use of force; organized killings of innocent
citizens; the isolation of Palestinian cities and towns by
tanks and military vehicles; the occupation of the
headquarters of the Palestinian Authority - the
headquarters of Chairman Yasser Arafat, who is
surrounded and in a single room there; and the cutting
off of water and electricity - an immoral, inhuman
and unprecedented measure.
I should be grateful here if we could have a list of
all the human rights Violations perpetrated by Israel.
The world has witnessed Israeli acts of aggression
perpetrated at holy sites, mosques and churches, as
well as attacks on ambulances, which have been shot at
while transporting the wounded. Furthermore, Israel
has not allowed the burying of the dead. The Ramallah
hospital has been forced to bury the dead in a common
grave in its courtyard; this was also witnessed on
television screens worldwide.
The eyes of the entire world are now turned to the
Council, waiting for its reaction and waiting to see if
its resolutions are implemented, given the aggression
that is taking place in flagrant violation of the Charter
of the United Nations, of international humanitarian
conventions and of the Fourth Geneva Convention.
Since Israel is continuing to flout the will of the
international community, it is up to the Security
Council to act immediately to oppose Israel, which has
exceeded all limits with its acts of aggression. As we
sit here now, Israel is trying to occupy the city of
Nablus - an extension of such aggression - in contempt
for all international resolutions.
The Council bears a moral responsibility first and
foremost - one laid down by its responsibilities under
the Charter of the United Nations - to stop violence
and the arbitrary use of force by the Israeli occupying
forces against innocent, defenceless Palestinian
civilians. The Council has a moral responsibility to
provide emergency protection by sending an
international force to monitor the Israeli withdrawal
demanded by Council resolution 1402 (2002).
We have seen the Council hold numerous
meetings and adopt resolutions and presidential
statements regarding the protection of civilians. Many
States have pleaded for the respect of human rights and
the protection of civilians in conflict areas and have
made this a priority in their foreign policy. Why are
those States now silent? Why do we not hear their
voices now? Some are even justifying Israel's actions,
which are tantamount to genocide.
Here we are faced with a clear case in which
civilians - in particular women, children and the
elderly - are enduring the worst kind of abuse and
repression. This requires that the Council act in
accordance with the will expressed by numerous
States: that rapid action be taken in the form of the
provision of protection to civilians in Palestine. If the
Security Council does not act rapidly and discharge its
responsibilities, it will in effect be refusing to abide by
its Charter obligations.
The war criminal Ariel Sharon rebuffed Security
Council resolution 1402 (2002) through his declaration
of war on the Palestinians and by considering
Chairman Arafat, the legitimate Chairman of the
Palestinian Authority, to be an enemy - and this after
the most recent Arab summit in Beirut showed, by
adopting the initiative of Crown Prince Abdallah Bin
Abdul Aziz, that the Arabs are in favour of peace.
Israel said simply that the Arabs did not desire
peace, and it demanded security and the recognition of
its State. But its real intentions - bloodshed - have
been revealed. Israel used a policy of repression and
killing against the defenceless Palestinian people and
once again occupied Palestinian cities and isolated
them by declaring them military zones, in a clear
attempt to push the region towards a total conflagration
whose consequences, though as yet unknown, would
definitely threaten international peace and security.
The security that Israel is seeking through
violence will never be guaranteed as long as it
continues to pursue its policy of aggression and
expansion, the occupation of Palestinian cities, the
perpetration of massacres and the daily killing of
Palestinian people. Violence spawns Violence. The
erroneous justifications presented by Israel, alleging
that its criminal campaign aims to combat terrorism or
provide self-defence, are unacceptable. It is the
Palestinian people who are fighting Israel's State
terrorism in order to end the Israeli occupation.
Who among us here would accept occupation and
colonialism without offering resistance? The histories
of the peoples of all States present here show a struggle
against occupation and colonialism. What would truly
guarantee Israeli security is full withdrawal from all
Palestinian and Arab territories, the Syrian Golan and
the rest of Lebanese territory in accordance with
Security Council resolutions 242 (1967) and 338
(1973) and allowing the Palestinian people to establish
their State with Al-Quds as their capital. Then, and
only then, will peace reign in the region.
From this rostrum we call on the international
community, in particular the United States of America,
the European Union and peace-loving States, to adopt a
firm position to make the Israeli Government refrain
from the continuation of a policy of confrontation,
killing and suppression. That policy does not justify
what is unacceptable. It does not mean that those who
have rights will, in fact, have to give up those rights.
Finally, we reaffirm that the Sudan supports the
Palestinian people, who are heroically defending their
legitimate - I reiterate, their legitimate right - to
recover their land and to have their place among
nations restored, given the injustice and acts of
aggression which continue to violate all international
laws and norms, as well as revealed religions and
human morality.
The President (spoke in Russian): I thank the
representative of Sudan for his kind words addressed to
me.
The next speaker inscribed on my list is the
representative of United Republic of Tanzania. I invite
him to take a seat at the Council table and to make his
statement.
Mr. Mwakawago (United Republic of Tanzania):
At the outset, I would like to associate my delegation
with the statement made by Ambassador Domisani
Kumalo, the Permanent Representative of South
Africa, on behalf of the Non-Aligned Movement.
As we are meeting here today, the situation in the
Middle East is fast deteriorating. Already, since
September 2001, over 1,000 Palestinians and 400
Israelis have died, the majority of whom were civilians.
The toll of the dead is mounting by the day. Reports
emanating from the region paint a very grim picture.
Last month the Security Council met in an
emergency session and adopted resolution 1397 (2002)
of 12 March, which had no dissenting voice. The
resolution was unequivocal in terms of what the
Council demanded of the parties. There has been
absolutely no visible movement towards compliance
with the resolution. On the contrary, what is evident is
the systematic destruction of the Palestinian Authority
and the confinement of its leader to his offices, with
little or no services. That situation can only fuel more
anger, resentment and, to say the least, humiliation.
On 30 March, the Security Council adopted
resolution 1402 (2002) which, inter alia, in paragraph 1
"calls for the withdrawal of Israeli troops from
Palestinian cities, including Ramallah". The situation
on the ground shows the opposite. More cities are
being occupied, and one wonders what the fate of the
occupied territories will be.
An analysis of the situation reveals the following:
the destruction of the Palestinian Authority can be
construed as undermining any semblance of the right of
the Palestinians to a State of their own. This conclusion
is borne out by the fact that no statement to that effect
has come from the Israeli authorities in the current
campaign. The right to self-determination is provided
for in the Charter of the Organization. No amount of
prevarication can assuage the determination of a people
to free themselves and establish their own self-rule.
My Government is gravely concerned at the
escalation of violence and of the military incursions in
the Palestinian Authority areas. The incursions have
been accompanied by widespread destruction of hard-
earned properties, particularly in Palestinian areas.
Collective punishment is being visited on the
Palestinian people, violating the basic tenets of the
Organization.
In our previous interventions, we had occasion to
speak of the disproportionate use of force by the Israeli
authorities. The situation is even worse today. One
need not emphasize the unequal strength of forces, to
put it mildly, between the parties. In making appeals to
the parties, it is important to take that reality into
account.
My Government appeals strongly to the Security
Council to take urgent action to stop the carnage that is
going on in the region. The requirements of security
have to be balanced by an unequivocal assurance to the
Palestinians that statehood, both viable and respected,
is around the corner. Violence or attacks will not solve
the Palestinian question or ensure the security of Israel.
My Government believes that for any meaningful
movement towards resolution of the crisis, the
authority and safety of President Arafat have to be
guaranteed. The Council should have no ambiguity on
the issue.
My Government appeals to both sides to comply
with Security Council resolutions, but more so to the
Government of Israel, which has the upper hand in the
current confrontation. At the end of the day, only
peaceful negotiations will provide the much-needed
solution to the historic conflict. It is therefore
incumbent upon both parties to urgently summon the
political will to return to the negotiations. Only a
couple of weeks ago there seemed to be some glimmers
of hope that a negotiated resolution was possible. Now
one wonders whether it has been dashed.
In conclusion, I would like to reiterate my
Government's support for the Secretary-General, Mr.
Kofi Annan, and his tireless efforts to achieve a
ceasefire and a peaceful resolution of the conflict. The
situation demands of the Security Council urgent action
in conformity with Article 24, paragraph 1, and other
relevant sections of the Charter. The world demands
resolute action, and nothing less. There should be no
further unnecessary loss of life, especially of civilians.
We appeal to the Council to draw on the vast arsenal of
instruments at its disposal in order to restore peace in
the region. We believe that the major players should
have unfettered freedom to be a part of the solution.
Time is of the essence. It is our hope that the
Council will not be found wanting. The road map for
the Palestinians should be laid out so as to give them
hope and determination.
The President (spoke in Russian): I thank the
representative of the United Republic of Tanzania for
his kind words addressed to me.
The next speaker inscribed on my list is the
representative of Djibouti. I invite him to take a seat at
the Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Olhaye (Djibouti): I would like to thank you,
Mr. President, for having convened this meeting at
short notice, given the calamity in the Palestinian
territories and the conflagration raging there. Since the
adoption of resolution 1402 (2002) last Saturday, the
situation, instead of improving, has got out of hand to
an alarming and dangerous degree. The international
outrage and the incessant calls for restraint, ceasefire
and immediate withdrawal, have fallen on deaf ears.
Israel has expanded its war and continued its relentless
military offensive directed solely at the infrastructure
and institutions of the Palestinian Authority. In the
words of the Secretary-General, when addressing the
Council on Monday, "It would take a reckless optimist
to say that the worst is over".
I applaud the Secretary-General for his courage
and for his forthright and candid statement on the
continuing chaos and bloodshed. Indeed, resolution
1402 (2002) is the best available instrument for halting
the undisguised menace to peace and security in the
region.
As we have stated all too often, my country
condemns all attacks against civilian populations,
whether Israeli or Palestinian. But the kind of terror
inflicted upon the Palestinian leadership, people,
security infrastructure and institutions in the past few
days defied all imagination. Israel has embarked on an
unprecedented military folly that will haunt it forever.
The massive Israeli military operations point to a
widening reoccupation of all territories under
Palestinian control.
Mr. Sharon's misguided display of military might
may cripple and paralyse the infrastructure and the
functioning of the Palestinian Authority, and may also
worsen the plight of the people. But brute force will
not kill their spirit. Mr. Sharon's relentless pursuit of a
military strategy that basically seeks to undermine the
Palestinian Authority, while at the same time
demanding that it crack down on the militant groups, is
short-sighted. Such a policy is bound to engender
hopelessness and breed more violence.
Both the Palestinian and Israeli peoples have the
right to live in peace and security, with a sure future.
The current one-sided war dims that prospect and helps
only to further escalate the suffering on both sides. We
are witnessing unbridled brutal aggression. Mr. Arafat
continues to languish in prison in his besieged
headquarters. The vengeful assault on the symbol of
Palestinian nationhood will have serious consequences.
It is also a slap in the face of Arab leaders who, for the
first time in history, have offered Israel normal
relations with all Arab States in exchange for ending
the occupation of Palestinian lands and for withdrawal
from all territories occupied in the 1967 war.
One of the perplexing questions that is still
begging for an answer is this: who has the power and
influence to restrain Sharon's military machine? Given
the current escalation of the bloodshed, the
prevarication and impotence of the international
community is numbing, to say the least. Those who are
supposed to make a difference in this insane situation
are trapped between inaction, incoherence and distant
hope.
As the Secretary-General argued forcefully before
the Council on Monday, security and peace must be
addressed in parallel in the spirit of Security Council
resolutions 1397 (2002) and 1402 (2002). The
legitimate security concerns of Israel cannot be
addressed independently or in isolation, without taking
into full consideration the legitimate political
aspirations of the Palestinian people. In this context,
the readiness of the Arab world to live in peace with
Israel deserves the undivided attention of Israel. This
is, we believe, the only way out of the hatred, mistrust
and pervasive vulnerability to acts of extremism on
both sides. We hope that the Council will live up to
expectations with respect to the maintenance of peace
and security throughout the whole world, particularly
given the current circumstances in the Middle East.
The President (spoke in Russian): I thank the
representative of Djibouti for his kind words addressed
to me.
The next speaker inscribed on my list is the
representative of Bhutan. I invite him to take a seat at
the Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Pradhan (Bhutan): I would like to
congratulate you, Sir, on your assumption of the
presidency of the Security Council for the month of
April. Allow me also to express our admiration for the
work done by your predecessor, the representative of
Norway, Peter Kolby, during his presidency last month.
We are here because we are alarmed by the
escalating and unending violence between Israel and
the Palestinians. We are alarmed by the fact that,
despite all the authority and responsibility given by the
Charter to the Security Council, this body has not been
able to bring about a cessation of the terrible violence
that has persisted over months, years and decades, let
alone to find a solution to this longstanding problem in
the Middle East. We are alarmed by the fact that the
big Powers - the permanent members of the Security
Council - to which the international community looks
up for guidance and action, have not been able to move
the parties in the Middle East to give up violence and
find a solution to their problems through dialogue.
The problem between the people of Palestine and
the State of Israel has been caught up in a vicious circle
of violence, death and destruction. The doctrine of "an
eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth" will only fuel
that vicious circle. Hatred and violence beget hatred
and violence. The circle must be broken. The Security
Council must work towards breaking the circle, and it
must not lose an opportunity to do so when it sees one.
My delegation welcomed the proposal of the
Crown Prince of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. We saw
in it the ingredients of breaking the Vicious circle. My
delegation urges the Security Council to start with the
initiative launched by the Crown Prince. In addition,
the people in the region, whether Arabs or Israelis,
have to change their outlook with respect to each other.
No matter what, they are neighbours, and peace and
cooperation are surely better than death, violence and
destruction.
In a globalizing and interdependent world - a
world that is moving towards freer movement, free
markets and greater interaction - no people or nation
can exist in isolation or be an island unto itself. That
realization is vital for the long-term peace and stability
of the region.
Finally, the Bhutanese delegation calls upon the
Security Council to further intensify its efforts to bring
about an immediate cessation of the violence prevailing
in the Middle East.
The President (spoke in Russian): The next
speaker on my list is the representative of Qatar, whom
I invite to take a seat at the Council table and to make
his statement.
Mr. Al-Nasser (Qatar) (spoke in Arabic): At the
outset, I should like, on behalf of Qatar, Chairman of
the ninth summit of the Organization of the Islamic
Conference, to congratulate you, Sir, on your
assumption of the presidency of the Security Council
for the month of April. We are convinced that your
wisdom and experience promise success in the
Council's deliberations. Your prompt response to our
request for an emergency meeting to consider the
dangerous situation in occupied Palestine, including
Jerusalem, is a sign that augurs well for us. My
delegation would also like to thank Ambassador Ole
Peter Kolby of Norway for the able and wise manner in
which he conducted the Council's deliberations last
month.
I shall not refer to the tragic situation of the
Palestinian people and its President, Chairman Arafat,
who are under Israeli attack and occupation, because I
am convinced that the Council knows all there is to
know about Israel's organized killings and massive
violations of international law and its contempt for the
Fourth Geneva Convention relative to the Protection of
Civilian Persons in Time of War, of 1949. However, I
will reiterate that the Council is responsible for what is
happening in the occupied Palestinian territories. Ever
since it declined to send international observers to that
region, things have gone from bad to worse. That is
because the Council hesitated to adopt the robust
initiative that would have been in the interests of both
parties, on the excuse that Israel had rejected it.
Obviously, Israel has no wish for observers, who would
reveal the abuses it is committing against defenceless
Palestinians. It continues to flout resolutions, including
resolution 1402 (2002), which calls upon it to withdraw
from the occupied Palestinian territories, declaring
quite unambiguously that it refuses to comply with the
provisions of that Council resolution, although the
Council is the supreme organ charged with the
maintenance of international peace and security.
Some are trying naively to explain the Israeli
onslaught by categorizing it as self-defence, but how
can one think that destroying and setting fire to a
neighbour's land will bring peace? It is only through
dialogue and negotiations that the Palestinian people
can regain their occupied land and gain their
independent State with East Jerusalem as its capital.
Israel must understand that it will never enjoy peace
while it insists on keeping that land. During their
Summit in Beirut, the leaders of Arab States, in good
faith, spoke of their desire to have a good-neighbourly
relationship with Israel.
The Middle East region is experiencing
unprecedented tension. I hope I do not seem to
exaggerate when I say that it is about to explode. We
must make every possible effort to save what can still
be saved. We must take practical and concrete
measures that will cause Israel to fully implement
resolution 1402 (2002). We must send international
peacekeeping forces to the region and pressure Israel to
return to the negotiating table to do what is necessary
to restore peace between Palestine and Israel to bring
the peace process back to the point where it left off.
The President (spoke in Russian): I thank the
representative of Qatar for his kind words addressed to
my delegation.
The next speaker on my list is the representative
of New Zealand, whom I invite to take a seat at the
Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. MacKay (New Zealand): I should like to join
others in congratulating Russia on its assumption of the
presidency and in thanking Norway for the way in
which it presided over the Council last month.
The issue under consideration by the Council
today is one of the utmost gravity. New Zealand
deplores in the strongest terms the increased intensity
of the violence, which is simply putting a durable
solution farther out of reach. The fact that it has
escalated so dramatically in such a short period
prompts us to address the Council today. We urge both
sides to reflect on where this terrible violence is
leading.
New Zealand has already criticized the use of
excessive force by the Israeli Defence Force, along
with its stated policy of assassinations, which should
be halted immediately. New Zealand condemns the
policy of extrajudicial executions and joins others in
urging an end to the occupation of the Palestinian
Authority headquarters in Ramallah and the attempted
isolation and exile of the Palestinian leader, Chairman
Arafat.
New Zealand Views plans to further expand
Israeli settlements in the occupied territories as a
particularly provocative obstacle to reconciliation and
calls on the Israeli Government to halt such action.
We also deplore and condemn in the strongest
terms the suicide bombings that have claimed the lives
of innocent Israeli civilians. Those responsible for
sending young people to their deaths in this way and
arbitrarily slaughtering civilians should be brought to
justice. Neither side in this conflict will come closer to
achieving their objectives by the use of Violent means.
Together with other speakers today, we urge full
and immediate implementation and compliance with
resolutions 1397 (2002) and 1402 (2002). The
international community has reflected in those
resolutions its strong commitment to a peaceful,
negotiated settlement in the Middle East. New Zealand
has consistently supported a two-State solution that
recognizes Israel's right to secure, agreed borders and
that of the Palestinians to have a viable State in which
self-determination and social and economic progress
can be achieved.
We reinforce the calls made by the European
Union, Chile and others today for the parties to accept
observers. A neutral third party monitoring mechanism
under a Security Council mandate would help support a
ceasefire and begin the rebuilding of trust between the
two parties. There is an urgent need for the leadership
of both the Palestinian and Israeli peoples to display a
goodfaith return to the peace process and seek a
durable solution based on respect for human rights and
international law. We call on both parties to turn their
backs on Violence and demonstrate a willingness to
begin a process that may lead to the durable peace for
which we all so greatly hope.
The President (spoke in Russian): I thank the
representative of New Zealand for his kind words
addressed to the Russian delegation.
The next speaker on my list is the representative
of Cyprus, whom I invite to take a seat at the Council
table and to make his statement.
Mr. Zackheos (Cyprus): I have the honour to
speak on behalf of the Cyprus Government. We have
also aligned ourselves with the statement delivered by
Spain on behalf of the European Union.
The Government and the people of Cyprus
express their profound concern and sorrow at the
worsening situation in the Middle East and condemn
Violence and any actions resulting in innocent victims,
be they Israelis or Palestinians.
We express full sympathy and solidarity with
President Yasser Arafat, whom we consider the
legitimate leader and representative of the Palestinian
people, and we call upon the Israeli troops to withdraw
immediately from Ramallah and the rest of the
Palestinian territories. We also call for an immediate
ceasefire and for resumption of dialogue in order to
rescue the peace process. In that respect, we join the
entire international community in calling for the
immediate and full implementation of Security Council
resolutions 1397 (2002) and 1402 (2002).
We urge Israel to desist from actions the thrust of
which is the collective punishment and humiliation of
the Palestinian population and to avoid a
disproportionate response to violence. We condemn the
extrajudicial executions of Palestinians, which are
illegal under international law. We also believe that
actions against medical and humanitarian institutions
and personnel are absolutely unacceptable. We call for
full adherence to international law and international
humanitarian law, including the Fourth Geneva
Convention. In that regard, we express our opposition
to illegal Israeli settlement activities.
We are particularly alarmed at reports of an
impending operation against Palestinians who have
sought refuge in the Church of the Nativity. We urge
the resolution of this issue in such a way as to respect
the sanctity of that most important religious site. The
same goes for all other religious sites which have
unfortunately fallen Victim to attack and unwarranted
destruction due to the hostilities. We call on Israel, as
the occupying Power, to abide by its international
obligations and to exercise maximum restraint.
Let me also underline that we strongly condemn
any and all forms of terrorism, for which there is no
justification, and we support the right of Israel and all
other States of the region to live in peace and security.
The Cyprus Government will support any
international initiative or effort aimed at preventing the
conflict from escalating further, and we urge those who
have the power to do so to assist in achieving an
immediate ceasefire and the return of the parties to the
negotiating table. In that respect, we will support an
increased and urgent role by the "quartet", and we call
for the parties to cooperate fully with Special Envoy
Zinni and others towards the implementation of the
Tenet work plan and the Mitchell report's
recommendations. We fully support the establishment
of a third-party monitoring mechanism.
We also welcome the declaration adopted at the
recent Arab League meeting in Beirut, and we reiterate
our support for a just and lasting settlement of the
Arab-Israeli conflict, based on Security Council
resolutions 242 (1967) and 338 (1973). We support a
solution that will put an end to the occupation of Arab
lands and to the plight of the Palestinian people,
ensuring the fulfilment of their legitimate rights,
including their right to an independent State. The
solution of the Middle East problem will bring stability
to this sensitive region of the world, will ensure normal
relations and the safety and security of all countries of
the region, and will put an end to violence,
strengthening the forces of moderation and
cooperation.
Finally, allow me to reiterate the unwavering
support of Cyprus for the pursuit of peace in the
region. The Government and the people of Cyprus,
who traditionally have strong bonds of friendship with
both the Palestinian and Israeli peoples, stand ready to
play a constructive role towards the achievement of
this goal. It is in this context that my Government has
offered to host, later this month, in Nicosia, the next
meeting of the Committee on the Exercise of the
Inalienable Rights of the Palestinian People, which we
hope will contribute in its own way to building the
necessary bridges of understanding between the
Palestinian and Israeli peoples.
The President (spoke in Russian): The next
speaker on my list is the representative of Lebanon. I
invite him to take a seat at the Council table and to
make his statement.
Mr. Diab (Lebanon)(spoke in Arabic): My
delegation would like to associate itself with the
statement made by the Permanent Representative of
Tunisia as Chairman of the Arab Group.
It gives us pleasure, Sir, to see you presiding over
the Security Council this month; we are confident that
your wise leadership will guide the Council to the best
possible results. We would also like to express our
thanks to Ambassador Kolby for the strenuous efforts
he made as President last month. My delegation would
further like to express to you our utmost appreciation
for your prompt response to the request to hold this
emergency meeting of the Security Council to consider
the extremely serious situation in the occupied
Palestinian territories.
The current serious deterioration in the occupied
Arab territories and the abhorrent escalation of
aggression by Israel against the Palestinian people and
its National Authority represent a flagrant violation of
international law and international humanitarian law,
particularly the Geneva Convention relative to the
Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War, of 1949.
What is more dangerous than all that is that Israel
exercises this State terrorism and commits war crimes
against a people whose land it occupies in blatant
violation and defiance of the resolutions of this
Council, which has repeatedly called upon Israel to
implement its resolutions.
This series of criminal actions by Israel against
the Palestinian people has led, since the beginning of
the intifada, to the death of more than 1,500 martyrs
and to thousands of injured people among the
Palestinians, the overwhelming majority of whom are
civilians, particularly children. Human rights
associations and organizations have reflected these
facts in their reports and have exposed the criminal
practices to which the Palestinians are subjected every
day. They have repeatedly called for intervention by
the international community with a View to putting an
end to these practices. The situation is becoming more
serious every day, a fact that has been recalled by the
Secretary-General on more than one occasion.
In light of the escalation of acts of destruction
and murder of the Palestinians, the cadres of the
Palestinian resistance and its leadership, the Security
Council is duty-bound to fulfil its mandate in
accordance with the Charter to intervene to preserve
peace and security and prevent further escalation of the
situation in the region. In this context, the Council is
called upon to force Israel immediately to end its acts
of aggression in the occupied territories and to abandon
its policy of siege, starvation and assassination against
the Palestinian people. It should also show respect for
the Fourth Geneva Convention of 1949, being the
occupying force in the occupied Palestinian territories,
including Jerusalem.
The Security Council should demand that Israel
immediately implement its relevant resolutions,
withdraw from Palestinian territories under occupation
and end the siege against the Palestinian Authority. The
Council is also duty-bound to dispatch an international
protection force and to provide adequate and prompt
assistance to alleviate the suffering of the Palestinian
people under occupation and put an end to the siege
imposed upon them.
The League of Arab States held a summit meeting
in Beirut on 27 and 28 March. It adopted an historic
resolution that was welcomed by the entire
international community, with the exception of Israel.
The Arab leaders adopted the initiative by His Royal
Highness Crown Prince Abdullah ibn Abdul Aziz as an
Arab peace initiative. The Arab leaders, by their
resolution, have opted once again for a just and
comprehensive peace as a strategic option. It was based
on their conviction that a military solution to the
conflict has not and will not achieve peace and security
in the region.
In spite of the call by the Arab leaders to Israel to
follow their suit and opt for peace, Israel has rejected
that Arab peace initiative and has responded to it with
gunfire, a total occupation of the Palestinian territories
and a siege of the Palestinian people and its leadership.
The root cause of the conflict is Israel's
continuation of its policy of occupying other people' s
land. Israel must realize that the policy of violence and
destruction can only lead to counter-violence and
destruction and that peace and security will not be
achieved unless a comprehensive and just peace based
on relevant Security Council resolutions, particularly
242 (1967) and 338 (1973), and the principle of land
for peace are complied with.
The President (spoke in Russian): The next
speaker on the list is the representative of Argentina. I
invite him to take a seat at the Council table and to
make his statement.
Mr. Listre (Argentina) (spoke in Spanish): Allow
me to congratulate you, Sir, on taking on the
presidency of the Security Council. I would also like to
congratulate Ambassador Kolby of Norway, your
predecessor, for his very efficient guidance during the
month of March, which made it possible to achieve
resolutions 1397 (2002) and 1402 (2002).
The Argentine Republic is extremely preoccupied
about the worsening situation in the Middle East. This
issue is not foreign to my country, because historically
Argentina has close links with the countries of the
region. In our country, there are Arab and Jewish
communities that live together in peace.
As a result of the worsening of the crisis in the
Middle East over the past few days, the Argentine
Government published a communique on 30 March
supporting resolution 1402 (2002), which had been
adopted that very day by the Security Council. Four
days later, when the situation worsened even more,
Argentina restated its support and appealed to the
parties to urgently take the necessary steps to put an
end to violence and terrorism and to embark on the
only possible path towards a resolution of this
horrifying conflict, to which there can be no military
solution. The only possible solution will be found
through dialogue and a return to the negotiating table,
which are tools to achieve an effective peace. For that
to be possible, it is necessary to disarm the inflamed
spirits of both peoples, which are now dominated by
rancour, revenge and mutual distrust. It is vital that
Israel make a clear commitment to accept the
legitimate right of the Palestinian people to a viable
and democratic Palestinian State. On the Palestinian
side, what is necessary is a genuine and unambiguous
commitment to reject terrorism and to recognize
Israel's inalienable right to live in peace within secure
borders that are by the international community, in
particular by the other States of the region.
At this difficult juncture, the Argentine
Government joins the rest of the international
community in calling upon the Government of Israel
and the Palestine Authority to take the urgent measures
necessary to facilitate concrete steps towards dialogue
and the search for peace. In this regard, it will be
necessary to comply in good faith with the letter and
the spirit of resolutions 242 (1967), 338 (1973) and
1397 (2002), and to start to implement the recently
adopted resolution 1402 (2002).
Finally, my Government acknowledges the efforts
of the United States, the European Union, the Russian
Federation and the Secretary-General that are being
made through their special envoys to try to bring about
an immediate ceasefire.
The President (spoke in Russian): I thank the
representative of Argentina for his kind words
addressed to our delegation.
The next speaker inscribed on my list is the
representative of Canada. I invite him to take a seat at
the Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Heinbecker (Canada) (spoke in French): I
welcome the opportunity to speak in this debate and to
endorse Security Council resolutions 1397 (2002) and
1402 (2002). Those instruments offer a way out of the
ever-worsening spiral of violence in the Middle East.
That spiral of violence is a threat to peace and stability
that goes well beyond the confines of the current
fighting, and it is having disastrous consequences for
people on both sides.
(spoke in English)
People's hopes, their dignity and their lives are
being progressively violated, denied, diminished and
destroyed. Canada calls on both parties to step back
from the brink. We call on the Council to help them
bring this catastrophe to an end.
To the Palestinians, we say that the use of suicide
bombers against innocents is intolerable, a perversion
of all religious faiths, an offence against humanity and
a tactic that is never acceptable, including in resistance
to occupation. Employing children as instruments of
war to target the innocent is a moral outrage, and it
must stop. Chairman Arafat and those in positions of
authority who fail to prevent such practices bear the
gravest personal and political responsibility. The world
sees condemnations after the fact for the empty
gestures they are.
To Israel, we say that Canada fully recognizes
Israel's right to exist within secure and recognized
borders and its right to self-defence against terrorist
acts. We nonetheless consider that continuing Israeli
incursions into Palestinian towns and cities feed the
spiral of violence. The physical destruction of civilian
infrastructure and the mounting toll of killed and
injured is putting peace and normal life progressively
further out of reach for ordinary people on both sides.
Impeding humanitarian access only adds to the
mounting bitterness. Canada calls for the prompt
withdrawal of Israeli troops from Ramallah and other
Palestinian-controlled areas, as called for by Security
Council resolution 1402 (2002).
Ongoing Israeli settlement construction
undermines any hope for re-establishing a peace
process and erodes trust. We call on Israel to end this
destabilizing action. In the interest of peace, it must
stop.
For the Israelis and for the Palestinians, neither
the status quo ante nor the status quo is acceptable. It
appears, nevertheless, that the Palestinians and the
Israelis are unable to end this conflict and to develop a
new modus Vivendi on their own. There is already
disturbing evidence that the violence is metastasizing
well beyond Israel and the West Bank and Gaza. The
international community must help the parties find an
exit strategy from the spiral of violence and a political
road map to peace. Grievances are deepening and will
poison relations for generations to come.
The tools are already in hand; they must be
applied without delay. The Tenet plan, the Mitchell
report and the Arab League's endorsement of Crown
Prince Abdullah's initiative together provide elements
of such a road map back from the abyss. The
international community must do all in its power to
bring the parties back to the negotiating table they left
14 months ago and to resume the quest for a political
solution.
We all know what the outcome must be.
How many innocent people must die or be
maimed physically and psychologically before reason
again prevails?
Let us all take to heart, though, the Secretary-
General's words spoken in Beirut: "In the desperate
search for peace, we should never lose hope" (Press release SG/T/2318).
Peace in the Middle East is everyone's business.
Let the members of the Council commit themselves to
work indefatigably to stop the spiral of violence. Let us
all, in our own ways, commit ourselves to supporting
the parties in decisively stemming the bloodshed and
definitively stilling this conflict.
The President (spoke in Russian): The next
speaker on my list is the representative of the
Committee on the Exercise of the Inalienable Rights of
the Palestinian People, Mr. Louis Papa Fall, to whom
the Council extended an invitation under rule 39 of its
provisional rules of procedure. I invite him to take a
seat at the Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Fall (spoke in French): Seized by a
vindictive and destructive fury, the occupying Power
has plunged into wanton, systematic reprisals,
buttressed by a mad all-security and all-military policy.
The catastrophic toll has been countless dead, Israelis
and for the most part Palestinians, under a ghastly
deluge of air raids, bombardments, terrorist attacks and
wanton murders or targeted assassinations. The
surrealistic and monolithic option of unjustified
collective punishment has failed, despite the obvious
connivance of hard-liners in both camps, paradoxically
united in their apocalyptic vision of a general
conflagration spreading beyond the Middle East.
The Israeli forces have thus entered a new stage
in the escalation of Violence and illegal repression with
military offensives launched against the headquarters
of the President of the Palestinian Authority, who has
been confined in a tiny space in Ramallah and whose
physical integrity is even threatened, notwithstanding
the recognized international status conferred upon
President Arafat.
It is therefore a matter of urgency that the
international community act immediately. The Security
Council has just reacted by adopting resolutions 1397
(2002), of 12 March, and 1402 (2002), of 30 March,
which stress using the peace process to find a political
settlement in the wake of the exercise of good offices
by the Arabs, Africans, Americans, European and
others - who have committed themselves to rescue the
situation through the Mitchell and Tenet plans intended
to resurrect the peace process on the basis of the
principle of normalization for total withdrawal, which
was endorsed by the recent Arab Summit held in Beirut
on the welcome initiative by Saudi Arabia. Given the
rapidly worsening of the situation due to acts of terror,
provocation, destruction and suicide bombings - acts
that the Committee strongly and without exception
condemns - through me, the Committee on the
Exercise of the Inalienable Rights of the Palestinian
People would like to state its position, a position of
which I know you, Mr. President, are particularly
mindful.
The path to peace is basically dependent on the
end of this relentless Israeli occupation, which has
gone on for 35 years. It also depends on the creation of
an independent, viable Palestinian State co-existing
with the State of Israel within secure and
internationally guaranteed borders, in keeping with
Security Council resolutions 242 (1967) and 338
(1973), from which resolution 1397 (2002) stems - a
resolution that broke a taboo in the Council's
vocabulary by proclaiming, with rare clarity, the
Promethean vision of a Palestinian State.
It follows that the conclusion of a just and lasting
settlement based on those resolutions and on General
Assembly resolution 194 (III) remains inseparable from
the question of Jerusalem as an open city that is the
capital of two States, Israel and Palestine, as well as on
the question of a just and fair solution to the problem
of refugees and their right to return. As the Palestinian
question is so central to any lasting solution to the
conflict in the Middle East, the United Nations has a
sacred duty to continue to exercise its full
responsibility with regard to this question until an
effective comprehensive solution is found pursuant to
the relevant resolutions of the United Nations.
It is for that reason that the parties to the conflict,
and Tel AViv in particular, are strongly required to
abide by the Geneva Convention relating to the
Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War, of 1949.
To that end, our Committee demands international
protection, deployment of a United Nations
interposition force, and/or the immediate dispatch of
international observers. We also urge donors to
mobilize urgent humanitarian relief and economic
assistance to be directed to Palestinian Victims.
In that context, when it comes to moving towards
peace, the Council is called upon to break the vicious
cycle of violence and recurring attacks in order to
explore innovative approaches and new ideas such as
those so wisely advocated by the Secretary-General, of
which resolution 1397 (2002) represents the most
significant milestone prior to the holding of the Arab
Summit in Beirut. It is vital that a two-fold
precondition precede the implementation of such a
strategy. I am referring to the immediate withdrawal of
Israeli troops from occupied Palestinian cities,
including Ramallah, and Tel Aviv's total and
unconditional restoration of freedom of movement to
President Arafat, to whom our Committee pays tribute
for the courage, calm and leadership he has
demonstrated in the face of adversity, with a fierce will
for peace and negotiation.
We would like to reiterate our congratulations to
you, Mr. President, as well as to your distinguished
predecessor, the Ambassador of Norway. I am
particularly grateful for this opportunity to participate
in the work of the Council and to see at first hand the
expression of active solidarity which the Council, in
addition to its constant support to the peace process,
reiterates to the innocent Palestinian and Israeli people,
as well as to all the peoples of the region.
Following the historic Arab Summit held in
Beirut - which, in endorsing resolution 1397 (2002),
also endorsed the innovative approaches spoken of by
the Secretary-General in an effort to catalyse and
channel international peace efforts - our Committee
welcomed the determined commitment and ongoing
efforts of Mr. Kofi Annan and his Special Coordinator,
as well as those of the American, European and
Russian special envoys to find a comprehensive, just
and lasting solution to the question of Palestine on the
basis of the relevant resolutions of the Security Council
and the governing principles of land for peace and
normalization for total withdrawal.
The President (spoke in Russian): I thank
Mr. Fall for his kind words addressed to me.
Mr. Wehbe (Syria) (spoke in Arabic): The
delegation of the Syrian Arab Republic would like to
express its heartfelt gratitude for the understanding of
the members of the Council in responding quickly to
convene this open meeting at the request of the Arab
Group and the caucus of the Non-Aligned Movement.
This meeting has been convened to discuss the
tragedy that is unfolding by the minute in the
Palestinian territories as a result of the barbaric and
bloody Israeli invasion. The world has come to realize
that the Israeli Prime Minister and his officials and
army generals - who have made murder, destruction
and hatred their profession - are trying to hide behind
the pretext of combating terrorism. This is a failed
attempt to justify the scorched-earth and genocidal
policies that are being systematically pursued by the
Israelis. The primary objective of those policies is the
continued Israeli occupation of Arab lands and the
stifling of the aspirations of the Palestinian people to
build their independent State on their land, with East
Jerusalem as its capital.
The international community expects that these
continuous meetings of the Security Council will be
able to put an end to Israel's arrogance and its
violations of the most basic rules of international law
and international humanitarian law, and the Fourth
Geneva Convention in particular.
Despite the fact that the Security Council has
adopted numerous resolutions in recent years, months
and even days, it has become clear that Israeli defiance
of these resolutions and this legitimacy knows no end.
It has also become evident that the authority vested in
the Security Council in particular, in the Charter and in
the United Nations as a whole is being continuously
violated. This confirms the view - widely held among
our peoples and countries - that selectivity and double
standards on the part of the Security Council are the
order of the day whenever the Council is called on to
condemn Israel's policies and its continuous flouting of
the Council's resolutions and authority, or its trampling
of international law and international legitimacy.
We do not believe that our delegation needs to
describe the impact on international peace and security
of the current situation in the occupied Arab territories
and in the Middle East region. By continuing its
aggression and its declared war against the Palestinian
people, Israel is pursuing a policy of genocide,
destroying everything in the path of its tanks, and
mercilessly shelling Palestinian civilians, their homes
and their infrastructure.
Has the Council seen how the Palestinians have
had to bury the bodies of their fallen victims and their
martyrs in a mass grave in a parking lot? Has the
Council heard about the family that has yet to bury one
of its members, who was beheaded by the Israelis? This
is but a drop in the sea. In addition, many Red Cross
and Red Crescent officials have been killed, and
ambulances have been prevented from reaching the
injured.
The Israeli army, under instructions from Sharon,
has imposed curfews on the Palestinians for days at a
time. Water and electricity have been cut off and
thousands of Palestinians detained. The houses of
refugees who had already been displaced several times
were demolished arbitrarily. Examples abound of the
carnage committed by Israel against defenceless
Palestinian civilians, who have been deprived of any
protection. They are attacked and left to bleed to death.
Pregnant women are not spared; some of them
miscarried or gave birth at checkpoints.
We do not believe that we need to repeat here the
story of Bethlehem, the city of peace and the birthplace
of Christ. It has been attacked, along with its churches
and its mosques. The Church of the Nativity has been
under siege, and a statue of the Virgin Mary has been
destroyed.
Against this backdrop, it should be clear to
everyone that Israel is openly pursuing a policy of
State terrorism, including killing, destruction,
assassination and detention. Israel wants to mislead the
world regarding its acts of aggression by committing
such acts under the guise of self-defence. The fact of
the matter is that Israel is trying to defend its
occupation of Arab lands, and attempting to impose its
conditions on the Palestinian side by force.
The message that the Council should send to the
Israeli Government is the following: withdraw
immediately from the Palestinian territories, lift the
siege imposed on the Palestinian President and the
Palestinian leadership and put an end to the killing of
innocent civilians.
The Council is well aware that the Arab States
unanimously adopted a peace initiative at the Beirut
Summit. If Israel backed down from its position
rejecting the initiative and if it put an end to its acts of
aggression, the road would become clear for the
establishment of a just and comprehensive peace; then
an independent Palestinian state would be a reality and
not a mere dream.
My delegation, on behalf of the Arab Group, will
submit a draft resolution on the implementation of
previous Council resolutions. The Chairman of the
Arab Group has already transmitted the draft text to
you, Mr. President. The Arab Group hopes that the
Council will adopt the draft resolution, because it
believes in the role of the United Nations -
represented here by the Security Council - in the
realization of stability and security in the Middle East
region.
In conclusion, let me say that, even as we meet
here to put an end to the Israeli aggression and to call
for the withdrawal of the Israeli occupation forces,
dozens of Israeli tanks have started to occupy the city
of Nablus - a city of more than 120,000 people, now
that Israel has completed the occupation of the city of
Jenin.
That is the situation following the adoption of the
Security Council resolutions. What should the Council
do now? We have submitted a draft resolution in blue. I
urge all my colleagues in the Council to support the
draft resolution, which simply reaffirms the call for the
implementation of resolutions 1397 (2002) and 1402
(2002).
Mr. Rivas (Colombia) (spoke in Spanish): It is
clear that the international community is increasingly
concerned at the continuation of the violence in the
Middle East. That is the reason for this new debate,
despite the fact that the Security Council took a stance
on the matter just a few days ago.
Yesterday the members of the Security Council
held a very intensive dialogue with the representatives
of Israel and of the Palestinian Authority. In that
dialogue, we reiterated our concern in the face of the
ongoing Violence. If we do not succeed in stopping that
violence, we run the risk of its spreading to the entire
region.
President Arafat's security is also a source of
great concern to the Colombian delegation. Although
the Government of Israel has said that its intention is
not to harm him, it is clear that the situation is
extremely risky.
Furthermore, we deem incomprehensible and
unacceptable the proposal made by the Prime Minister
of Israel that President Arafat should leave Palestine to
go into exile. It should not be forgotten that Mr. Arafat
is the elected President of the Palestinian Authority and
that as such he is the internationally recognized leader
of the Palestinian people. We add our voice to the call
for Israel to end immediately its siege of President
Arafat.
The Security Council has adopted two important
resolutions in less than a month, 1397 (2002) and 1402
(2002), without achieving the desired results so far. It
is urgent that the parties comply with the two
resolutions immediately, since they are the only way
out of the current impasse.
We wish to reiterate the appeal to both parties for
an immediate ceasefire, for Israel's withdrawal from
the Palestinian cities and for an end to the suicide
attacks in the Israeli cities. The military occupation
will not provide the security guarantees that Israel is
seeking, nor will the suicide attacks achieve the
political results desired by the Palestinians. We also
wish to reiterate our support for the Tenet plan and the
Mitchell recommendations.
The Security Council's efforts complement the
efforts being made on the ground by the various special
envoys. We reiterate our support for their work, which
requires the cooperation and full compliance of both
parties. There is no reason for limiting the special
envoys' access to dialogue with President Arafat.
The Arab Summit in Beirut finished a few days
ago. It offered a ray of hope for finding a solution to
this conflict. These new proposals must be studied. As
the Secretary-General mentioned, the security concerns
of Israel and the political aspirations of the Palestinians
must be taken into account simultaneously. Security
and peace are two sides of the same coin.
Mr. Ryan (Ireland): Ireland associates itself fully
with the earlier intervention of Spain, which was made
on behalf of the European Union.
As the Council is aware, the Ministers for
Foreign Affairs of the European Union member States
held an extraordinary meeting in Luxembourg this
evening. I would like to draw attention to the important
statement made to the press afterward by Foreign
Minister Pique of Spain to the effect that the European
Union Ministers are in agreement that the most urgent
requirement is the implementation - immediately and
in their entirety - of resolutions 1397 (2002) and 1402
(2002). This very night, Foreign Minister Pique and
High Representative Solana are travelling to the region
with the objective of meeting at the highest level with
the Government of Israel and the Palestinian Authority.
Ireland shares the grave concern of the Secretary-
General at the further aggravation of the situation on
the ground. We commend the clarity of the Secretary-
General's public statement of last Monday and the
leadership that he is showing at this very difficult time.
We strongly support what he has said. This is not a
time for the Security Council to take one side or the
other. Truly, in the current situation there is a great deal
of right and a great deal of wrong on all sides. It is for
the Council to help the parties get out of the current
crisis. They are incapable of doing so unassisted,
embedded as they are in impasse.
In welcoming the adoption of resolution 1402
(2002) last Saturday, the Minister for Foreign Affairs
of Ireland, Mr. Brian Cowen, made a strong appeal for
the Israeli Government and the Palestinian Authority to
implement immediately and in full the terms of the
resolution and to respond to the wider appeals of the
international community. He said there can be no
justification for further killings or hostile actions which
serve to deepen hatred between the Israeli and
Palestinian peoples. The peace and security of Israel
and a free and independent State of Palestine can be
secured through political negotiations alone. The
policy of violence, coercion and revenge which
currently prevails will lead only to further unnecessary
grief and suffering. Mr. Cowen went on to say that the
Security Council is acting on behalf of the international
community in pointing the way to the resolution of this
crisis. Israeli and Palestinian leaders must grasp this
opportunity and work together to overcome those who
would seek to perpetuate the conflict between their
peoples.
We are greatly disappointed, and we cannot
accept that even on the same day when resolution 1402
(2002) was adopted, key elements of the resolution
were downplayed and even repudiated. Since then, the
situation has deteriorated further. Let me add that it is
no virtue for any party to state that it has "not rejected"
resolution 1402 (2002). Member States of the United
Nations are, under the Charter, required to implement
resolutions of the Council.
Again, we condemn unreservedly the murder of
civilians by suicide bombings. Equally, we call for an
end to Israel's military attack on Ramallah and other
Palestinian towns, and we condemn unreservedly the
violations of international humanitarian law and of
United Nations conventions that have accompanied it.
We call for an immediate end to Israel's siege of
President Arafat, which is deeply dangerous and
unwise. We reject outright any intention to oblige the
elected leader of the Palestinian people to re-enter
exile. We deplore all violations of the blue line
between Lebanon and Israel. Ireland deeply deplores
widespread denials of human rights, including, first
and foremost, the right to life of Palestinians and
Israelis alike.
The overall context for forward movement is
clearly set out in resolution 1397 (2002). The elements
for immediate progress are clear. These are crystallized
in paragraph 1 of resolution 1402 (2002). Every
member of the Council expressly declared through the
Council President on 30 March that no sequence is
implied or required in the implementation of these
elements. We agree with the Secretary-General that we
need to take into account the legitimate security
concerns of Israel and the legitimate political
aspirations of the Palestinians at the same time.
There is a need to encourage most strongly the
continuing efforts of the "quartet". An even-handed,
sustained and determined engagement on the part of the
"quartet" - which is comprised of envoys of the
Secretary-General, the President of the United States,
the European Union and the Russian Federation - is
central and crucial. The "quartet" may in the
deteriorating circumstances need strengthening on the
ground at the political level. It would be
unconscionable and unacceptable if the "quartet" or
members of it were to continue to be prevented from
meeting with President Arafat. We call on all parties to
cooperate fully with the efforts of the "quartet".
We agree with the Secretary-General that the
question of deploying a third party on the ground
deserves to be further examined. It is, of course, crucial
that the Council maintain its active engagement with
the current crisis. The international community expects
and deserves no less. We should continue to receive
regular briefings from the Secretary-General in the
light of reports from his Special Coordinator.
The Government of Ireland, for its part, has been
in direct touch with Secretary-General Annan and both
sides in recent days, and we will continue to do our
utmost within the means available to us nationally, as a
member of the European Union, and here in the
Security Council to help deliver the parties and the
region from the current catastrophe.
Sir Jeremy Greenstock (United Kingdom): The
United Kingdom's position is fully contained in the
statement made by Spain on behalf of the European
Union (EU), and there is no need for me to add more
words to that admirably clear position, which is
entirely consonant with the strong stance taken by the
Secretary-General.
There is nevertheless one point in particular
which I feel I need to emphasize. Resolutions 1397
(2002) and 1402 (2002) are significant developments
of Security Council policy on this issue. The deliberate
use of violence and, in particular, the unproductive and
unacceptable escalation in the degree of force used by
the Israeli Defence Force, have got to be brought to a
halt. The Israeli forces must quickly withdraw from
Ramallah and other West Bank towns. Likewise,
Palestinian suicide bombings, which are undoubtedly
acts of terror, must cease, and the Palestinian Authority
must make a 100-per-cent effort to that end.
I believe that the whole Security Council is clear
that there can be no military solution. Israelis and
Palestinians alike have the right to security. But this
can be secured only by a peaceful settlement,
negotiated between the parties. President Arafat and
the Palestinian Authority are the legitimate
representatives of the Palestinian people, with whom
Israel must be able to resume that dialogue. It is not in
the interests of peace - or, I submit, of Israel - to
weaken their capacity.
These two resolutions have to be implemented;
they are routes out of the desperate position into which
the two sides have got themselves. They provide,
succinctly and forcefully, the basis for real peace. The
whole United Nations system should be directed to
implementation. In our national diplomacy, the United
Kingdom will play its part; so will the EU, collectively.
As Ambassador Ryan just mentioned earlier, a
high-level delegation of the EU is leaving for the
region now, with the intention of meeting the leaders of
both sides, to encourage the immediate cessation of the
violence and the implementation of the resolutions.
They and other active negotiators within the "quartet"
have the basis for action in resolutions 1397 (2002) and
1402 (2002) - which need no further interpretation -
and in the conclusions of the Arab League Summit. We
should be doing everything to facilitate their practical
work on the ground.
Mr. Mahbubani (Singapore): I have not been
present in this Chamber throughout the debate that
began this morning, but I have been watching and
listening to all the speeches on television in my office.
Having listened to the speeches all day long, I believe
that a very strong message has clearly come through
the debate and the discussion today. The strong
message is that the international community is deeply
concerned about the situation in the region, and that
we, the members of the Security Council, cannot and
should not underestimate the gravity of the situation
that we are facing.
Since the adoption of resolution 1402 (2002) in
the early hours of 30 March - it is barely five days old
now - the situation on the ground in the Middle East
has not improved. The parties have not moved
anywhere near to a meaningful ceasefire. Israeli troops
have not been withdrawn from Palestinian cities,
including Ramallah. While the United States Special
Envoy, Anthony Zinni, and others, including members
of the "quartet", continue to be engaged on the ground,
acts of violence continue, including acts of terror,
provocation and incitement. There have also been
worrying developments along the Blue Line - a
situation which bears careful watching.
The parties are, to quote the Secretary-General,
who briefed the Council members on Monday, "locked
into the logic of war". In mentioning the Secretary-
General, I think that it is important for us to recognize
that he has shown unusual leadership in telling the
Security Council that it cannot ignore the situation
there.
The consequences of being locked into that logic
of war is that the region, which is already poised at the
edge of an abyss, might tip over into it - although
some, of course, say that we have already fallen into it.
We might find the parties free-falling in that abyss, the
depth of which is not yet known. The international
community, including the Security Council, has been
toiling for months to find ways and means of
preventing the parties from tumbling into the abyss.
Resolutions 1397 (2002) and 1402 (2002) are two
lifelines that have been extended in good faith to both
parties for them to use to extract themselves from the
lose-lose situation in which they find themselves today.
They should be read together; resolution 1397 (2002)
provides the long-term vision - indeed, a clear long-
term vision - while resolution 1402 (2002) lays down
the immediate steps required.
However, at the end of the day, it will be up to the
parties to decide whether they will reach out for the
lifelines to pull themselves out of the abyss, and find a
win-win solution. But that can be done only on the
basis of a negotiated political settlement.
The focus of today's meeting is therefore to see
how those two resolutions - 1397 (2002) and 1402
(2002) - can be implemented. We listened carefully to
the views expressed earlier by non-members of the
Council. As for the Security Council, as a first step, the
Council presidency issued two press statements - one
of them on Monday, 1 April 2002 - demanding the
immediate implementation of those resolutions. As it is
ultimately the responsibility of the parties to implement
Security Council resolutions, the Council presidency
was tasked to meet with the parties to convey the
demand directly. That task was promptly carried out by
you, Mr. President.
In addition, the Security Council met separately
with the Permanent Representative of Israel and with
the Permanent Observer of Palestine in private
meetings yesterday, during which Council members
made it abundantly clear that resolutions 1397 (2002)
and 1402 (2002) offer the best instrument for the
parties to get out of the rut that they are in today.
Indeed, I might add that in some ways it may have been
unfortunate that non-members were not present to
listen to the discussions that we had yesterday in this
Chamber, because, truly, we had remarkably frank and
candid discussions. It is our hope that both parties
listened carefully to what was said to them in the
private meetings here, barely 24 hours ago. All of us
stressed that the actions required by paragraph 1 of
resolution 1402 (2002) are not sequential, and have to
be implemented immediately.
With that in mind, we would like to remind the
parties that, under Article 25 of the United Nations
Charter, Members of the United Nations agreed to
accept and carry out decisions of the Security Council.
That Article makes no distinction between decisions
adopted under Chapter VI and Chapter VII of the
Charter. We hope that these cumulative steps will make
it clear that the Council expects full and immediate
compliance with the resolutions by the parties. If the
parties need external help, members of the "quartet"
and other international mediators, and certainly the
good offices of the Secretary-General, stand ready,
either individually or collectively, to facilitate the
implementation.
Indeed, as we know, there is no lack of mediators
or of political initiatives, the most significant of which
is the Arab peace initiative adopted recently at the
Summit meeting of the League of Arab States in
Beirut. At this stage, what we need to do is to
consolidate these various initiatives and go back to
familiar ground, such as the Oslo peace agreement, the
more recent negotiations at Camp David in 2000 and
the subsequent discussions in Taba, as well as the Tenet
work plan and the Mitchell report.
In each of those agreements, Yasser Arafat, a
recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize together with the
late Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and the elected
leader of the Palestinian people, has been a pivotal
player. Steps should be taken to allow him to take the
measures requested of him by the Security Council.
Clearly, leadership is required on both sides. In order to
bring the Middle East back to the path of peace, one
side should not be prevented from exercising its
leadership.
Mr. Tafrov (Bulgaria) (spoke in French): As a
country associated with the European Union, Bulgaria
fully supports the statement made earlier by the
representative of Spain on behalf of the European
Union.
Bulgaria, like all other members of the Council
and of the United Nations as a whole, is concerned by
the worsening of the situation in the Middle East. We
call upon the parties to the crisis to exercise restraint.
That restraint should be exercised not only through acts
but also through language. Sometimes linguistic or
rhetorical excesses can be as dangerous and harmful as
actions.
My country believes that resolutions 1397 (2002)
and 1402 (2002) represent a clear and unequivocal road
map to resolve the current crisis. Those Council
resolutions provide a solid basis for action by all who
are engaged on the ground to help resolve the crisis. I
am thinking in particular of the Special Envoy of
President Bush, General Zinni; the Special Envoy of
the European Union, Mr. Moratinos; Terry Larsen;
Mr. Vdovine; and others. My country welcomes the
decision just taken by the European Union to dispatch
to the region the Minister for Foreign Affairs of Spain,
Mr. Pique, and the European Union's High
Representative for Common Foreign and Security
Policy, Mr. Solana.
Bulgaria calls upon Israel to implement
resolutions 1397 (2002) and 1402 (2002) and to put an
end to the isolation of President Arafat and to the
danger to his physical integrity. We are concerned by
information we have received concerning difficulties
that prominent representatives of the international
community are having in contacting President Arafat,
who remains the legitimate leader of the Palestinian
people. We read in the press that the current President
of the European Union himself, the Prime Minister of
Spain, Mr. Jose Maria Aznar, was prevented from
having a telephone conversation with President Arafat.
If that is the case, we protest strongly against such an
action on the part of the Israeli authorities.
Terrorist attacks represent a major source of the
current tension in the region. They have continued
since the adoption of the two resolutions. Bulgaria
condemns them unequivocally. They are inexcusable,
not only from a moral point of view but also from a
political standpoint. It is undeniable that they have
introduced into the conflict an element that is irrational
and inhuman from every perspective. They have done
so to an unprecedented extent in this already ghastly
conflict. Such acts of suicide represent a phenomenon
with grave consequences. What really disgusts us is
that they are very often encouraged by political leaders.
I would like to say this very clearly: the culture of
the glorification of sacrifice must go, not only for the
moral reasons that I just mentioned, but also for
political reasons. Quite simply, such acts do not help
the Palestinian cause. The Palestinian people is being
called to live with the Israeli people. I cannot resist the
temptation to cite the eminent nineteenth-century
statesman and diplomat Talleyrand, who, when
referring to a political assassination, said it was worse
than a crime - it was a mistake. Unfortunately,
however, that is the case here.
Mr. Negroponte (United States of America):
Today, the Security Council meets again to consider the
situation in the Middle East. When many of us left
New York for Monterrey for the International
Conference on Financing for Development just over
two weeks ago, there was cause for guarded optimism.
The Security Council had just passed resolution 1397
(2002), Crown Prince Abdullah had begun to lay out
his bold vision for peace, and both parties had
welcomed General Zinni's return to the region. Now,
two weeks later, we are faced with a terrible crisis. As
Secretary Powell said yesterday morning, both sides
are losing right now, and it is time to find a way
forward.
My Government is committed to working with
the parties to find a way forward. Just last month
President Bush stated, "We have an obligation to work
for peace in the region, and we will." We have been
working for peace at the highest levels - in
Washington, through General Zinni, through our
embassies in the region and, where appropriate,
through the United Nations Security Council.
Ultimately, however, the United States believes that
there is no military solution to the current impasse.
Palestinian aspirations are not being advanced
through terror and Violence. And long-term security
and peace for Israel cannot be achieved by military
means. We are also concerned by the violent incidents
taking place on Israel's northern border, instigated by
Hezbollah and Palestinian elements. These incidents
are clear violations of the "blue line" and further
aggravate the regional situation.
The United States has been supportive of a
constructive Security Council role during this crisis.
We introduced resolution 1397 (2002), which affirmed
a political vision of two States, Israel and Palestine,
within secure and recognized borders and called for a
cessation of violence and terror. We voted in support of
resolution 1402 (2002), which called for an immediate
ceasefire, the withdrawal of Israeli forces and a return
to the Tenet work plan, which is the first step towards
implementation of the Mitchell Committee's
recommendations. Mitchell, in turn, rapidly gets us into
a political process and negotiations, as Secretary
Powell has said.
We are working around the clock with both sides
to secure the implementation of resolution 1402 (2002)
in its entirety. Through resolutions 1397 (2002) and
1402 (2002), the Council has laid out the road map. We
would urge the parties to engage immediately in the
implementation of these provisions.
Mr. Kolby (Norway): Norway remains deeply
alarmed by the escalating cycle of violence in the
Middle East. The terrorist attacks against Israeli
civilians and the Israeli military campaign represent a
dramatic worsening of the situation.
Norway is fully aligned with what Secretary-
General Annan has described as the "core
problems" - that is, occupation, violence, including
terrorism, and the economic plight of the Palestinians.
Unless these problems are addressed, the conflict will
only escalate further. Norway also agrees with the
Secretary-General that the issues of security and peace
are two sides of the same coin, and these two issues
must be addressed in parallel in the spirit of Security
Council resolutions 1397 (2002) and 1402 (2002).
Norway has repeatedly condemned Palestinian
terrorist attacks. Terrorism is not acceptable as a tool to
reach political goals. We call on the Palestinian people
to renounce terrorism and disassociate themselves from
the practices of extremist groups.
However, the ongoing Israeli military campaign
against the Palestinian Authority is destroying the
Palestinian police and its ability to fight terrorism. We
fear that the present military operations will only breed
further hatred and continued terrorist attacks. Israel's
military campaign and use of lethal force, especially in
civilian-populated areas, is not going to achieve its
aim. Such use of force will bring neither peace nor
security, but it will fuel hatred and despair. The
campaign must be brought to an end immediately.
The Israeli siege of President Arafat's compound
in Ramallah is another matter of concern. The
treatment of Mr. Arafat, the democratically elected
leader of the Palestinians, is unacceptable and can only
contribute to complicating the possibility for finding
any political solution. President Arafat has minimal
opportunity to act in the present situation. His ability to
function as the leader of the Palestinian Authority must
be restored immediately. Without that happening, no
process to lead us out of the present dire situation can
be found.
The humanitarian situation in the Palestinian area
must also be addressed. Reports about violations of
international humanitarian law resulting from the
recent military campaign are very disturbing. Norway
calls on Israel to immediately lift restrictions on
movement of humanitarian personnel and medical
relief. We are also concerned about the safety of
journalists covering recent developments.
The present escalation of the conflict has a clear
potential to threaten regional peace and security.
Norway therefore calls on Israel and the Palestinians to
immediately cease the fighting. Norway remains
convinced that only the resumption of a political
process can bring a lasting solution and peace to
Israelis and Palestinians. The Security Council has
indicated the way forward through resolutions 1397
(2002) and 1402 (2002). The international community
and this Council must stand united in its demand that
these measures be implemented.
Mr. Levitte (France) (spoke in French): France
fully aligns itself with the statement made by the
Ambassador of Spain on behalf of the European Union.
Since the adoption of resolution 1402 (2002),
violence has escalated even further in the Middle East.
The military operations undertaken by the Israeli army
in Ramallah, and later in other Palestinian towns, are
leading to a political impasse and a humanitarian
tragedy. This situation in unacceptable.
France strongly urges that both parties fully
implement resolution 1402 (2002) without delay. The
Israeli army must withdraw from all Palestinian towns,
and military operations under way must cease. Equally,
all forms of violence and terror must cease. A real
ceasefire between Palestinians and Israelis should be
concluded without delay. France reaffirms what was
stated by the President of the Security Council on
behalf of the 15 members: the demands contained in
resolution 1402 (2002) are not in a sequence and
should all be fully implemented.
In order to emerge from this vicious cycle of
violence and hatred it is necessary to have a political
perspective. The situation can improve only when the
Israeli Government agrees to undertake, in parallel to
discussions on security, political negotiations leading
to the creation of an independent, Viable and
democratic Palestinian State. Security issues and
political issues must be addressed; they cannot be
separated.
France states once again, and forcefully, that
nothing can justify the murder of innocent civilians.
The suicide bombings that have taken place over the
past few days lead to a feeling of disgust. France
condemns them with horror. Once again, we express
our compassion and our deep sympathy to all the
victims and their families.
The Palestinian Authority, which has the
responsibility to combat terrorism, can act only if its
capacities are preserved and if it is not weakened. This
implies, notably for the Israeli Government, the lifting
of the siege of Ramallah and the re-establishment of
President Arafat's abilities to take action, travel and
negotiate. The physical integrity and personal safety of
the President of the Palestinian Authority must be
assured. To exile him would be a mistake, with
incalculable consequences.
The neutralizing of President Arafat and, to a
larger extent, the dismantling of the Palestinian
Authority and its security infrastructures run counter to
Israel's sought-after objective. The long-term security
of the Israeli people does not come through the
destruction of the Palestinian Authority but, on the
contrary, through negotiation with the elected and
legitimate representatives of the Palestinian people.
Our Council should be fully aware of the very
serious humanitarian consequences of the Israeli
military operations. They inflict new trials on the
Palestinian people, who are victim to a blockade and
are being gradually deprived of the most elementary
means of subsistence. The restrictions imposed on the
activities of the International Committee of the Red
Cross (ICRC) and other medical and humanitarian
institutions are unacceptable. Equally unacceptable are
the repeated violations of the right to consular access
for nationals of third States in danger.
For a long time France has been in favour of
deploying international observers. It proposed this idea
in this Chamber 18 months ago. The present
circumstances, tragically, lend increased relevance to
this proposal. The presence of these monitors would
serve the interests of the Israeli population as well as of
the Palestinian population. This proposal, which is
increasingly supported, could complement the
proposals of General Zinni and assist in the
implementation of the Tenet and Mitchell plans. It
would facilitate the resumption of political negotiations
by contributing to a return to calm. The Secretary-
General rightly emphasized that this idea should be
placed at the forefront of the work of the Security
Council. Perhaps we should go even beyond that and
give serious consideration to deploying an interposition
force to accompany the implementation of the Security
Council resolutions. The question deserves to be posed
from now on.
The situation poses a considerable risk to the
entire region. France is extremely concerned by the
renewal of tensions observed on the border between
Lebanon and Israel. In a presidential statement of 18
June 2000, the Security Council confirmed that Israel
had withdrawn from Lebanon. Recent attacks
originating from Lebanese territory are unacceptable.
Any violation of the blue line, in either direction,
should cease. France calls on all parties involved to
demonstrate the greatest possible restraint.
France encourages the diplomatic efforts being
made by all, and particularly those of the "quartet".
The "quartet" must have access to President Arafat. It
should be able to play its full role, in unity and in the
service of peace. We hope that the United States will
once again become involved further in the search for a
solution to the conflict. The Ministers for Foreign
Affairs of the European Union met in Luxembourg to
examine the means that would make it possible to
escape the spiral of violence and restore the conditions
for a resumption of dialogue. As my European
colleagues have indicated, our Ministers have decided
to immediately dispatch to the region Mr. Pique,
Spanish Minister for Foreign Affairs, on behalf of the
European Union, and Mr. Solana, the High
Representative, to meet with President Arafat and
Prime Minister Sharon and to demand the immediate
implementation of resolution 1402 (2002). The efforts
of all must converge towards our common objective: a
halt to the confrontations and the resumption of
negotiations.
In two weeks the Security Council has adopted
two important texts, resolutions 1397 (2002) and 1402
(2002). These two resolutions show the way towards a
de-escalation, ceasefire and resumption of political
talks. There are no other paths towards peace.
Mr. Belinga-Eboutou (Cameroon) (spoke in French): First of all, I would like to thank you for
having convened this meeting at the request of the
States of the Arab League and the member States of the
Non-Aligned Movement.
Given the worsening of the conflict between
Israelis and Palestinians, the succession of meetings of
the Security Council reflects the hope that the
international community places in our body. The
community hopes and expects of us that we quickly
and decisively contribute to halting the violence in
Israel and Palestine. The role of the Council should be
decisive in helping to promote the resumption of peace
negotiations between Israel and Palestine.
Allow me to convey a few words to the
international community as a whole and to you,
Ambassadors of Member States. It is quite natural that
the events of recent weeks elicit powerful feelings. I
am in a good position to know this. I am firmly
convinced that life that is lost is a tragedy and that the
life of any human being is of the same value as
anybody else's. My thoughts and my prayers go to the
families and to the communities that are suffering
today on either side. I want to see an end put to
violence and the peace process resumed.
This is how Secretary-General Kofi Annan
expressed himself when he reported back to the
General Assembly on 20 October 2000 on his mission
to the Middle East. His words haunt me, and while we
face this extremely tense situation, Cameroon is
speaking in the framework of this Council meeting,
which is of particularly decisive importance. I am
aware that more than ever before, words can stir up or
calm feelings, and that the return to calm and
tranquillity is a precondition for a climate that would
facilitate a resumption of the peace talks.
On 29 and 30 March of this year we had an
intense debate, which made it possible for us to tackle
head-on, as far as possible, the delicate and complex
situation prevailing in the Middle East, which verges
on being frozen, or even deadlocked. Thanks to the
effectiveness and the tact of your predecessor, Sir, we
managed to adopt resolution 1402 (2002), which is the
best road map towards a political, final solution
advocated in resolution 1397 (2002).
In that resolution, the Council puts its finger on
the problem. The Council has said that it was seriously
concerned because of the worsening situation in the
Middle East. This worsening of the situation has two
basic causes: the recent suicide bombings carried out in
Israel, and the military offensive conducted against the
headquarters of the President of the Palestinian
Authority. That is the crux of the matter, and that is
why the Council calls for an immediate ceasefire, the
withdrawal from the cities under siege and the
cessation of all violence and terror.
This resolution is crucial, and only compliance
with it can halt the escalation of violence and make it
possible to safeguard the peace dynamic. This
dynamic, re-launched by the adoption of resolution
1397 (2002) and recognizing the need for coexistence
in the region, side by side, of two States, Israel and
Palestine, within secure recognized borders, was
reinforced through the unequivocal expression by the
Arab countries of their willingness to live with Israel
and to recognize it, according to the Saudi Arabian
peace plan, which was approved at the most recent
Arab League Summit.
The parties must not hide behind semantics. The
question of a sequential implementation of the relevant
provisions of resolution 1402 (2002) should not be an
obstacle in the implementation of that resolution.
A little more than three months ago the United
Nations and its Secretary-General, Mr. Kofi Annan,
received the Nobel Peace Prize. Today the Middle East
is a real challenge to peace, a problem for the United
Nations, particularly for the Security Council, which
since 29 March 2002 has been holding at least one
meeting a day on the situation in the Middle East,
including the Palestinian question.
The decisions that we take, as well as our
capacity and determination to implement them, are for
the international community, States, public opinion and
the media a decisive indicator of the credibility and the
capacity, for action of the United Nations in the
maintenance of peace. At this time all these observers
who welcomed with hope and enthusiasm resolution
1397 (2002) and 1402 (2002) are now wondering about
the tragic developments on the ground. Hence, the
Council must explore all avenues to lead the parties to
abide by these resolutions, to help the parties renounce
the logic of war and to return to the peace process. We
must salute the role played by the American, European,
Russian and United Nations envoys to try to reweave
the strands of dialogue.
The current situation, however, requires that we
do more than that, that we create an electric shock to
stop the escalation of violence so that Israelis and
Palestinians can quickly put an end to the current cycle
of violence and reprisals that plunge them into a
bottomless abyss. That was the thrust of the broad-
based, candid and in-depth dialogue that we had
yesterday with the representative of Israel and the
Permanent Observer of Palestine.
Is it not high time that the United Nations,
through the Security Council, go beyond that and really
engage directly in the peace process in the Middle
East? I believe in this regard that the Secretary-General
and a delegation of the Council, possibly at the
ministerial level, could very soon go to the region to
stop the spiral of violence and to re-launch the Israeli-
Palestinian dialogue. The context requires this. Indeed,
as of today the climate is explosive everywhere. The
risk of an uncontrollable situation is all too real. The
parties are deeply distrustful of each other. The
language they use unfortunately is the language of war.
Hence, the proposal to dispatch a mission is becoming
highly relevant now. Pending the dispatch of such a
mission, Cameroon is open to any strong, balanced
initiative that the Council might take right now.
It is clear that the success of our action is
possible only if we all speak with one voice in the
Council and if we are united and coordinated. Peace in
the Middle East will be the fruit of our solidarity,
solidarity that brings efforts and forces together. But
Cameroon has always supported this point, and we
restate it again today; the reign of peace will come in
the Middle East when the Israelis and the Palestinians
decide to be the builders and inventors. We have
always said this and we restate this point today. Peace
has to be invented first in the heart of man and in our
relations with each other. Inventing peace means
working for a just, fraternal, secure and peaceful
society.
Inhabitants of Palestine, Israelis and Palestinians,
become the inventors of peace, of your peace, of this
peace that you always call "Shalom/Salaam", which for
you precisely represents the state of people living in
harmony with each other and with nature.
Mr. Wang Yingfan (China) (spoke in Chinese):
Since the Security Council adopted resolution 1402
(2002) on 30 March, the conflict between Israel and
Palestine has continued to escalate. Instead of
improving, the situation has deteriorated further. In
particular, the economic and social life of the
Palestinian people has been seriously disrupted, and the
humanitarian situation is in deep crisis. We express our
serious concern and worry over these developments.
A resolution to the question of the Middle East
can only be based on the relevant resolutions of the
Security Council and the principle of land for peace.
Resorting to military occupation and violence will not
bring peace to either side; rather, it will make the road
to peace more difficult.
The deterioration of the situation in the Middle
East in recent days has proven once again that Israel's
approach of achieving security through military high-
handedness will go nowhere. It must be pointed out
that Israel's continued siege of President Arafat and its
threat to force him into exile are very dangerous.
Should President Arafat be harmed, the consequences
would be extremely grave.
We oppose and condemn Israel's invasion of
Palestine, and we call upon Israel to immediately
implement resolutions 1397 (2002) and 1402 (2002), to
unconditionally withdraw all its troops from Palestine,
to guarantee the personal safety of President Arafat,
and to lift the blockade and the relevant restrictions on
the Palestinian sides so as to create the necessary
conditions for the Palestinian side to be able to stop the
extreme and Violent activities by a handful of people
and to make possible a ceasefire between the two sides.
At the same time, we also condemn the violent
activities targeting innocent civilians in Israel. We call
for an early end to the vicious cycle of countering
violence with violence, so as to prevent extreme and
violent activities by a handful of people from
disrupting the early restoration of all the legitimate
rights of the Palestinian people.
In the current situation, the United Nations, and
the Security Council in particular, should play a more
active and effective role to avoid the evolution of the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict into an all-out confrontation
and to prevent the situation from sliding into an
irreparable state. Yesterday, the Council held separate
meetings with the Israeli and Palestinian sides. We
hope the two sides will take practical steps to
immediately stop all violent activities. All peace-loving
countries should work together to stop the deterioration
of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and to promote the
momentum for peace in the Middle East.
Mr. Bhuckory (Mauritius): I thank you, Mr.
President, for organizing this public meeting to further
discuss the deteriorating situation in the Middle East.
Almost all the speakers who have spoken since
this morning agree that there is indeed total despair in
the region and that the situation is clearly out of
control. We are deeply concerned by the ongoing
outrageous Israeli assaults and the reoccupation of
Bethlehem, Ramallah and other Palestinian towns. Yet
what we fear the most is the turn these events might
take in the days ahead. We have said on previous
occasions that the military assault by Israel can only be
counter-productive. Many other delegations rightly
share the same assessment. In a statement made to the
National Assembly yesterday, the Foreign Minister of
Mauritius commented on the explosive situation in the
Middle East and condemned the unprecedented scale of
the violence by Israel on the Palestinian Authority and
on the Palestinian people. He also condemned the
Palestinian suicide bombings.
At the Arab League Summit in Beirut last week,
the Arab world extended a hand of friendship to Israel
by endorsing the Arab peace initiative of Saudi Crown
Prince Abdullah. These proposals have the potential of
showing us a real ray of light at the end of the tunnel.
They provide a basis for the two parties to engage in a
meaningful dialogue with a view to ending the
stalemate. It is regrettable that instead of taking
advantage of this opportunity, Prime Minister Sharon
has further compromised the prospects for peace in the
region. The senseless and miscalculated Israeli actions
lead us to wonder whether Prime Minister Sharon has
any intention of making peace with the Palestinians.
Mauritius reiterates its condemnation of all acts
of terror and suicide bombings, especially against
innocent civilians. At the same time, it must be
emphasized that the Israeli actions in West Bank cannot
be justified. In fact, subjecting President Arafat to the
worst form of humiliation, besieging him for months,
speaking openly about his exile, reoccupying
Palestinian towns, destroying all the infrastructure that
the Palestinians have built over the years and forcing
them to bury their dead inhumanely can only further
radicalize and infuriate even the moderate Arab world.
The protests and street demonstrations in various
capitals are living proof of the grief and anger of the
Arab world. This will no doubt cause a backlash on
Israel. It will seriously compromise the vision of the
Security Council of a region where two States, Israel
and Palestine, would live side by side within secure
and recognized borders. We fear that the recent
hostilities across the blue line are not just a beginning.
An Arab world in turmoil would have dire
consequences for international peace and security, with
eventual disastrous effects on the global economy.
We again emphasize that President Arafat
remains the only interlocutor with whom Israel can
negotiate peace. We repeat once again that in this
difficult situation, he must be strengthened instead of
being isolated and marginalized. He is the legitimate
leader of the Palestinians. His physical integrity and
personal safety must be protected at all costs, and
Israel has to unconditionally end the siege on him.
Two weeks ago, the Security Council adopted
resolution 1397 (2002), and on Saturday last it adopted
resolution 1402 (2002). The Council demanded the
immediate cessation of all acts of violence and called
for the withdrawal of Israeli troops from Palestinian
cities. Unfortunately, both these resolutions have been
ignored. It is absolutely important for both Palestine
and Israel to implement fully these two resolutions and
to adhere strictly not only to their letter but also to their
spirit.
Before the adoption of resolution 1402 (2002),
the Council President clearly stressed the non-
sequential nature of the steps outlined in its paragraph
1. It would be intellectually dishonest to claim that a
ceasefire and an end of suicide attacks should precede
any pullout from Palestinian cities, including
Ramallah. There is clearly no conditionality for an
Israeli pullout from Ramallah and other Palestinian
Cities.
My delegation is ready to support any draft
resolution that would reaffirm the Council's demand
for the immediate implementation of all provisions
contained in resolution 1402 (2002). It is also time for
the Security Council to engage in a meaningful
discussion on the dispatch of an international observer
force in the area that could restore a climate of trust
between the two parties.
There are influential world leaders who should be
called upon to act in such a difficult situation, and we
call upon them to press for an immediate Israeli
withdrawal. Secretary-General Kofi Annan has rightly
said that security cannot be dealt with in isolation and
that it has to be addressed alongside key political and
humanitarian issues. Hence, any proposal to address
the security concerns and which fails to include steps
towards resolving the core political issues will be
doomed to fail. The inalienable right of the Palestinian
people to statehood based on Security Council
resolutions 242 (1967) and 338 (1973) should remain
central to any initiative. The Palestinian people will
never settle for less, nor should the international
community.
Mr. Aguilar Zinser (Mexico) (spoke in Spanish):
The Mexican presidency yesterday expressed its
deepest concern over the serious deterioration of the
situation in the Middle East and at the continuing lack
of implementation of Security Council resolutions.
Mexico reiterates its position today that a just and
lasting solution to the conflict should be found, based
on the implementation of resolutions 242 (1967), 338
(1973), 1397 (2002) and 1402 (2002) and strongly
supports the concept of a region in which Israel and
Palestine coexist side by side within secure and
mutually respected borders.
Mexico also endorses the statement made
yesterday by the Rio Group that, in keeping with
resolution 1402 (2002), both parties proceed
immediately with the implementation of a genuine
ceasefire and with the withdrawal of Israeli troops from
Palestinian cities, including Ramallah. It supports the
demand contained in resolution 1397 (2002) for an
immediate end to all acts of terrorism, provocation,
incitement and destruction.
All Security Council resolutions are mandatory
for all those involved and in all circumstances, as set
out in Article 25 of the Charter. This is not subject to
discussion. Nonetheless, despite this obligation, Israel
considers that military incursions into Palestinian cities
and its virtual siege and kidnapping of the President of
the Palestinian National Authority fall within Israel's
right to legitimate self-defence.
Mexico believes that, on the contrary, Israel is not
acting in accordance with the principles of legitimate
self-defence recognized by Article 51 of the Charter of
the United Nations. The military actions that Israel is
carrying out in the Palestinian territories will not
succeed in preventing terrorism. On the contrary,
regardless of their military or strategic objectives, the
effects and practical consequences of those actions will
lead to acts of reprisal and to new extremist actions on
the part of the Palestinians.
Israel's military actions in Palestinian territory
have involved several acts of aggression against the
civilian population, which runs totally counter to
international humanitarian law. My delegation
therefore can find no legal, moral or political
justification for the actions undertaken by Israel in the
Palestinian territories.
Mexico - firmly convinced of Israel's right to
security and repudiating as abominable acts the suicide
bombings of the Palestinians against the Israeli
population - calls on Israel to respect international
law; immediately to withdraw its troops from
Palestinian cities; and to give the President of the
Palestinian National Authority, Yasser Arafat, freedom
of movement and respect his integrity.
Mexico also calls on the Israeli authorities to
cease their military actions against the civilian
population. The people of Mexico are friends of the
people of Israel, and, on the basis of this friendship,
Mexico calls on Israel to place its trust in the United
Nations and to have recourse to the Council, seeking
here solutions that will lead to a just peace and to the
full achievement of its legitimate aspirations to live in
an international environment of security and safety.
The Palestinian Authority and its representatives
have indicated their willingness to act within the
framework of international law, deeming it the only
way to find a just solution to the conflict.
Nonetheless, the suicide bombings that are taking
place in Israel are in totally contravention of
international law. For that reason, the Palestinian
National Authority should therefore demand that these
terrorist actions cease, in accordance with the
unambiguous provisions of Security Council
resolutions 1397 (2002) and 1402 (2002).
The Palestinian National Authority cannot be
ambiguous or ambivalent in the face of a flagrant
violation of international law. Mexico believes that
President Yasser Arafat should demand the cessation of
all of these acts of terrorist Violence, as they are
contrary to the cause defended by the Palestinian
Authority and to the demands that it is making for all
parties to respect international law. That message
should be transmitted without any ambiguity or
ambivalence to the people of Palestine and to all
Palestinian organizations. Mexico considers that the
Palestinian Authority is also compelled to respect the
provisions of international humanitarian law.
The last two resolutions adopted by the Security
Council on the situation in the Middle East, including
the issue of Palestine, have been ignored. This
undermines the credibility of the Council and of the
United Nations.
Mexico believes that the Security Council must
adopt concrete, specific and effective measures in order
for its authority and resolutions to prevail. This
meeting of the Security Council is being held in
response to the request made by the international
community, which is awaiting resolute and effective
action by the United Nations to put an end to the
escalating Violence and terrorism in the Middle East,
which is threatening international security.
The Security Council remains actively seized of
the issue. Our immediate objective is to ensure,
through all of the diplomatic means at our disposal,
that the parties involved both implement resolutions
1397 (2002) and 1402 (2002).
The Security Council is endeavouring to
contribute to seeing that the mediating activities of the
"quartet" bear fruit very shortly. The declarations made
by our President, his meeting with the representatives
of Palestine and Israel, and the separate dialogue of the
15 members of the Council yesterday with the
Ambassador of Israel and the Ambassador of Palestine
have made it very clear to the Government of Israel
and of the Palestinian National Authority that the
Council is expecting both parties fully to respect and
implement the resolutions. This public debate has
contributed additional elements to the Council and will
help guide its actions.
In these circumstances, Mexico believes that the
Council must support the work of the special envoys,
particularly of General Zinni; the actions being
currently undertaken by representatives of the
European Union; and those of the Secretary-General of
the United Nations to reach agreement on a ceasefire as
soon as possible, as well as to take the political steps
necessary to allow for an urgent return to the
negotiating table.
Mexico considers that the clearer and better
defined the positions of the countries promoting these
measures, the more effective their efforts will be.
Mexico also considers that the Security Council should
now start exploring the role that it will have to play
when - as we hope - the ceasefire becomes a reality
and the political dialogue is resumed. Among these
actions, Mexico proposes that the Security Council
explore activities appropriate to the authority conferred
upon it by the Charter of the United Nations and which
are part of its past experience, such as the observation
and monitoring of ceasefires, the establishment of
zones of peace, the implementation of disarmament
programmes and the collection arms obtained by illicit
groups, the verification of security arrangements, the
adoption of confidence-building measures, the
establishment and protection of violence-free zones
and on-the-spot verification of the implementation of
agreements and of provisions of international
humanitarian law.
Finally, Mexico considers that the Security
Council has made very significant progress in its action
in the Middle East thanks to the consensus reached
among its members. We therefore feel that any future
Council action to encourage compliance with its
resolutions should be done while maintaining a
position of consensus and its unity of action.
The President (spoke in Russian): The next
speaker inscribed on my list is the representative of
Guinea. I invite him to take a seat at the Council table
and to make his statement.
Mr. Fall (Guinea) (spoke in French): My
delegation notes and deplores the escalation of
violence in the occupied Palestinian territories and in
Israel since the Council's adoption on 30 March of
resolution 1402 (2002).
Despite the international community's numerous
appeals for the prompt implementation of that
resolution, the situation continues to deteriorate
dangerously. The Israeli army is intensifying its
military offensive in the Palestinian territories. The
offensive is characterized by the sustained occupation
of Palestinian towns, the destruction of infrastructure
and the maintenance of the siege of President Arafat's
headquarters, as well as summary executions and
arbitrary arrests. The suicide bombing attacks, directed
by groups of Palestinian extremists, have greatly
increased in number, leading to numerous Victims
among the Israeli population. We were very
encouraged this morning to hear the Permanent
Observer of Palestine acknowledge that the suicide
bombing attacks are harmful to the interests of the
Palestinian people.
In this context of great concern, my delegation
welcomes the fact that yesterday in this same Chamber
two meetings were held, with the Permanent
Representative of Israel and the Permanent Observer of
Palestine. Those private meetings were of great
usefulness to us and shed light on the position of each
p arty.
Though the two parties commit themselves to
implementing resolution 1397 (2002), Israel has
signalled some reservations with regard to certain
aspects of resolution 1402 (2002). On the question of
the ceasefire and withdrawal, Israel would like to
obtain the prior cessation of suicide bombing attacks, a
principle source of its concern.
For its part, the Palestinian party judges that a
solution to the crisis must necessarily include the
simultaneous implementation of the political and
security issues, as well as the presence of an
international force of interposition. As well, my
delegation points out the existence of differing
understandings of the elements to be implemented in
the Mitchell report.
In our opinion, the security question and a
political settlement of the conflict are inseparable. In
this framework, everything must be done to end the
suicide bombings and the Israeli occupation of
autonomous Palestinian territories. For this reason, we
urge President Arafat and Prime Minister Sharon to
demonstrate greater responsibility in the search for a
negotiated solution to the conflict. However, to do this,
my delegation invites the Israeli authorities to lift their
siege so that the Palestinian leader can entirely regain
his freedom of movement and action.
My delegation congratulates the courage and
lucidity of the Palestinian leader in these critical
moments. Mr. Arafat remains the symbol of national
Palestinian identity and of the legitimate aspirations of
the Palestinian people.
The offer the Israeli Prime Minister made to the
Palestinian leader of a "one way ticket for exile" is
unacceptable, in our view. We will never cease to
repeat that President Yasser Arafat is not an obstacle to
peace; he remains an inevitable part of the peace
process. The achievements of Oslo must be preserved
at all costs. The war on peace must stop.
We would like to take this opportunity to reiterate
the urgent need for the immediate implementation of
all provisions of Council resolution 1402 (2002) in
order to create favourable conditions for the
resumption of dialogue and a final settlement of the
Israeli-Arab crisis.
In the light of this, Guinea supports the peace
plan adopted by the Arab League Summit recently held
in Beirut. Guinea invites all parties to renounce
confrontation and violence and to commit themselves
with determination to the path of peace in order to
ensure the one party's existence and security and the
other party's right to an independent State.
The President (spoke in Russian): I shall now
make a statement in my capacity as the representative
of the Russian Federation.
Russia strongly condemns terrorism in all of its
forms, and Russia is convinced that it is impossible to
attain political goals through terrorist acts. This fully
applies to terrorist acts in Israel, among the victims of
which are many of our compatriots.
At the same time, Israel's response should be
appropriate to the threat faced today. We condemn all
forms of violence. We mourn for the victims on both
sides, and we call for an immediate halt to the
bloodshed. However, today we have the impression
that both sides are behaving in a suicidal fashion and
that the raging conflict is threatening to spill over to
the other countries of the region. The madness must be
stopped before it is too late. The unprecedented
sufferings of civilians in the conflict elicited the
extreme concern of the Secretary-General, of all the
countries of the world and of many organizations,
including the League of Arab States, the Organization
of the Islamic Conference, the Non-Aligned
Movement, the Rio Group, the European Union and the
United Nations Commission on Human Rights. The
Palestinian-Israeli conflict is the subject of regular
contacts between the leaders of Russia and the United
States, as co-sponsors of the peace process. This
rampage of violence is inflicting suffering on not only
the Israelis and Palestinians, but the citizens of other
countries, too, including Russians.
We are seriously concerned that Israeli troops are
continuing to hold on to the site and building in
Bethlehem belonging to the Russian Orthodox Church,
where Russian pilgrims are lodged. Russia insists on
the speedy release of Russia's property and on the
inadmissability of causing any damage to it. On the
whole, we are very concerned at the overall alarming
situation around various religious holy sites in the
territory of the Palestinian National Authority, as a
result of the continuing Palestinian-Israeli
confrontation.
Halting the confrontation is possible only through
joint efforts by the Israelis and the Palestinians and
through their return to collaboration to implement the
agreements that have been achieved.
If Israel uses indiscriminate acts of force to do
the job of the Palestinians by destroying the terrorist
infrastructure, and the Palestinians likewise decide to
do Israel's work by bringing about a withdrawal from
the occupied territories, then the result will be all-out
war.
We are convinced that rooting out terror and
achieving a settlement, including the creation of a
Palestinian State, are in the fundamental interests of
both the Israelis and Palestinians, and can be achieved
only through peaceful means and direct talks by the
parties, in active cooperation with international
mediators, who must act in a united fashion. That is
why Russia, as a co-sponsor of the peace process and a
member of the "quartet", persistently seeks the speedy
implementation of resolutions 1397 (2002) and 1402
(2002), which provide for a comprehensive approach to
overcoming the crisis through an immediate ceasefire,
the withdrawal of Israeli troops from Palestinian towns,
the renunciation of any form of terrorism and other acts
of violence, the lifting of the economic blockades and
the implementation of the Tenet plan and the Mitchell
recommendations as preconditions for moving towards
a final settlement on the basis of United Nations
resolutions and the Madrid principles. The ultimate
goal of that process is peace, security and good-
neighbourliness between the two States, Israel and
Palestine.
We call upon Israel and the Palestinians to take
immediate steps to implement resolution 1402 (2002).
To this end, it is imperative and urgent to end the
isolation of the President of the Palestinian National
Authority, Yasser Arafat.
Following talks in Madrid, the Minister for
Foreign Affairs of Russia, Igor Ivanov, stated today
that Russia and the European Union oppose linking the
campaign against terrorism with the destruction of the
political structure within the Palestinian National
Authority.
Today, we have a unique opportunity, not only to
halt the cycle of Violence, but to achieve the goal of a
comprehensive settlement throughout the entire Middle
East region. This opportunity has emerged thanks to
the unanimous position of members of the Security
Council, as reflected in resolutions 1397 (2002) and
1402 (2002), as well as of the Arab peace initiative, put
forward by Saudi Arabia and endorsed at the Beirut
Summit. Missing that opportunity would be an
unforgivable mistake.
Russia supports the constructive role of the
Security Council in helping to resolve the Israeli-
Palestinian crisis and will do everything it can to
facilitate further practical steps by the Council in this
important area.
I now resume my functions as President of the
Security Council.
There are no further speakers on my list.
The meeting rose at 8.05 p.m.
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