Statement by Ambassador , UK Permanent
Representative to the UN, at the Security Council briefing on the
Middle East
Thank you Mr President. As others have done, I’d like to thank
Special Coordinator Wennesland for his briefing, and welcome him
to this new role. Thank you also to the Secretary-General of the
League of Arab States for joining us today, and for his briefing.
Mr President, let me start by welcoming President Abbas’s
announcement of dates for legislative and Presidential elections
in the Occupied Palestinian Territories for the first time since
2006. We encourage the Palestinian leadership to work toward
strong, inclusive, accountable and democratic institutions, based
on respect for the rule of law and human rights. Free and fair
elections are an important and necessary step.
Turning to the conflict, Mr President, I should first reiterate
the United Kingdom’s longstanding position on the Middle East
Peace Process: we support a negotiated settlement leading to a
safe and secure Israel living alongside a viable and sovereign
Palestinian state; based on 1967 lines with agreed land swaps,
Jerusalem as the shared capital of both states, and a just, fair,
agreed and realistic settlement for refugees. The UK supports
existing UN Security Council Resolutions as a basis for this
settlement, including UN Security Council Resolution 2334.
With our commitment to the two-state solution in mind, Mr
President, we condemn the Government of Israel’s decision on 20
January to award tenders, and thus proceed towards construction
of settlement units in the prospective East Jerusalem settlement
of Givat Hamatos, an extremely sensitive area of the West Bank.
Settlements are illegal under international law, and remain an
obstacle to peace, and a threat to the two-state solution. The
decision undermines the potential for future peace talks. The UK
has also expressed concern at the additional 3,900 settlement
units that have been advanced across the West Bank throughout
January. We again urge Israel to immediately cease settlement
expansion in the West Bank. And we remain concerned by
demolitions and evictions of Palestinians from their homes.
Mr President, we condemn the murder of Esther Horgan, in a
suspected terror attack by a Palestinian suspect on 20 December
in Tal Menashe. The UK is clear about our condemnation of all
acts of terrorism, which gravely undermine the prospects for
peace. Equally, we condemn all violence by Israeli settlers
against Palestinians.
Mr President, this month also saw the firing of rockets on 17
January from militant groups in Gaza. The UK condemns the firing
of rockets towards civilian populations. Any attacks targeted
against civilians are unlawful and unjustifiable. The UK
continues to encourage actors to put forward long-term
sustainable proposals, to resolve the threat posed to Israel’s
security by Hamas, Palestinian Islamic Jihad and other militants
in Gaza. We call upon Hamas and other terrorist groups to
permanently end their incitement and rocket fire against Israel.
We continue to urge the parties to prioritise progress towards
reaching a durable solution for Gaza. And we encourage Israel to
take the necessary practical steps to ensure Gaza’s
reconstruction and economic recovery.
Mr President, as we have consistently done, we join the US and
other Council members today in rejecting unilateral action on
both sides.
The UK has been a strong supporter of recent Arab-Israeli
normalisation agreements. Normalisation changes the regional
context, and presents opportunities for moving ahead with
material benefits and new partnerships, to help deliver long
overdue Israeli-Palestinian peace.
Mr President, a two-state solution is the only viable long-term
solution. It is the only way to permanently end the Arab-Israeli
conflict, deliver Palestinian self-determination, and preserve
Israel’s Jewish and democratic identity.
We echo the incoming US administration’s hope that the process
will unlock options for advancing a two-state solution. We look
forward to working with them, alongside regional partners and the
Israeli and Palestinian leaderships to seize this positive
momentum – helping deliver greater regional prosperity and
security, and progressing a solution to the conflict. We continue
to support that goal.