Mr President, the United Kingdom remains extremely
concerned by the situation in Gaza. We condemn the
violent activities of Hamas and Palestinian Islamic
Jihad and other terrorist organisations and we condemn
them unreservedly. We have witnessed recently,
unacceptable mortar and rocket attacks from Gaza into
Israel. Such acts of terror are destructive to peace
efforts and they need to stop. And in the past weeks,
we have seen violence, Hamas’ exploitation of peaceful
protests and a disturbing volume of live fire. Hamas’
military wing has been proscribed as a terrorist
organization by the UK since 2001 and the United
Kingdom has sanctions in place against senior Hamas
officials.
The recent violence has led to the tragic loss of life
of over 100 Palestinians, and we reiterate that there
is an urgent need to establish the facts surrounding
past weeks’ events.
Mr President, the deteriorating situation in Gaza
should concentrate our minds on how we can work
urgently towards a resolution of the long-standing
issues between Israel and the Palestinian people.
The United Kingdom has long supported UN action on
Israeli-Palestinian issues. It is therefore
regrettable, Mr President, that today’s resolutions
contain elements that are either imbalanced or too
vague to be viable. For example, the Kuwaiti text fails
to name terrorist actors including Hamas and
Palestinian Islamic Jihad. And its suggestion of an
international protection mechanism risks raising
unrealistic expectations. We condemn Hamas, but at the
same time, we regret that the American text does not
adequately reference Israel’s responsibilities and
obligations with regard to Gaza. Therefore Mr
President, the United Kingdom will abstain on both
resolutions today.
I have set out our principled rationale and nothing
more should be construed. Thank you.