Statement by Ambassador at the UN Security Council
meeting on Middle Eastern Peace Process.
I have three areas I wish to highlight since our last meeting in
August.
Firstly, September 15 marked the third anniversary of the signing
of the Abraham Accords. The UK celebrates the success of the
accords and we are unabashed in encouraging more countries to
normalise their relations with Israel and seize the opportunities
it presents. We are also committed to making sure that
normalisation delivers concrete benefits for the Palestinian
people.
Second, from 11 to 13 September, the British Foreign Secretary
visited Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territories.
The Foreign Secretary spoke with Israeli and Palestinian leaders
where he called for a de-escalation of tensions, emphasised the
importance of holding long-overdue elections in the OPTs, and
made crystal clear the UK’s commitment to a two-state solution as
the only way to a safe and secure Israel living alongside a
viable and sovereign Palestinian state. The 30th anniversary of
the Oslo Accords is a poignant reminder that we must work
together to achieve lasting and sustainable peace in the region.
During his visit, the Foreign Secretary met the
commissioner-general of UNRWA and he went to Jalazone refugee
camp to see, first hand, the impact of the agency’s work to
protect the most vulnerable. This brings me to my third point.
We have previously discussed the funding crisis that UNRWA faces.
The UK was proud to announce an additional ten million pounds
during the visit to help address the crisis. Other states also
pledged more funds to UNRWA during high-level week, we must make
sure those funds are available quickly and we must maintain
efforts to put the agency on a more sustainable financial
footing.
Separately, I want to highlight a UN OCHA report published last
week showing that 1,105 Palestinians were displaced from their
communities since 2022. A major and rising concern is the
increasing settler violence in the OPTs, largely unchallenged,
renders Palestinians at risk of forcible transfer. We call on the
Israeli government to tackle this threat.
Tragically, 2023 has already seen at least 193 Palestinians
killed by Israeli security forces in the West Bank and 31
Israelis have died at the hands of terrorists. We must end the
cycle of violence.