Statement by Ambassador at the UN General Assembly
meeting on the humanitarian situation in the Gaza Strip.
Thank you, President.
And I’d like to start by thanking the United Nations,
particularly today’s briefers, and all the humanitarians for
their truly heroic efforts. And I extend again my condolences to
the UN family and the families of those 103 staff members in Gaza
who have lost their lives in the past six weeks.
President, as I said in the Security Council on Wednesday, it is
impossible to comprehend the pain and loss that civilians are
enduring in this conflict. Too many civilians are losing their
lives and the protection of civilians and alleviating suffering
is the top priority for the UK.
This is why we strongly welcomed the passage of the Security
Council’s humanitarian resolution this week. This calls for a
humanitarian pause for a period of days for long enough to get
lifesaving aid to those who need it. This will establish a safer
environment for humanitarians, and support urgent efforts to
secure the immediate and safe release of all
hostages.
We must now turn these words into action.
The UK is committed to the urgent implementation of this
resolution, in particular in three areas.
Firstly, we are working with our partners to provide and to get
lifesaving items into Gaza. This includes food, water, medical
supplies and crucially, fuel. The priority must be for Israel to
allow sufficient fuel into Gaza so that humanitarian operations
can run unimpeded and so hospitals and desalination plants can
operate.
Secondly, we are supporting efforts to scale up the response. We
are urging, and I urge again here today, that the priority must
be improved land access, including at Kerem Shalom, as well as
scaled-up access at Rafah, so aid can reach the levels needed.
Third, we remain clear that both sides must comply with
international humanitarian law and take every possible step to
minimise harm to civilians. That includes respecting the sanctity
of hospitals so that healthcare professionals can care for the
sick and injured.
President, a humanitarian response to this crisis is vital. But
our responsibility does not end there. We will redouble our
efforts, with our partners, to create a new political horizon to
deliver on the promise of peace and security for Israelis and
Palestinians, and make the two-state solution a reality.