UNRWA urges world to block implementation of Israels ban
UNRWA urges world to block implementation of Israel’s ban
The head of the UN agency for Palestinian refugees said on Wednesday that UNRWA is in its “darkest hour”, and urged the international community to prevent Israel from enacting a ban on its operations in areas under Israeli control.
“The Israeli Knesset’s legislative action poses an imminent and existential threat to the agency,” Philippe Lazzarini told the 193-member General Assembly, adding that “without intervention by member states, UNRWA will collapse, plunging millions of Palestinians into chaos”.
“Since the beginning of the war in Gaza, Israeli officials have described dismantling UNRWA as a war goal. The Knesset legislation serves this objective."
Israel on Monday announced that it would sever ties with UN agency, after recent laws passed in the Knesset that prohibit the agency’s operations in areas under Israeli control and bar Israeli officials from coordinating with UNRWA personnel. That would end a 1967 cooperation agreement that allowed for the protection, movement and diplomatic immunity of the agency. The law will also ban UNRWA's operations in Israel from late January.
Palestine’s UN representative Riyad Mansour told the General Assembly that the ban on the agency supporting millions of Palestinian refugees is central to what he called Israel's efforts to “liquidate the question of Palestine”.
Mansour said this move represents “one more proof of Israel's genocide in Gaza” and forms part of an effort to “strip” Palestinian refugees of their status and “deny them their rights”.
UN General Assembly President Philemon Yang, from Cameroon, voiced his “deep alarm” at the decision made by Israel's legislature, warning that dismantling the agency will undermine the pursuit of a lasting end to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and constitute “an attack on the foundations of a two-state solution”.
“Let me be clear, the conflict in the Middle East will not be resolved by force or with further occupation. If it were so, the problem would have long been resolved,” Yang said.
source: tehrantimes.com