DUBAI: The international community has a “moral duty” to “establish a protection mechanism” for Palestinians “across the Occupied Territories,” Jordan’s King Abdullah told the UN General Assembly on Tuesday.
He also condemned “those who continue to propagate the idea of Jordan as an alternative homeland” for Palestinians. “Let me be very, very clear: That will never happen.”
The king said no country in the region benefits from escalation, adding: “We’ve seen that clearly in the dangerous developments in Lebanon over the past few days. This has to stop.
“For years, the Arab world has extended a hand to Israel through the Arab Peace Initiative, offering full recognition and normalization in exchange for peace.
“But consecutive Israeli governments, emboldened by years of impunity, have rejected peace and chosen confrontation instead.”
The UN “is facing a crisis that strikes at its very legitimacy and threatens a collapse of global trust and moral authority. The UN is under attack, literally and figuratively,” said the king, adding that for nearly a year, the organization has been powerless to protect innocent civilians from Israeli bombardment of its shelters and schools in Gaza.
UN aid trucks sit motionless just miles away from starving Palestinians, its workers are disparaged and targeted, and the rulings of the UN’s International Court of Justice “are defied and its opinions are disregarded,” he said.
“So it’s no surprise that both inside and outside this hall, trust in the UN’s cornerstone principles and ideals is crumbling.”
He said many people see that some nations are above international law and that human rights are selective.
Addressing the UNGA, he said: “Ask yourselves, if we aren’t nations united in the conviction that all people are equal in rights, dignity and worth, and that all countries are equal in the eyes of the law, what kind of world does that leave us with?”
He reminded the audience that the Oct. 7 Hamas attack against Israel was condemned by countries all over the world, including Jordan.
“But the unprecedented scale of terror unleashed on Gaza since that day is beyond any justification,” the king said.
“The Israeli government’s assault has resulted in one of the fastest death rates in recent conflicts, and one of the fastest rates of starvation caused by war … and unprecedented levels of destruction.”
He accused Israel of killing more children, journalists, aid workers and medical personnel than in any other war in recent memory, “and let us not forget the attacks on the West Bank.”
International community has ‘moral duty’ to protect Palestinians: Jordan’s king
https://arab.news/5z9jc
International community has ‘moral duty’ to protect Palestinians: Jordan’s king
- ‘Consecutive Israeli governments, emboldened by years of impunity, have rejected peace and chosen confrontation’
- ‘The unprecedented scale of terror unleashed on Gaza is beyond any justification,’ he tells UN General Assembly
Lebanon condemns deadly Israeli strikes on south and east
- Joseph Aoun called the attacks “a blatant act of aggression aimed at thwarting diplomatic efforts”
- A lawmaker from Hezbollah called on Beirut to suspend meetings of a multinational committee tasked with monitoring the truce
BEIRUT: Lebanon’s president on Saturday condemned deadly Israeli attacks on his country carried out a day prior, the latest despite a ceasefire with militant group Hezbollah.
In a statement, Joseph Aoun called the attacks “a blatant act of aggression aimed at thwarting diplomatic efforts” by the United States and other nations to establish stability.
A lawmaker from Hezbollah called on Beirut to suspend meetings of a multinational committee tasked with monitoring the truce.
Washington is one of five members on the committee overseeing the ceasefire implemented in November 2024, with the body scheduled to meet again next week.
Israel has repeatedly bombed Lebanon despite the ceasefire, usually saying it is targeting Hezbollah but occasionally also the group’s Palestinian ally Hamas.
The Friday attacks on southern and eastern Lebanon killed 12 people, according to the health ministry, 10 of them in the east of the country.
Israel’s military said it struck “several terrorists of Hezbollah’s missile array in three different command centers in the Baalbek area.”
Hezbollah said a commander was killed in the raids. Its lawmaker Rami Abu Hamdan said on Saturday the group “will not accept the authorities acting as mere political analysts, dismissing these as Israeli strikes we have grown accustomed to before every meeting of the committee.”
He called on Beirut to “suspend the committee’s meetings until the enemy ceases its attacks.”
Hezbollah, while weakened following war with Israel, remains a strong political force in Lebanon represented in parliament.
Lebanon’s government last year committed to disarming the group, with the army saying last month it had completed the first phase of the plan covering the area near the Israeli border.
Israel, which accuses Hezbollah of rearming since the war, has called the Lebanese army’s progress on disarming the militant group insufficient.










