Two-state solution being ‘stripped away in broad daylight’: UN chief

Antonio Guterres, Secretary-General of the United Nations. (File/AFP)
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Updated 24 February 2026
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Two-state solution being ‘stripped away in broad daylight’: UN chief

  • UN chief blasts blatant violations of human rights and human dignity in occupied Palestine

GENEVA: The two-state solution in Palestine and Israel was being “stripped away in broad daylight,” UN chief Antonio Guterres warned on Monday.

There were “blatant violations of human rights, human dignity and international law in the Occupied Palestinian Territory,” he said, and the trajectory under Israeli occupation was "stark, clear and purposeful. The international community cannot allow it to happen.”
Human rights were under “full-scale attack around the world,” Guterres said, with the most powerful often leading the charge. “The rule of law is being outmuscled by the rule of force,” he told the opening of the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva.
“This assault is not coming from the shadows, or by surprise. It is happening in plain sight — and often led by those who hold the greatest power.”

Guterres said the worst conflict-hit areas were not the only places where rights were eroding.
“Around the world, human rights are being pushed back deliberately, strategically and sometimes proudly,” he said. “We are living in a world where mass suffering is excused away, where humans are used as bargaining chips, where international law is treated as a mere inconvenience. And when human rights fall, everything else tumbles.

“Across every front, those who are already vulnerable are being pushed further to the margins.”
The UN chief called for urgent action to reverse the trend. “We must defend our shared foundations, without compromise,” he said. “The UN Charter, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and the instruments of international human rights law are not a menu. Leaders cannot pick the parts they like and ignore the rest.”


Explosions rock Ukrainian capital ahead of planned talks in Geneva

Updated 4 sec ago
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Explosions rock Ukrainian capital ahead of planned talks in Geneva

KYIV: Several explosions shook central Kyiv early Thursday, AFP journalists heard, after officials warned of air raids in the Ukrainian capital ahead of planned talks in Geneva with US representatives on ending the Russian war.
Washington is pushing to bring an end to the war triggered by Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine four years ago, which has left hundreds of thousands dead and destroyed swathes of territory, particularly in eastern and southern Ukraine.
The Ukrainian Air Force reported high-speed targets heading toward Kyiv shortly before Tymur Tkachenko, head of the capital’s military administration, said Russia was attacking the city with strike drones and ballistic missiles.
“Air defense is operating. Stay in shelters until the alert is cleared!” he said on Telegram.
The attacks were not limited to the capital.
In the northeast, Kharkiv mayor Igor Terekhov said two blasts were heard in the city as Russian Shahed drones targeted the area, warning residents to stay in shelters with “drones and missiles flying toward the city.”
Terekhov later reported a “combined air attack” with impacts in the Shevchenkivsky and Kyivsky districts.
In the southeast, Zaporizhzhia regional chief Ivan Fedorov said the city had come under attack, reporting several explosions and at least one person wounded.
In Kryvyi Rig, Oleksandr Ganzha, head of the Dnipropetrovsk regional administration, said a Russian strike wounded an 89-year-old man and sparked a fire that damaged a high-rise building.
Ukraine has faced repeated overnight barrages in recent months as Russia targets cities with missiles and drones amid harsh winter conditions.