More than one million people across Lebanon have been uprooted by ongoing and deadly Israeli airstrikes across the country, including one reported early Monday morning in a residential area of central Beirut, adding to fears of a full-scale invasion.
The UN Security Council on Monday re-authorized the deployment of the Multinational Security Support (MSS) mission to Haiti for 12 months.
Mobilization at the national, regional and international level are needed to support the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) in the face of continued violence in the east, trafficking of natural resources, and other challenges, the UN Security Council heard on Monday.
UN humanitarians on Monday warned of the potentially dire consequences that could arise from disruption to the flow of food imports into Yemen following Israeli strikes on the crucial Red Sea port of Hudaydah.
The top UN aid official in Ukraine has condemned Russian attacks in the northeastern city of Sumy on Saturday which damaged a hospital and killed and injured several people.
UN Secretary-General António Guterres expressed grave concern on Saturday over the dramatic escalation of events in Lebanon's capital, Beirut, in the past 24 hours.
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The Secretary-General is gravely concerned by the dramatic escalation of events in Beirut in the last 24 hours.
This cycle of violence must stop now, and all sides must step back from the brink. The people of Lebanon, the people of Israel, as well as the wider region, cannot afford an all-out war.
He urges the parties to recommit to the full implementation of Security Council resolution 1701 (2006) and immediately return to a cessation of hostilities. He also...
The sudden and massive escalation between Israel and the Hezbollah armed group in Lebanon has created widespread fear that even worse is to come, UN humanitarians said on Friday.
At least 11 schools being used as shelters by internally displaced Gazans have been hit so far this month, with nearly 100 deaths reported, said UN aid coordination office, OCHA, on Friday.
Women and girls in the midst of the brutal conflict between rival militaries in Sudan are being disproportionately impacted, including 5.8 million who are now displaced, according to an alert released by UN Women on Friday.
The UN Security Council debated the current situation on the ground in war-torn Gaza on Friday, where Israeli strikes have killed more than 41,500 Palestinians amid mass displacement and stymied humanitarian efforts as Israel continues hampering the entry of lifesaving aid. UN News app users can catch up with our live coverage here.
Remarks for Ms. Rosemary A. DiCarlo,
Under-Secretary-General for Political and Peacebuilding Affairs
Peacebuilding Commission Ministerial-Level Meeting
New York, 26 September 2024
Mr. Chair, Mr Chair of the Peacebuilding Commission, President Türk,
Excellencies, distinguished guests,
I am honored to address you today on how the United Nations can further strengthen its peacebuilding work following the adoption of the Pact for the Future.
The Pact aims to reinvigorate “global action to ensure the future we want and to effectively respond to current and future challenges”. In our fraught times, it represents an important achievement.
Indeed, over the last decade armed conflict has surged. Global division and tensions have grown. Cooperation on matters of peace and security has diminished. It is urgent to mend the ties that bind us, to rebuild trust, and recommit to address the monumental challenges before us together.
With the Pact, the global community is pledging to do just that. And, importantly for our work, the Pact places strong emphasis on prevention and peacebuilding, and on their link to sustainable development.
The 2025 Peacebuilding Architecture Review is an opportunity to further develop and operationalize the political commitments that Member States have made in this regard in the Pact.
The Review aims, of course, at enhancing the UN’s peacebuilding efforts and their impact in conflict-affected societies. It also serves as a platform for deliberation on recommendations in A New Agenda for Peace.
Mr. Chair,
Allow me to briefly highlight five areas where the 2025 Review can help translate into reality the Pact’s objective to bring a more strategic approach and coherence to peacebuilding efforts, particularly through the work of the Peacebuilding Commission.
First, the Commission could further support national prevention and peacebuilding strategies by providing a platform for sharing experiences, by highlighting how various countries address the root causes and drivers of violence and conflict within their societies.
The Commission can also provide political accompaniment, solidarity and visibility for a Member State’s peacebuilding and prevention efforts.
And it can help tailor support for the country, with potential contributions of the broader UN system, international financial institutions, regional organizations and the private sector. Key to this enhanced role for the PBC will be adequate logistical and substantive support.
Second, the advisory role of the Commission to the Security Council regarding countries in transition could be more action-oriented, as elaborated in the founding resolutions of the Commission. The Pact underscores this vital support role.
The Commission’s mandate and activities could further complement and enhance the work of the Council, sustaining peacebuilding gains and continuing valuable accompaniment.
A good example of this action-oriented approach is the Commission’s efforts to helping ensure a smooth transition in Liberia as the United Nations Mission in Liberia (UNMIL) was closing. The Commission and key partners advised Liberian officials on their peacebuilding plan, identifying financial and capacity gaps.
Third, the Commission should continue to champion inclusive approaches to peacebuilding. I commend the Commission for being the only intergovernmental body with a gender strategy and a youth action plan, and for continuing to advocate for the full and meaningful participation of women and youth in peacebuilding.
Regarding Colombia, for example, the Commission has been active in highlighting the important role of Colombian women in the implementation of the Final Agreement for Ending the Conflict and Building a Stable and Lasting Peace.
The upcoming twenty-fifth anniversary of resolution 1325 is an opportunity to showcase the Commission’s added value in supporting women peacebuilders.
In line with commitments in its Gender Action Plan, we can collectively advance implementation – by increasing the number of women peacebuilders briefing the Commission and supporting, in all relevant PBC meetings, the inclusion of gender analysis.
Engagement with civil society is especially relevant here. The Commission’s exchange with more than seventy civil society representatives from around the world during the CSO-UN Dialogue on Peacebuilding was an important step in broadening the conversation on peacebuilding.
We look forward to continuing to engage with new constituencies during the next Dialogue in December of this year.
Fourth, let me underline the importance of the role of partnerships.
The Secretary-General has stressed the need for robust partnerships with regional organizations to address complex peacebuilding and prevention challenges.
The Commission’s recent decision to formalize its engagement with the African Union is a positive step towards a stronger collaboration with Africa. We hope to see the Commission partner with other regional and sub-regional organizations.
Further, the Pact for the Future reinforces the call for multilateral development banks to better address global challenges, which includes implementation of the Sustainable Development Goal 16 on promoting peaceful and inclusive societies.
Regional development banks have an increasingly important role to play in this regard. Several have recently adopted tailored strategies in fragile and conflict-affected settings.
For example, the African Development Bank has set up the Transition Support Facility, a financing mechanism that has disbursed more than $5 billion to date in member countries in transition or affected by fragility. The PBC should be encouraged to build stronger and more systematic linkages with these institutions.
Excellencies,
My fifth, and final point, is a call for us to recommit to adequate, predictable and sustained financing for peacebuilding.
The landmark General Assembly resolution on Financing for Peacebuilding (A/RES/76/305) emphasizes the need to close the critical peacebuilding funding gap.
While the achievement of assessed contributions for the Peacebuilding Fund is commendable and has been welcomed in the Pact, we need more financing to reverse the backsliding in investments in prevention and peacebuilding.
The upcoming Review will provide an excellent occasion to further explore and operationalize various elements of this resolution.
Mr. Chair, Excellencies,
The Pact for the Future provides a comprehensive framework for advancing our peacebuilding agenda. We cannot miss this opportunity. We look forward to working with all of you in turning these commitments into reality.
Thank you.
A new humanitarian crisis is unfolding at Lebanon’s border with Syria as thousands of people flee Israeli shelling linked to the war in Gaza, UN humanitarians said on Thursday, just as Israel premier Benyamin Netanyahu arrived in New York for the UN General Assembly.
World leaders, senior government officials and civil society representatives joined forces at UN Headquarters on Thursday to reaffirm commitment to nuclear disarmament as a global priority.
The UN agency that supports Palestine refugees, UNRWA, is the only “outpost of hope” left in the hellscape that is Gaza, the UN Secretary-General told a high-level ministerial meeting on Thursday in New York.
The call for a more inclusive and representative Security Council resonated loud and clear at the UN General Assembly on Thursday, as African leaders demanded global powers address the longstanding inequity in the Council’s composition.
Excellencies,
Distinguished speakers,
Today’s discussion has shown that the pursuit of peace and international cooperation is not a hopeless goal.
It is tempting to despair or be cynical, amid the level of divisions in today’s world.
However, as leaders gather in New York this week, this Summit reminds us that Member States overwhelmingly want the multilateral system to be effective and fair.
They know that the challenges we face – from the climate emergency and the weaponization of new technologies to deadlier and more complex conflicts – can only be addressed through international cooperation.
I would like to make three observations on what our priorities going forward should be:
First, a recommitment to diplomacy.
Diplomacy is the essence of multilateral cooperation. If we want to overcome divisions, we need to boost diplomacy.
This requires investing in mechanisms that keep channels open, defuse tensions, and bring different viewpoints together – especially across divides and amongst countries that disagree and dispute.
I welcome the strong language around diplomacy, including on the good offices role of the Secretary-General, in the Pact for the Future.
Recommitting to diplomacy is a political choice: to resort to dialogue instead of arms, negotiation instead of coercion, and persuasion instead of imposition.
Indeed, peace instead of war.
It might be politically difficult and unpopular to do so at times, but it is the only decision that pays off in the long term.
Second, we must invest – politically and financially – in prevention.
The evidence is clear: prevention saves lives. It safeguards development gains. It is cost-effective. But it remains chronically underprioritized.
A New Agenda for Peace made a strong case for a paradigm shift on prevention, with a focus on universality and national ownership.
I am pleased that many of these ideas have found support in the Pact for the Future, and we look forward to working with Member States to carry this agenda forward.
Finally, we must ensure that the multilateral system, and the collective security system in particular, work for everyone.
Unless the benefits of international cooperation become more tangible and equitable, we won’t have global buy-in to tackle our common challenges.
The Pact for the Future points to key priorities to upgrade the different institutions at the heart of the multilateral system, including the Security Council.
We must now ensure that the principles the Member States have agreed on in the Pact can form the basis for real reform.
Excellencies,
The United Nations was born out of a shared commitment to save succeeding generations from the scourge of war.
You may have noticed the key words there – shared commitment.
The United Nations is shaped fundamentally by the willingness – that is, the commitment – of its Member States to cooperate.
As the Secretary-General said in A New Agenda for Peace: if war is a choice, peace can be too.
Thank you.
Distinguished guests,
Dear friends and colleagues,
Good morning, first of all, welcome to the United Nations, which today hosts our session ‘A Peaceful Future for All’.
I am delighted that you came to New York – many of you from far away – to participate in the Action Days. Your presence here shows how much you are invested in more peaceful future.
We have a truly diverse group of speakers today, ranging from former Heads of State and Government to grassroots organizers from around the world. Despite their very different backgrounds, they all have one thing in common: they have been on the frontlines of the work to bring peace to their nations, regions or communities.
I am looking forward to hearing how their different perspectives complement each other. I am certain that we all will be able to draw practical lessons on how we can jointly boost our work for peace.
Now, we are about to start with Act 1, ‘A More Equal World’. These sessions envision a world in which we recognize each other as equal partners for the future, no matter our race, sex, identity, religion or age. The eminent journalist Razia Iqbal will guide us through these discussions as moderator.
We will open with an intergenerational dialogue for peace. Young peacebuilders – like many of you in this audience – and former Presidents will discuss how to rebuild trust: Trust in the power of dialogue, trust in diplomacy to resolve conflicts, and trust in each other.
Next will be a discussion on ‘Dismantling Patriarchal Power Structures’. This is based on a simple idea: as long as gendered dynamics, power inequalities hold back half of our societies, peace will remain elusive. We will hear from people from different walks of life what these power structures mean in practice. But we will also learn how we can overcome them to create a more just, fair, equal, and inclusive future.
Colleagues,
It is serendipitous that today’s discussions fall on the International Day of Peace – a time to reflect on the tragic toll of violent conflict, and on what we can do to stop war.
With today’s event, we aim to put the accent on doing, and not talking. We want to put a spotlight on individuals who are taking action for peace. I know they will inspire us. In these difficult times, we need to celebrate those who persevere and show us, in ways big and small, that peace is possible.
And now, we will hear the voices of some of our young peacebuilding partners from around the world, and then it is my pleasure to hand over to our fantastic moderator and panel.
Thank you.
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New York, 21 September 2024
Everywhere we look, peace is under attack.
From Gaza, to Sudan, to Ukraine and beyond we see:
Civilians in the firing line;
Homes blown apart;
Traumatised, terrified populations who have lost everything – and sometimes everyone.
...Under-Secretary-General Rosemary A. DiCarlo’s
Briefing to the Security Council
on the situation in Lebanon
20 September 2024
Mister President,
Thank you for the opportunity to brief the Council on the situation in Lebanon and the region, including the most recent alarming developments.
For nearly a year, Hizbullah and other non-state armed groups in Lebanon and the Israel Defense Forces have exchanged fire across the Blue Line on an almost daily basis. These exchanges have been in repeated breach of the cessation of hostilities and in violation of resolution 1701.
Strikes and exchanges of fire have expanded in scope and intensity, and in some cases reached much deeper into Lebanese and Israeli territory. Over 100,000 people have been displaced from southern Lebanon. At least 60,000 have been displaced from northern Israel.
The exchanges of fire have caused numerous casualties, including among civilians, and significant damage to homes, civilian infrastructure, and agricultural land on both sides of the Blue Line.
The risk of further expansion of this cycle of violence is extremely serious and poses a grave threat to the stability of Lebanon, Israel, and the whole region.
Mister President,
On the afternoon of 17 September, many communication devices, or “pagers” - primarily used by members of Hizbullah - exploded simultaneously across Lebanon. Similar explosions were also reported in Syria.
The following day, a second wave of explosions, smaller in scale but more lethal, was reported throughout the same areas of Lebanon. This time, the devices involved were two-way handheld radios reportedly used by Hizbullah.
Devices exploded in homes, cars, supermarkets, and streets. Lebanon's Ministry of Public Health stated that 37 people were killed, including two children, and more than 3,400 people were injured in the successive explosions.
Medical professionals and hospitals are working around the clock to help the wounded. Lebanese society – old and young have been in profound shock and panic.
The Lebanese government has strongly denounced the attack, which it attributed to Israel. Caretaker Prime Minister Mikati said– I quote - “represented a serious violation of Lebanese sovereignty and a crime”. End quote.
In a speech on 19 September, Hizbullah Secretary General, Hassan Nasrallah, said in response to the attacks that “Israel exceeded all limits, laws and red lines” and he vowed “to exact a heavy price and a fair punishment.” He reiterated that the Lebanon front would only stop once the aggression on Gaza ended.
In a letter to the President of the Security Council on 18 September, the Islamic Republic of Iran blamed Israel for the explosions. Noting that its Ambassador to Lebanon was among those wounded, Iran stated that it – quote - “reserves its right under international law to take required measures deemed necessary to respond to such a heinous crime and violation.” End quote.
To date, the Government of Israel has made no official comment on these developments.
Mister President,
Since the explosions on 17 and 18 September, exchanges of fire across the Blue Line have continued, showing worrying signs of escalation.
The exchanges include some of the heaviest bombardment of southern Lebanon since 8 October 2023. Israeli aircraft have conducted a high number of air strikes and overflights, including breaking the sound barrier over Beirut on several occasions.
In addition, we are receiving initial reports about an Israeli air strike in the southern suburbs of Beirut hours ago, which Israel said targeted and killed a number of senior Hizbullah leaders.
The Lebanese health ministry said at least twelve people were killed and over 60 injured in the strike.
Meanwhile, heavy barrages of rocket, drone, artillery, and anti-tank missile fire from Lebanon have killed two IDF soldiers and wounded ten Israelis. UNIFIL is monitoring the situation closely.
On 16 September, Israel's Minister of Defense, Yoav Gallant, suggested that the center of gravity was moving north, including the transfer of military forces.
Speaking of the onset of a – quote - “new phase of war”, he suggested the only way left to ensure the return of Israel's northern communities to their homes was through military action.
Reports from Israeli media indicate that Israel Defense Forces 98th Division was transferred from Gaza to the Northern Command, adding to concerns about the risk of further escalation on the horizon.
From Lebanon, the UN Special Coordinator Hennis-Plasschaert has been in constant contact with all concerned actors, including care taker Prime Minister Mikati, Foreign Minister Bou Habib, Speaker of Parliament Nabih Berri and their offices, and other authorities. In her meetings, she has continued to push for a diplomatic solution and warned against further escalation.
She continues to underscore that military advances would not restore stability or enable displaced civilians on both sides of the Blue Line to return home safely. She will travel to Israel early next week for consultations with relevant counterparts.
Mr. President,
In the current fragile regional context, the devastating war in Gaza continues. Nearly a year after the horrific atrocities committed by Hamas on 7 October, Israeli military operations, including bombardment from the air and land, and armed exchanges with Hamas and other militants continue across the strip. The number of fatalities tragically keeps increasing. More than 41,000 Palestinians have been killed, according to the Gaza Ministry of Health, many of them children.
At the same time, the indiscriminate launching of rockets by Hamas and other armed groups toward population centres in Israel also continues.
I once again echo the words of the Secretary-General: we need an immediate ceasefire, the immediate and unconditional release of all remaining hostages, and a massive scale-up of humanitarian aid to Gaza.
Mister President,
The risk to security and stability, not only in Lebanon but also in the region, could not be clearer or graver. The Secretary-General has already expressed his deep alarm over these events.
I echo his sentiments and strongly urge all actors to exercise maximum restraint to avert any further escalation. They must abide by their obligations under international law concerning the protection of civilians.
I also strongly urge Member States with influence over the parties to leverage it now.
As we approach a full year of near-daily exchanges of fire across the Blue Line and bloodshed in Gaza, too many lives have been lost, too many people have been displaced, and too many livelihoods have been destroyed.
But if things continue as they are, we risk seeing a conflagration that could dwarf even the devastation and suffering witnessed so far.
It is not too late to avoid such folly. There is still room for diplomacy, which must be used without delay. The Secretary-General continues to urgently call on the parties to recommit to the full implementation of Security Council resolution 1701 and immediately return to a cessation of hostilities.
Thank you, Mr. President.
UN Secretary-General António Guterres has called for accountability following a “despicable” terrorist attack in Mali this week, his Spokesperson said on Thursday.
Last October’s terror attacks by Hamas and other Palestinian armed groups on Israeli communities marked a devastating day for children, and the suffering has continued unabated, a senior UNICEF official said on Thursday.
Repeated Russian attacks on energy infrastructure and power cuts in Ukraine will likely uproot an additional 500,000 people ahead of the coming winter, UN human rights monitors said on Thursday.
The UN envoy supporting peace efforts between Israelis and Palestinians voiced grave concern over the growing risk of widescale regional escalation during a briefing to the Security Council in New York on Wednesday.
Mr. President, Distinguished Members of the Security Council,
Thank you for convening today’s meeting on the situation in the Sudan, following alarming reports of yet another escalation of fighting in El Fasher. This recent intensification is occurring as devasting clashes continue in many other parts of Sudan, including around Greater Khartoum and Sennar.
Even while millions of lives are at risk across Sudan, hundreds of thousands of civilians trapped in El Fasher are now at risk of the consequences of mass violence as fighting engulfs the city. It has further exposed the extremely vulnerable population, including internally displaced persons living in large camps near El Fasher. This violence has also affected healthcare facilities.
Open sources report that a fresh round of large-scale fighting broke out in El Fasher on 12 September. The Rapid Support Forces launched a coordinated attack on the city from multiple directions. The Sudanese Armed Forces and affiliated armed movements reportedly repelled the attack in the hours and days that followed.
Mr. President,
The current wave of fighting marks the latest chapter of violence in El Fasher and occurs amidst a months-long siege and attack on the city at the hands of the Rapid Support Forces. This has caused appalling levels of suffering for the civilian population, including famine conditions in Zamzam camp south of El Fasher, among other locations.
For months, international partners have engaged individually and collectively in trying to secure a de-escalation of the situation and prevent more suffering in El Fasher. The Council has adopted resolution 2736 (2024) calling on the Rapid Support Forces to halt the siege of El Fasher and for an immediate end to the fighting. Yet, prevention efforts to prevent a further military escalation in El Fasher have failed. Hundreds of thousands of civilians remain trapped in the city are at risk of mass violence.
The stakes could not be higher. The risk of the escalation of fighting fueling a dangerous ethnic dimension of this conflict is well known. So are the destabilizing effects for the entire region.
Mr. President,
The Secretary-General has consistently called on the parties to de-escalate the situation in El Fasher and spare civilians from further suffering. He has warned of the grave and unpredictable ramifications of such an escalation.
The Personal Envoy of the Secretary-General for Sudan, Mr. Ramtane Lamamra, has directly engaged the belligerents, including during the proximity talks in Geneva in July and supported the mediation efforts of the United States, Saudi Arabia, and Switzerland in August. Mr. Lamamra most recently engaged the Sudanese authorities during a visit to Port Sudan at the end of August, alongside the Deputy Secretary-General.
The impetus underpinning the UN’s collective efforts during this recent “season of diplomacy” has been to amplify the criticality of the protection of civilians, in El Fasher and across the entirety of Sudan.
The protection of civilians is the responsibility of the Government of the Sudan, first and foremost. However, it is incumbent upon all warring parties in the Sudan to respect and uphold their obligations under international human rights and humanitarian law.
The Rapid Support Forces submitted a set of unilateral commitments to the Secretary-General on how to strengthen the protection of civilians pursuant to the conclusion of the proximity talks in Geneva in July, under the auspices of Personal Envoy Lamamra. The Rapid Support Forces must live up to their own commitments and take steps to implement them without delay.
Mr. President,
An agreement on a ceasefire would be the single-most effective way to strengthen civilian protection. This is true for El Fasher and all of the Sudan.
Progress in agreeing on a nationwide ceasefire and securing progress on other commitments such as those in the Jeddah Declaration has, however, proven difficult to achieve.
Yet it is critical that the conflict parties take immediate action toward implementation of the Jeddah Declaration of Commitment to Protect the Civilians of Sudan of 11 May 2023 in accordance with the respective Resolutions of this Council.
To that end, it is notable that the Aligned for Advancing Lifesaving and Peace in Sudan (ALPS) Group, which met in Geneva last month, presented the conflict parties a proposal for a compliance mechanism to resolve disputes, receive complaints, and address problems arising in relation to implementation of commitments around the protection of civilians under existing agreements, including the Jeddah Declaration, and international humanitarian and human rights law.
We urge the conflict parties to give serious consideration to this proposed modality.
Efforts have also been made to explore possibilities for local ceasefires, including by drawing on local actors. Prior to the deterioration of the situation in El Fasher, a local ceasefire protected the city’s population for close to a year. A return to such an arrangement in El Fasher and similar short-term solutions in other locations must continue to be pursued.
Besides calling on the parties to de-escalate the fighting in El Fasher, resolution 2736 (2024) also contained a request for the “Secretary-General, in consultation with the Sudanese authorities and regional stakeholders, to make further recommendations for the protection of civilians in Sudan.”
Work on these recommendations, informed by the outcomes of the proximity talks convened by Personal Envoy Lamamra and the secretariat’s wide-ranging consultations with key stakeholders led by the Secretariat, is ongoing and will be presented to the Security Council in October.
Mr. President,
We take note of the Council’s recent adoption of resolution 2750 (2024), further extending the sanctions regime first established by resolution 1591 (2005).
The conflict in Sudan is not occurring in a vacuum. The flames of armed violence continue to be fanned by inflows of weapons to Sudan. We call on all Member States to refrain from supplying arms to Sudan and to observe the arms embargo for Darfur, in keeping with relevant Council resolutions.
Mr. President,
As the violence escalates in El Fasher and continues to spread across the Sudan, the risk of atrocities multiply, including gross violence against women. Both the SAF and RSF, and their respective allied groups and militias, continue to show complete disregard for international human rights and humanitarian law.
Violations include summary executions, abductions and enforced disappearances, arbitrary and incommunicado detention of civilians by both parties, subjecting many to torture and other human rights violations. We are alarmed by the shrinking civic space as well as by the ethnically motivated attacks and hate speech, and the use of sexual violence as a weapon of war.
The prevailing impunity, and lack of effective accountability, are a major challenge in Sudan. Human rights violations must stop. Perpetrators must be held accountable for their crimes.
Mr. President,
Immediate action is needed to halt the fighting in El Fasher. I urge members of the Security Council to employ their collective leverage to help protect the population caught in the crossfire.
The upcoming General Assembly marks an additional opportunity for Member States and the United Nations alike to raise the profile of this escalating tragedy. Relevant external players must act responsibly and use their leverage over the warring parties to advance peace efforts.
Personal Envoy Lamamra will continue coordinating international mediation efforts in the Sudan to promote dialogue to end the war, while advancing incremental progress on key issues such as a cessation of hostilities, protection of civilians and humanitarian access.
A dangerous new reality has now emerged in the wake of the El Fasher escalation with grave and unpredictable ramifications. It risks a widening and entrenchment of the armed conflict; an even deeper ethnic polarization of Sudanese society; and a further destabilization of the region.
The United Nations remains committed to working with all relevant stakeholders to help bring an end to the conflict, starting with an immediate cessation of hostilities.
I thank you.
The United Nations General Assembly on Wednesday voted overwhelmingly to adopt a resolution that demands that Israel “brings to an end without delay its unlawful presence” in the Occupied Palestinian Territory.