UN chief uses rare power to warn Security Council of Gaza 'humanitarian catastrophe'
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres used a rarely exercised power to warn the Security Council on Wednesday of an impending “humanitarian catastrophe” in Gaza and urged its members to demand an immediate humanitarian cease-fire.
His letter to the council's 15 members said Gaza's humanitarian system was at risk of collapse after two months of war that has created “appalling human suffering, physical destruction and collective trauma,” and he demanded civilians be spared greater harm.
Guterres invoked Article 99 of the UN Charter, which says the secretary-general may inform the council of matters he believes threaten international peace and security.
“The international community has a responsibility to use all its influence to prevent further escalation and end this crisis," he said.
UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric said he expects the secretary-general to address the Security Council on Gaza this week and to press for a humanitarian ceasefire.
A short draft resolution circulated to council members late Wednesday by the United Arab Emirates, the Arab representative on the council, would act on Guterres’ letter under Article 99.
It demands “an immediate humanitarian cease-fire” and expresses “grave concern over the catastrophic situation in the Gaza Strip and the suffering of the Palestinian civilian population.”
Earlier Wednesday, the 22-nation Arab Group at the UN strongly backed a ceasefire.
On 14 October, Iris Hefets stood alone in a public square in the German capital and held up a sign. On it, she had written: “As an Israeli and Jew, stop the genocide in Gaza” – on one side in English, and on the other in German. Soon, police officers stationed nearby decided to… pic.twitter.com/4RQM75JymY
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Riyad Mansour, the Palestinian UN ambassador, said it is essential that the UN’s most powerful body demand a halt to the conflict.
But the United States, Israel’s closest ally, has veto power in the Security Council and has not supported a ceasefire.
On Tuesday, U.S. deputy ambassador Robert Wood told reporters that the role of the Security Council in the Israeli-Gaza war “is not to get in the way of this important diplomacy going on on the ground … because we have seen some results, although not as great results as we want to see.”
A Security Council resolution at this time, he said, “would not be useful.”
Mansour said a ministerial delegation from Arab nations and the 57-member Organization of Islamic Cooperation will be in Washington on Thursday to meet U.S. officials and press for an immediate cease-fire.
Israel’s UN Ambassador Gilad Erdan said the secretary-general invoked Article 99 to pressure Israel, accusing the U.N. chief of “a new moral low” and “bias against Israel.”
In his letter, Guterres denounced “the abhorrent acts of terror” and killing of more than 1,200 people in Israel by Hamas on October 7 and the abduction of some 250 people in the attack that started the war.
He urged the immediate release of more than 130 still held captive.
But Guterres also noted the worsening state of Gaza under Israel’s ongoing military action.
More than 17,200 people have been brutally killed by Israeli attacks, and some 80% of Gaza's 2.3 million people have been forcibly displaced into increasingly smaller areas.
“Amid constant bombardment by the Israel Defense Forces, and without shelter or the essentials to survive, I expect public order to completely break down soon due to the desperate conditions, rendering even limited humanitarian assistance impossible,” Guterres warned.
A total collapse of the humanitarian system in Gaza, he said, would have “potentially irreversible implications for Palestinians as a whole and for peace and security in the region.”
Dujarric, the UN spokesman, told reporters earlier that invoking Article 99 was “a very dramatic constitutional move by the secretary-general."
The only previous mention of Article 99 was in a December 1971 report by then Secretary-General U Thant to the council expressing his conviction that the situation in East Pakistan, now Bangladesh, and the Indian subcontinent threatened international peace and security, Dujarric said.
“One doesn’t invoke this article lightly,” Dujarric said. “I think given the situation on the ground and the risk of complete collapse, not only of our humanitarian operations but of civil order, it’s something that he felt needed to be done now.”