
UN chief warns of ‘breaking point' for two-state solution, calls for immediate action at Palestine landmark conference
Speaking at the morning wrap-up session of the conference in New York, Guterres praised France and Saudi Arabia for organizing the gathering, calling it a 'rare and indispensable opportunity' to shift from rhetoric to action.
'We are here today with our eyes wide open, fully aware of the challenges before us,' he said. 'The Israeli-Palestinian conflict has endured for generations, defying hopes, diplomacy, countless resolutions, and international law.'
But, Guterres insisted, its persistence 'is not inevitable. It can be resolved. That demands political will and courageous leadership. And it demands truth.
'The truth is: We are at a breaking point. The two-state solution is farther than ever before.'
While unequivocally condemning the 'horrific 7 October terror attacks by Hamas and the taking of hostages,' Guterres emphasized that 'nothing can justify the obliteration of Gaza that has unfolded before the eyes of the world.'
Nothing justifies, he added, 'the starvation of Gaza's population, the killing of tens of thousands of civilians, the fragmentation of the Occupied Palestinian Territory, the expansion of Israeli settlements, the rising settler violence, the demolition of Palestinian homes and forced displacement, the demographic changes on the ground, the lack of a credible political horizon, and the open support, including from a recent Knesset declaration, for annexing the West Bank.
'Let's be clear: The creeping annexation of the occupied West Bank is illegal. It must stop,' Guterres said. 'The wholesale destruction of Gaza is intolerable. It must stop. Unilateral actions that would forever undermine the two-state solution are unacceptable. They must stop.
'These are not isolated events,' he added. 'They are part of a systemic reality that is dismantling the building blocks of peace in the Middle East.'
In urging world leaders not to let the conference become 'another exercise in well-meaning rhetoric,' Guterres said it must instead be a 'decisive turning point, one that catalyzes irreversible progress towards ending the occupation and realizing our shared aspiration for a viable two-state solution.'
He reaffirmed the vision of two independent, sovereign, democratic and contiguous states — Israel and Palestine — living side-by-side in peace and security within secure and recognized borders, based on the pre-1967 lines and with Jerusalem as the capital of both states.
'This remains the only framework rooted in international law, endorsed by this Assembly, and supported by the international community,' he said. 'It is the only credible path to a just and lasting peace between Israelis and Palestinians. And it is the sine qua non for peace across the wider Middle East.'
Guterres underscored the need for 'bold and principled leadership' from Israel, Palestine, and other actors.
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Al Arabiya
8 minutes ago
- Al Arabiya
Palestinian PM says Hamas must disarm, surrender Gaza control to PA
Palestinian Prime Minister Mohammad Mustafa said Monday that Hamas must disarm and give up control of Gaza to the Palestinian Authority to restore security in the war-torn territory. 'Israel must withdraw completely from the Gaza Strip and Hamas must relinquish its control over the strip and hand over its weapons to the Palestinian Authority,' Mustafa said at a conference on the two-state solution for Israel and the Palestinians at the United Nations in New York. France's top diplomat on Monday told the conference, which is co-chaired by Paris and Riyadh, that there was no alternative to a two-state solution between Israelis and the Palestinians. 'Only a political, two-state solution will help respond to the legitimate aspirations of Israelis and Palestinians to live in peace and security. There is no alternative,' French Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot said at the start of the three-day meeting. Days before the conference, which has been boycotted by Israel and the US, French President Emmanuel Macron announced he would formally recognize Palestinian statehood in September, provoking strong opposition from Israel and Wahington. Barrot said that other Western countries will confirm their intention to recognize the state of Palestine during the conference, without confirming which. 'All states have a responsibility to act now,' said Palestinian Prime Minister Mustafa at the start of the meeting, calling for an international force to help underwrite Palestinian statehood. He called for the world to recognize Palestinian statehood. France is hoping Britain will follow its lead. More than 200 British members of parliament on Friday voiced support for the idea, but Prime Minister Keir Starmer said that recognition of a Palestinian state 'must be part of a wider plan.' United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said at the meeting 'the two-state solution is farther than ever before.' According to an AFP database, at least 142 of the 193 UN member states now recognize the Palestinian state proclaimed by the Palestinian leadership in exile in 1988. In 1947, in a resolution approved by the General Assembly, the United Nations decided to partition Palestine, then under a British mandate, into Jewish and Arab states. Israel was proclaimed in 1948. For decades, most UN members have supported a two-state solution with Israel and a Palestinian state existing side-by-side. But after more than 21 months of war in Gaza, the ongoing expansion of Israeli settlements in the West Bank, and Israeli officials declaring designs to annex occupied territory, it is feared a Palestinian state could become geographically impossible. The current war in Gaza started following a deadly attack by Hamas on Israel, which responded with a large-scale military response that has claimed tens of thousands of Palestinian lives and destroyed most infrastructure in the enclave. Barrot said it would be an 'illusion to think that you can get to a lasting ceasefire without having an outline of what's going to happen in Gaza after the end of the war and having a political horizon.' Saudi Arabia's Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan said US President Donald Trump could be a 'catalyst' to ending the war in Gaza and jump-starting the two-state solution, stressing Riyadh had no plans to normalize relations with Israel. Jordan's Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi said action was needed to counter Israeli 'settlements, land confiscation (and) encroachments on the holy sites.' Israel and the United States were not taking part in the meeting, amid growing international pressure on Israel to end nearly two years of war in Gaza. Despite 'tactical pauses' announced by Israel, the humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza will dominate speeches. Israeli Ambassador to the UN Danny Danon said 'this conference does not promote a solution.'


Arab News
8 minutes ago
- Arab News
Landmark Saudi-French peace summit signals growing international consensus for Palestinian statehood
DUBAI/LONDON: The first day of the High-Level International Conference for the Peaceful Settlement of the Question of Palestine sent a unified message: the path toward Palestinian statehood is taking shape, with international actors working to chart what France's foreign minister described as an 'irreversible political path' to a two-state solution. Co-hosted by Saudi Arabia and France at the UN from July 28 to 30, the conference seeks to revive global momentum around Palestinian recognition — momentum that has waned amid Israel's military campaign in Gaza triggered by the Hamas-led Oct. 7, 2023, attacks. 'This is a historic stage that reflects growing international consensus,' Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan told a near-capacity hall on Monday, adding that the gathering aims to shift the international atmosphere decisively toward a two-state solution. 'This is not simply a political position. Rather, this is a deeply entrenched belief that an independent Palestinian state is the true keys to peace,' which he said he envisioned in the form of the Arab Peace Initiative, presented by Saudi Arabia and adopted by the Arab League in Beirut in 2002. The conference comes days after French President Emmanuel Macron pledged to officially recognize the State of Palestine at the UN General Assembly in September — a move that would make France the first G7 country to do so. The US, however, declined to participate, saying in a memo that the meeting was 'counterproductive to ongoing, life-saving efforts to end the war in Gaza and free hostages.' Washington added that it opposes 'any steps that would unilaterally recognize a conjectural Palestinian state,' arguing such moves introduce 'significant legal and political obstacles' to resolving the conflict. Israel, which faces mounting international pressure over the humanitarian crisis in Gaza — where the UN says starvation is taking hold — also boycotted the meeting. French Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot said the wide attendance at the conference proved 'the consensus and the mobilization of the international community around the appeal for an end to the war in Gaza.' He urged participants to view the gathering as 'a turning point — a transformational juncture for implementing the two-state solution.' 'We have begun an unprecedented and unstoppable momentum for a political solution in the Middle East, which is already beginning to bear fruit,' Barrot said, citing tangible steps such as 'recognition of Palestine, normalization and regional integration of Israel, reform of Palestinian governance, and the disarmament of Hamas.' While the 1947 UN Partition Plan originally proposed separate Jewish and Arab states, Israel's far-right government continues to reject any form of Palestinian statehood, advocating instead for the permanent annexation of land and, in some cases, the expulsion of Palestinian residents. 'This conference does not promote a solution, but rather deepens the illusion,' said Danny Danon, the Israeli ambassador to the UN, on Monday, accusing organizers of being 'disconnected from reality' by prioritizing Palestinian sovereignty over the release of hostages and the dismantling of Hamas. The future of Hamas and Israeli settler violence dominated discussions on the first day and are expected to remain a focus throughout the conference. Juan Manuel Santos, the former Colombian president and Nobel Peace Prize laureate, told the conference that the current Israeli government is 'pursuing a greater Israel through the destruction of Gaza, illegal settlement expansion and the annexation of the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem.' He called on nations to recognize the State of Palestine, saying it would send a clear message that Israel's 'expansionist agenda will never be accepted and does not serve their true interests.' Intervening on the issue, Palestinian Prime Minister Mohammad Mustafa described Gaza as the 'latest and most brutal manifestation' of the crisis. 'The idea that peace can come through the destruction or subjugation of our people is a deadly illusion,' he said, arguing that the Palestinian people — and not Hamas — 'have demonstrated an ironclad commitment to peace in the face of brutal violence.' Israel has defended its actions as essential to national security and has signaled its intention to maintain military control over Gaza and the West Bank after the war. But on Monday, several speakers insisted that true security cannot exist without peace. 'Just as there can be no peace without security, there can be no security without peace,' said Italian representative Maria Tripodi. Participants proposed building an inclusive regional security framework modeled after the OSCE or ASEAN, focused on negotiations and policy rather than military control. Qatar's representative emphasized that while a ceasefire and increasing the flow of humanitarian aid remain the immediate goals, lasting peace requires a two-state solution, tackling root causes, protecting independent media, and countering hate speech. Egyptian Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty said Cairo has 'intensified efforts' to end the war, resume aid, and provide security training to forces that could help create the conditions for a viable Palestinian state. The humanitarian crisis in Gaza loomed large over discussions. With the territory's health and food systems in a state of collapse, the UN has warned that famine is already unfolding in parts of the enclave, where hundreds of thousands remain trapped. Despite mounting international pressure, Israel has maintained tight control over land access and aid convoys, increasing the allowance of humanitarian convoys entering the enclave on Sunday — efforts that humanitarian groups say are insufficient, erratic, and dangerous. Ahmed Aboul Gheit, secretary-general of the Arab League, warned that 'a new Middle East will never emerge from the suffering of Palestinians.' Peace, he said, will not come through 'starvation, deportation or total suppression,' and cannot exist while occupation and apartheid persist. Prince Zeid Ra'ad Al-Hussein, former UN high commissioner for human rights, urged the international community to define a clear and pragmatic plan for a new and independent Palestine. 'A vision is not for today's emotional audit,' he said, but for a new tomorrow for both Israel and Palestine. This is why, 'a two-state solution would have to be practical to gain support' and 'wholesale vagueness about the end game is not strategic; it is dangerous.' He advocated for a 'cleverly designed, regionally anchored security arrangement to prevent unilateral abrogation as a first urgent transitional step' in addition to a reconstruction and rehabilitation mission with an international mandate. Addressing delegates, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said the conflict had reached a 'breaking point,' and urged a shift from rhetoric to concrete action. Nothing justifies 'the obliteration of Gaza that has unfolded before the eyes of the world,' he said, listing illegal settlement expansion, settler violence, mass displacement and the annexation drive as elements of a 'systemic reality dismantling the building blocks of peace.' He called for an immediate end to unilateral actions undermining a two-state solution, and reaffirmed the UN vision of two sovereign, democratic states living side-by-side in peace, based on pre-1967 borders and with Jerusalem as a shared capital. 'This remains the only framework rooted in international law, endorsed by this Assembly, and supported by the international community,' he said. 'It is the only credible path to a just and lasting peace between Israelis and Palestinians. And it is the sine qua non for peace across the wider Middle East.'


Arab News
8 minutes ago
- Arab News
Hamas must surrender Gaza control, disarm: Palestinian PM
Palestinian prime minister Mohammad Mustafa said Monday that Hamas must disarm and give up control of Gaza to the Palestinian Authority to restore security in the war-torn territory. 'Israel must withdraw completely from the Gaza Strip and Hamas must relinquish its control over the strip and hand over its weapons to the Palestinian Authority,' Mustafa said at a conference on the two-state solution for Israel and the Palestinians at the United Nations in New York.