
US vetoes UNSC ceasefire resolution as death, starvation consume Gaza
The United States has vetoed a United Nations Security Council (UNSC) resolution that called for an immediate, unconditional, and permanent ceasefire in Gaza, as Israeli strikes across the enclave have killed nearly 100 Palestinians in the past 24 hours amid a crippling aid blockade.
The US was the only country to vote against the measure on Wednesday while the 14 other members of the council voted in favour.
The resolution also called for the release of Israeli captives held in Gaza, but Washington said it was a 'non-starter' because the ceasefire demand is not directly linked to the release of captives.
In remarks before the start of the voting, Acting US Ambassador Dorothy Shea made her country's opposition to the resolution, put forward by 10 countries on the 15-member council, painfully clear, which she said 'should come as no surprise'.
'The United States has taken the very clear position since this conflict began that Israel has the right to defend itself, which includes defeating Hamas and ensuring they are never again in a position to threaten Israel,' she told the council.
China's Ambassador Fu Cong said Israel's actions have 'crossed every red line' of international humanitarian law and seriously violated U.N. resolutions. 'Yet, due to the shielding by one country, these violations have not been stopped or held accountable.'
Al Jazeera's senior political analyst Marwan Bishara noted that the US veto makes it 'so isolated'.
'Clearly there is a gathering storm … with so many countries' that are standing against the US at the UNSC. 'It's only the US that is trying to block this converging and rising current against Israel and what it's doing in Gaza … Israel is not defending itself in Gaza, Israel is defending its occupation and siege in Gaza,' Bishara added.
Despite global demands for a truce, Israel has repeatedly rejected calls for an unconditional or permanent ceasefire, insisting Hamas cannot stay in power, nor in Gaza. It has expanded its military assault in Gaza, killing and wounding thousands more Palestinians and maintaining a brutal blockade on the enclave, only allowing a trickle of tightly-controlled aid in where a famine looms.
At least 95 Palestinians have been killed on Wednesday and more than 440 injured, according to health officials in Gaza.
Al Jazeera's Tareq Abu Azzoum, reporting from Deir el-Balah, said, 'There has been a clear surge of attacks.' He said there were relentless Israeli strikes there in central Gaza and throughout the territory.
Meanwhile, Israel's military warned starving Palestinians against approaching roads to the US-backed aid distribution sites run by the controversial Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), saying the areas will be 'considered combat zones' while it halted aid for a whole day.
That move came after Israeli forces opened fire at aid seekers several times, killing more than 100 Palestinians and injuring hundreds more since the GHF started operating on May 27.
Witnesses said Israeli soldiers opened fire on crowds that massed before dawn to seek food on Tuesday. Images of starving Palestinians scrambling for paltry aid packages, herded in cage-like lines and then coming under fire have caused global outrage.
The Israeli military admitted it shot at aid seekers on Tuesday, but claimed that they opened fire when 'suspects' deviated from a stipulated route.
At a hospital in southern Gaza, the family of Reem al-Akhras, who was killed in Israel's mass shooting on Tuesday, mourned her death.
'She went to bring us some food, and this is what happened to her,' her son Zain Zidan said through tears. Her husband, Mohamed Zidan, said 'every day unarmed people' are being killed. 'This is not humanitarian aid – it's a trap.'
The new aid distribution process – currently from just three sites – has been widely criticised by rights groups and the UN, who say it does not adhere to humanitarian principles. They also say the aid model, which uses private US security and logistics workers, militarises aid.
Ahead of the UNSC vote, UN aid chief Tom Fletcher again appealed for the UN and aid groups to be allowed to assist people in Gaza, stressing that they have a plan, supplies and experience.
'Open the crossings – all of them. Let in lifesaving aid at scale, from all directions. Lift the restrictions on what and how much aid we can bring in. Ensure our convoys aren't held up by delays and denials,' Fletcher said in a statement.
The UN has long blamed Israel and lawlessness in the enclave for hindering the delivery of aid and its distribution in Gaza. Israel accuses Hamas of stealing aid, which the group vehemently denies, and the World Food Programme says there is no evidence to support that allegation.
UN Children's Fund (UNICEF) spokesman James Elder, currently in Gaza, described the 'horrors' he witnessed within just 24 hours. Speaking from al-Mawasi, Elder told Al Jazeera that Gaza's hospitals and streets are filled with malnourished children. 'I'm seeing teenage boys in tears, showing me their ribs,' he said, noting that children were pleading for food.
The UNSC has voted on 14 Gaza-related resolutions and approved four since the war began in October 2023. Wednesday's vote was the first since November 2024.
Hamas is still holding 58 captives, a third of them believed to be alive, after most of the rest were released in previous short-lived ceasefire agreements or other deals.
Israel's offensive has killed more than 54,000 Palestinians, mostly women and children, according to Gaza's Health Ministry.

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