
Palestinians in Gaza 'deserve more than survival,' says UN envoy
UNITED NATIONS: Palestinians living in Gaza 'deserve more than survival,' the United Nations envoy for the Middle East told the Security Council on Wednesday, as Israel's war there enters its 600th day.
Israel stepped up its military offensive in Gaza, ignited by an attack by Palestinian militant group Hamas on October 7, 2023, earlier this month, while mediators push for a ceasefire that remains elusive.
The issue of aid has come sharply into focus amid a hunger crisis after Israel imposed a full blockade on Gaza for over two months, before allowing supplies in at a trickle last week.
'Since the resumption of hostilities in Gaza, the already horrific existence of civilians has only sunk further into the abyss. This is manmade,' Sigrid Kaag, the United Nations Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process, told the Council.
'Death is their companion,' she continued. 'It's not life, it's not hope. The people of Gaza deserve more than survival. They deserve a future.'
The aid that is now coming in 'is comparable to a lifeboat after the ship has sunk,' she said.
Kaag warned that there could be no 'sustainable peace' in the Middle East without a solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, adding that the West Bank also is on a 'dangerous trajectory.'
And she called for collective action to revive a two-state solution, saying that a high-level international conference in June presents a 'critical opportunity.'
'It must launch a concrete path towards ending the occupation and realizing the two-state solution,' she said.
When speaking of people in Gaza, 'the words empathy, solidarity and support have lost their meaning,' Kaag said.
'We should not become accustomed to the number of people killed or injured. These are daughters, mothers, and young children whose lives have been shattered. All have a name, all had a future, all had dreams and aspirations.'
'Why didn't I die? '
The UN Security Council also heard the harrowing testimony of an American surgeon on Wednesday, a few weeks after his return from Gaza.
'I am here because I have witnessed what is happening in Gaza with my own eyes, especially to children, and I cannot pretend not to have seen it. You too, cannot claim ignorance,' said Dr Feroze Sidhwa.
The medical system in Gaza has not failed, he said. 'It has been systematically dismantled through a sustained military campaign that has willfully violated international humanitarian law.'
Children are 'supposed to be protected,' he said, but 'in Gaza, those protections are simply gone.'
'Most of my patients were pre-teen children, their bodies shattered by explosions and torn by flying metal. Many died. Those who lived often awoke to find their entire families gone,' he said.
'According to the War Child Alliance, nearly half of Gaza's children are suicidal,' he said.
'They ask, why didn't I die with my sister, my mother, my father? Not out of extremism, but out of unbearable grief. I wonder if any member of this Council has ever met a five-year-old child who no longer wants to live.'
The Israeli ambassador to the UN, Danny Danon, blamed Hamas for the situation in Gaza.
'There is suffering in Gaza, but the blame is on the shoulders of Hamas ... so they will continue to be suffering until Hamas will understand that they will not stay in Gaza,' he told reporters.
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The Star
3 hours ago
- The Star
Vietnam drafts first population law to tackle demographic challenges
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The country successfully met the Millennium Development Goals by 2015 and is now steadily progressing towards the United Nations' 2030 Sustainable Development Agenda. These gains have laid the groundwork for Vietnam's pivot from a narrow focus on family planning, to a holistic approach to population and development. With a population of over 100 million people, Vietnam has been in a period of golden population structure since 2007. This is characterised by a large proportion of people of working age, a demographic window of opportunity for socio-economic development. However, experts warn that this window will not remain open indefinitely. Without the right policies in place, this demographic dividend could quickly turn into a liability as the population ages and the labour force shrinks. While Vietnam has maintained a replacement fertility rate around 2.1 children per woman since 2006, recent data suggests this rate is now on the decline. 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Deputy Director General of the General Office for Population and Family Planning, Dr Pham Vu Hoang, said that Vietnam's population policy now faces a host of challenges, including falling fertility rates, regional disparities, persistent gender imbalance at birth, rapid ageing, slow improvement in population quality and ineffective migration management. In response, the Ministry of Health is leading efforts to draft the country's first Population Law, a strategic and legislative upgrade from the 2003 Population Ordinance, which remains the existing legal framework. This move enhances the legal status of population policy and reflects its vital role in national development strategy. Deputy Minister of Health, Associate Professor Dr Nguyen Thi Lien Huong, emphasised the pressing need for this legislative step, noting that the new law is intended to give legal form to the Party's strategic directions on population. 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As the country faces major shifts such as ageing, falling fertility, gender imbalances and changing migration patterns, the need for a modern, flexible legal framework has become urgent. A recent Ministry of Justice review affirms that the draft Population Law introduces breakthrough measures absent from current legislation, directly targeting the country's most pressing demographic challenges. Population is no longer just a figure — it is a strategic asset central to Vietnam's global competitiveness. This law is not merely a policy tool, but a roadmap for unlocking the nation's demographic potential and building a high-income, digitally-driven economy by 2045. - VNS via Vietnam News/ANN


Malaysiakini
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- Malaysiakini
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The Sun
6 hours ago
- The Sun
Trump offers no rest for lifelong US activist couple
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