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Moroccan PM urges UN to support push for Palestinian statehood

Moroccan PM urges UN to support push for Palestinian statehood
Morocco’s prime minister Aziz Akhannouch called for the UN to define a timeframe “to ensure the legitimate right of the Palestinian people to establish a Palestinian state.” (AP)
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Moroccan PM urges UN to support push for Palestinian statehood

Moroccan PM urges UN to support push for Palestinian statehood
  • Aziz Akhannouch expresses solidarity with Qatar, Syria, Lebanon against Israeli attacks
  • Two-state solution ‘only way’ to achieve Mideast peace, ‘can no longer be delayed or marginalized’

NEW YORK: Morocco’s prime minister urged the UN General Assembly on Tuesday to support the push for Palestinian statehood along the 1967 borders and with East Jerusalem as its capital.

Aziz Akhannouch, whose country signed the Abraham Accords with Israel in December 2020, expressed concern for the “deteriorating situation in the Palestinian territories,” urging the UN to “mobilize” to “save the region from the cycle of violence.”

He outlined four priorities that must be pursued: “One, an immediate ceasefire (in Gaza) and a return to the negotiating table in order to put a final end to the war. Two, ensuring the entry of humanitarian assistance to the Gaza Strip and the West Bank without any conditions or restrictions. Three, promote the vital role of UNRWA (the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees). And four, implement a clear and comprehensive roadmap for reconstruction.”

He added: “We continue to believe that the two-state solution is the only way to achieve sustainable and comprehensive peace in the Middle East.

“This is the solution that can no longer be delayed or marginalized. It needs to be a moral commitment and a political, immediate request.”

Akhannouch called for the UN to define a timeframe “to ensure the legitimate right of the Palestinian people to establish a Palestinian state.”

He emphasized that there can be no peace without “a strong economic foundation” for the Palestinian people.

“We need to also promote support to the Palestinian Authority so that it can strengthen its institutions to serve its people and achieve their aspirations, and finally adopt regional security mechanisms that are sustainable based on international law and mutual respect,” he added.

Akhannouch said the holy sites in Palestine are of critical importance to Morocco’s King Mohammed VI, who is chair of the Al-Quds Committee, established in 1975 as one of the four standing committees of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation.

The prime minister added that Morocco “stands in solidarity” with Qatar, Syria and Lebanon “in the face of the attacks they’ve been under by Israel. In the same vein, we call for the adoption of peaceful solutions to disputes in sisterly Arab states — including in Libya, Yemen, Sudan and Somalia — through dialogue and consensus.”


Palestine is proof of world’s ‘selectiveness’ over human rights, justice, international law: Iraqi president

Palestine is proof of world’s ‘selectiveness’ over human rights, justice, international law: Iraqi president
Updated 24 September 2025

Palestine is proof of world’s ‘selectiveness’ over human rights, justice, international law: Iraqi president

Palestine is proof of world’s ‘selectiveness’ over human rights, justice, international law: Iraqi president
  • Abdul Latif Rashid outlines his country’s efforts to be a ‘good neighbor’ in the region
  • ‘The Middle East has witnessed enough war, tears, bloodshed and grief,’ he tells UN General Assembly

NEW YORK: Palestine is proof of the world’s “selectiveness” when it comes to human rights, justice and international law, Iraq’s president told the UN General Assembly on Tuesday.

Abdul Latif Rashid outlined his nation’s efforts to respect the rights of all citizens and to be a “good neighbor” in the region, but paid particular attention to Palestinian suffering.

“The Palestinian civilians are beset by killing, starvation, displacement, and the destruction of infrastructure and state institutions. This is inhumane. It’s a disgrace for humanity. Therefore, this must end,” he said, demanding that the UN apply the rule of law to end the suffering.

Rashid denounced Israel’s attacks against Qatar, Yemen, Iran, Syria, Palestine and Lebanon. “We reiterate our call for the international community to take urgent measures to ensure a just and comprehensive settlement to the Palestinian cause through the implementation of UN resolutions,” he said.

“This, and the establishment of an independent State of Palestine, is the only pathway to stability and security in the Middle East and the entire world.

“Decisive measures must be taken against the policy of settlement and annexation of land espoused by the occupying power against Palestinians to destroy their hope in a liveable state. We welcome the wide-scale international recognition of the State of Palestine.”

Rashid said more must be done to defeat terrorism across the board, citing Iraq as an example of a nation that “triumphed over the threat of terrorism” and is moving forward to empower its 46 million citizens.

“We rely on the unity of our people and the establishment of development plans to heal the wounds of the past and pave the way for a promising future, which relies on the steadfast national will of our people and the international community’s support,” he said.

“Terrorism is but one scourge, even if it takes on various slogans and manifestations. It therefore should be countered comprehensively without any distinction as to its forms.”

He added: “We underline the need to hold accountable those who support terrorism through funds, weapons, safe havens or media outlets, and those who allow the transfer of terrorists.”

Rashid described Iraq “as a beacon of hope” for the rest of the world, citing “the great sacrifices our people have conceded with great resolve to ensure coexistence and respect for pluralism, contrary to the repressive regime (of Saddam Hussein) that formally ruled Iraq.

“And as the guarantor of the constitution, I’m cooperating with the judiciary as the safety valve of the democratic system to hold free, fair and transparent elections to ensure neutrality and equal opportunities to candidacy and parliamentary representation.”

He emphasized the work that continues to strengthen its relations with other Arab nations, including Kuwait, which Saddam invaded in 1990.

“We’re not calling for sympathy but rather partnership, a partnership to heal our land, to secure our rivers, to safeguard our security, to empower our youth, and to ensure the unity of our region instead of its division,” Rashid said.

“The Middle East has witnessed enough war, tears, bloodshed and grief. Many opportunities for peace and dignified life have been lost. It’s high time to end this urgently and to forge a new path for peace, justice and cooperation.”

He continued to applause: “Iraq is willing to walk that path and to support those who will join it. The peoples of the world, namely the Middle East, look to the UN as the last remaining pathway for peace and they wonder, will it act or will it look the other way?

“Will we live in a world where international law, human rights and justice prevail? Or will we slip back into the law of the jungle, a disgrace to humanity, one that stokes the inferno of hatred, cruelty and chaos?”


Lebanon facing triple crisis, president tells UN General Assembly

Lebanon facing triple crisis, president tells UN General Assembly
Updated 24 September 2025

Lebanon facing triple crisis, president tells UN General Assembly

Lebanon facing triple crisis, president tells UN General Assembly
  • Joseph Aoun cites Gaza war, Syrian refugee issue, reconstruction of south
  • Calls for Israel’s full withdrawal from his country’s territory, condemns continued attacks

NEW YORK: Lebanon is facing a triple crisis due to instability from the war in Gaza, the Syrian refugee issue and the reconstruction of the south, the country’s president told the UN General Assembly on Tuesday.

Joseph Aoun called for Israel’s full withdrawal from Lebanese territory, and condemned its continued use of drone strikes on the south of the country.

He also alluded to the disarmament of Hezbollah, by “securing the exclusive sovereignty of the Lebanese state,” which would be “enforced solely by … its legal armed forces.”

Lebanon is committed to an independent financial audit and a fair restructuring of the banking sector, Aoun said.

“We’ve also taken on the fight against corruption and organized crime to rebuild the trust of the Lebanese people in their state and the world’s confidence in Lebanon,” he added.

The president said his country “plays a unique role” in the world. “Amid the global clash over religious identities, Lebanon stands out as a nation where Christians and Muslims coexist as equals under a constitution that guarantees equitable representation to both communities in the parliament and the Council of Ministers with full citizenship for all individuals,” he added.

“I reiterate and emphasize a message of freedom and plurality. In a region where people are killed or kill over their religious belief or even for displaying a symbol of faith, in a wary world torn between those who want to impose religious attire and others intent on banning it, Lebanon offers a unique, unmatched and irreplaceable model.”

Aoun called for the protection of Lebanon’s religious traditions: “If Christians were to disappear from Lebanon, this delicate balance will fall and with it, justice.

“If the Muslim community in Lebanon no longer exists, this balance will also fall, and this will also undermine justice.”

He added: “It’s clear to me today that many of the underlying causes of the war on Lebanon, as well as the deeper, more insidious motivations behind it, have been aimed at dismantling Lebanon’s unique model.”

Aoun urged the UNGA to carry out its “moral, human and political obligation” and call for an end to the war in Gaza, which represents one of the “deep underlying causes” of the crises in Lebanon.

The country is burdened by the “unprecedented displacement situation taking place on its soil,” he added, describing the refugee crisis in Lebanon as “the largest in history” per capita.

“Through direct negotiations (with Syria) and with the support of the Kingdom of Ƶ,” Lebanon hopes to bring about the “dignified and safe return of displaced Syrian citizens” as well as “the restoration of the special relations between Lebanon and Syria,” he said.

Israel’s destruction of border villages in south Lebanon will prevent stability in the country unless infrastructure “is rebuilt and its beauty restored,” Aoun said.

The Lebanese military must be given the means to “defend and safekeep our national integrity,” he added.

“We remain hopeful about the public initiatives to organize international conferences dedicated to that purpose.”


Activists say Gaza aid flotilla attacked by ‘multiple drones’

Activists say Gaza aid flotilla attacked by ‘multiple drones’
Updated 24 September 2025

Activists say Gaza aid flotilla attacked by ‘multiple drones’

Activists say Gaza aid flotilla attacked by ‘multiple drones’
  • German human rights activist and flotilla member Yasemin Acar said in a video she posted on Instagram that five vessels had been attacked

ATHENS: Organizers of a Gaza-bound flotilla carrying aid and pro-Palestinian activists said late Tuesday they heard explosions and saw multiple drones that targeted some of their boats, currently situated off Greece.
“Multiple drones, unidentified objects dropped, communications jammed and explosions heard from a number of boats,” the Global Sumud Flotilla said in a statement, without adding whether there were any casualties.
“We are witnessing these psychological operations firsthand, right now, but we will not be intimidated,” the statement said.
German human rights activist and flotilla member Yasemin Acar said in a video she posted on Instagram that five vessels had been attacked.
“We are carrying only humanitarian aid,” she said. “We have no weapons. We pose no threat to anyone. It is Israel who is killing thousands of people (and) starving a whole population.”
In an earlier video, Acar said the activists had “sighted 15 to 16 drones,” adding that their radios had been jammed as loud music could be heard.
One video posted by the flotilla’s official Instagram page showed an explosion it said it recorded from the Spectre boat at “01:43 GMT +3.”
In another video posted by the same page, Brazilian activist Thiago Avila said four boats had been “targeted with drones throwing devices” just before another explosion was heard in the background.
The Global Sumud Flotilla set sail from Barcelona earlier this month with the aim of breaking Israel’s blockade of Gaza and delivering aid to the territory.
It currently numbers 51 vessels, most of which are situated off the Greek island of Crete.
It had already been targeted in two suspected drone attacks in Tunisia, where its boat had been anchored before resuming its voyage toward Gaza.
Among its high-profile participants is environmental activist Greta Thunberg.
Israel said Monday it would not allow the boats to reach Gaza.
Israel blocked two earlier attempts by activists to reach Gaza by sea in June and July.
Israel has come under huge international pressure over its war in Gaza, which has sparked a dire humanitarian crisis in the Palestinian territory.
Last month, a body backed by the United Nations officially declared famine in part of Gaza.
And on September 16, UN investigators accused Israel of committing “genocide” in the besieged territory, nearly two years after the war erupted following Hamas’s October 7, 2023, attack on Israel.

 


US may end Gaza war ‘right now’: Trump

US may end Gaza war ‘right now’: Trump
Updated 24 September 2025

US may end Gaza war ‘right now’: Trump

US may end Gaza war ‘right now’: Trump
  • President holds meeting with Arab, Muslim leaders at UN
  • ‘We’re going to get something done because it’s gone on too long’

NEW YORK: The US may end the Gaza war “right now,” President Donald Trump told a meeting of Arab and Muslim leaders at the UN on Tuesday.

“We want to end the war in Gaza. We’re going to end it. Maybe we can end it right now,” he told the leaders and the media.

Trump said he would “see the people in Israel,” including Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, “and we’re going to get something done because it’s gone on too long, and we want it to end.”

He added: “We’re here to see if we can get the hostages back and get the war over and get back to life in the Middle East, which is a beautiful life, but it’s much more beautiful without wars, right?”

The meeting was attended by the presidents or foreign ministers of Ƶ, the UAE, Qatar, Turkiye, Egypt, Jordan, Pakistan and Indonesia.

Trump described them as “great leaders from a very important part of our planet” who are “respected all over the world.”

He added: “They’re respected by me in the Oval Office, I can tell you that. They’re respected by the US.”

Trump highlighted the issue of the Israeli hostages held by Hamas and other militant groups. “Right now, they have 20 hostages and 38 dead bodies … We have to get the 38 back and we have to get the 20 back, and I think we’ll be able to do it,” he said.

“This is the group that can do it more than any other group in the world. This is the group that can do it.”

Qatar’s emir told Trump: “The only reason you’re here is to stop the war and bring the hostages back. And we count on you and your leadership as well to end this war and to help the people of Gaza. The situation is very, very, very bad there.”

Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al-Thani added: “We’re here to meet and to do everything we can to stop this war, and to bring the hostages back.”


UN Security Council under intense pressure to halt Gaza bloodshed amid political deadlock

UN Security Council under intense pressure to halt Gaza bloodshed amid political deadlock
Updated 24 September 2025

UN Security Council under intense pressure to halt Gaza bloodshed amid political deadlock

UN Security Council under intense pressure to halt Gaza bloodshed amid political deadlock
  • UN chief: ‘To call this situation untenable, and morally and legally indefensible, doesn’t begin to capture the scale of human suffering’
  • Saudi envoy slams ‘lack of accountability and prevalence of impunity,’ urges Security Council to ‘shoulder its responsibilities’

NEW YORK: The world is confronting “one of the darkest chapters of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict,” the UN secretary-general said on Tuesday, warning that nearly two years after the “horrific Hamas terror attacks” of Oct. 7 and the “devastating Israeli military response,” violence has only deepened across the Occupied Territories, posing grave threats to regional and global peace and security.

The Israeli onslaught in Gaza City is compounding an already catastrophic humanitarian crisis, said Antonio Guterres.

“Famine is a reality, with the population constantly forced to move and being starved,” he told a high-level UN Security Council meeting. “To call this situation untenable, and morally and legally indefensible, doesn’t begin to capture the scale of human suffering.”

Impunity prevails “and our collective credibility is being undermined,” he said, adding that violence is spreading from Gaza to the occupied West Bank and beyond, including several countries in the region, most recently Qatar.

“Efforts to secure a ceasefire and hostage release deal — led by Qatar, Egypt and the US — suffered a serious blow on Sept. 9,” Guterres said.

“The Israeli attack (on Doha) wasn’t only a violation of Qatar’s sovereignty and territorial integrity — it also threatened the very norms and mechanisms we rely on for diplomacy and conflict resolution.”

Guterres also warned that the viability of a two-state solution is “steadily eroding,” reaching its “most critical level in more than a generation.”

He added: “Relentless settlement expansion, de facto annexation, forced displacement, cycles of deadly violence — including by extremist settlers — have entrenched an unlawful Israeli occupation and pushed us perilously close to a point of no return.”

Guterres sounded the alarm over Israel’s recent approval of settlement construction in the E1 area which, if implemented, would destroy the contiguity of a Palestinian state. “Israeli settlements aren’t just a political issue — they’re a flagrant violation of international law,” he said.

Meanwhile, the Palestinian Authority is facing an existential crisis, with fiscal, political and institutional pressures severely undermining its ability to function, he added.

Israel’s withholding of tax revenues, the collapse of the Palestinian economy, and a drastic decline in donor aid have left the PA unable to pay salaries or provide basic services, Guterres said.

He emphasized the urgent need for international financial and political support to stabilize the PA and maintain it as a viable partner for peace.

He noted a “glimmer of hope” with the High-Level International Conference for the Peaceful Settlement of the Question of Palestine and the Implementation of the Two-State Solution that took place on Monday, commending France and Ƶ for co-chairing it and helping to revive political momentum.
Guterres welcomed increased international recognition of Palestinian statehood, particularly by France and the UK, calling this the clearest path to achieving a two-state solution based on pre-1967 borders with Jerusalem as the shared capital.

He urged the international community to seize this momentum, stressing that the future of Gaza must be rooted in international law, free of ethnic cleansing and aligned with a political vision for a viable Palestinian state.

He called for an immediate halt to settler expansion, violence and annexation threats, and reiterated the International Court of Justice’s demands for Israel to end its settlement activities and unlawful presence in the Occupied Territories.

Ƶ’s permanent representative to the UN, Abdulaziz Alwasil, described Gaza as “a catastrophic situation that’s deteriorating day by day” due to ongoing military escalation and a prolonged siege.

He said the repeated Israeli aggressions and violations of international law stem from “the lack of accountability and the prevalence of impunity,” which has undermined the credibility of the UN and threatens both regional and global peace and security.

Alwasil criticized the failure of the international community to deter these actions, warning that it risks erasing national sovereignty and deepening the regional conflict.

He called on the UNSC to “shoulder its responsibilities” by enforcing accountability measures against Israel to restore peace and uphold international legitimacy.

He condemned Israel’s continued intransigence and expansionist policies, including violations of the sovereignty of regional countries such as Qatar.

Stressing the urgent need for a just resolution, Alwasil insisted that peace can only be achieved through a comprehensive approach based on the “implementation of a two-state solution and the establishment of an independent Palestinian state along the lines of 1967 with East Jerusalem as its capital.”

Slovenia’s Foreign Minister Tanya Fajon lamented the UNSC’s paralysis and its failure to fulfill its obligations to maintain international peace and security.

She warned that when politicians facing charges for war crimes and crimes against humanity walk free while judges are placed under sanctions, the international community cannot remain silent without becoming complicit through complacency.

Fajon stressed that the breakdown of the rules and obligations underpinning the international system constitutes a direct threat to global peace and security.

“Gaza has become a textbook example of the failure of the international community,” she said. “It has become a place in which people dread the nightfall and fear what a new day will bring.

“Gaza has become the deadliest place for children, the deadliest place for humanitarian and medical workers, the deadliest place for journalists, the place of the first-ever proclaimed famine in the Middle East.

“Marked by continuous offensives and strikes against hospitals, schools, homes, shelters and holy places, it’s defined by death and despair, where hostages suffer and civilians count heartbeats left.”

Tajon told council members that “Gaza is a man-made catastrophe which is live-streamed across the globe and sustained by those acting in contradiction to everything we stand for.”

Danish Foreign Minister Lars Lokke Rasmussen told the UNSC that it is essential that Israel change its course immediately and that the war in Gaza ends.

He emphasized that the council, tasked with maintaining international peace and security, should be able to make this demand as a bare minimum.

“That means all of us, every single member, working in concert and common cause toward this goal. It means setting aside political differences to save lives,” he said.

Rasmussen lamented last week’s US veto, the sixth since the start of the war, on a resolution demanding an immediate ceasefire and the release of Israeli hostages.

Addressing Americans directly, Rasmussen quoted President Donald Trump as saying the war in Gaza needs to be stopped immediately.

“Denmark continues to support the dedicated efforts of the US, Qatar and Egypt to mitigate a ceasefire,” he said.

“Your unwavering commitment to find a path to peace is critical in the context, but we count on you in this council too. Your leadership is critical in our joint aspirations of bringing peace and stability to the region.”

UK Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper said her country’s “historic recognition” of Palestine is part of acting to protect the viability of the two-state solution as the only path “to a just and lasting peace,” and part of “rejecting extremist ideas on all sides, which involved too often fantasies of the destruction of the State of Israel or expulsion of the Palestinian population.”

Mike Waltz, US permanent representative to the UN, reiterated Washington’s demand that Hamas immediately release all remaining hostages, “cease putting civilians in harm’s way, cease sacrificing their own people for propaganda aims,” and “disarm” and “surrender,” adding: “This war could end today if that happened.”

Waltz said there was no credible Palestinian partner for peace, adding that PA leaders were denied visas to be in New York this week because they “failed to meet their Oslo commitments.”

He said: “The commitments were basic, including renouncing terrorism, renouncing violence, resolving issues through direct negotiations with Israel.

“The Palestinian Authority has failed to clear even those low bars, and their attempts to bypass negotiations through what can only be called lawfare, including at the ICC (International Criminal Court) and at the ICJ, and its pushes for unilateral recognition of statehood … this charade is disappointing. It’s clearly fueled by domestic politics, and has given Hamas a reward for refusing to surrender.”