NEW YORK CITY: France and șÚÁÏÉçÇű issued a joint declaration at the UN on Tuesday calling for an immediate end to the war in Gaza, and setting out a detailed international road map for the implementation of a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Released at the close of a high-level international conference in New York, which the two countries co-chaired, and seen by Arab News, the âNew York Declaration on the Peaceful Settlement of the Question of Palestineâ outlined a time-bound process for establishing an independent, sovereign Palestinian state alongside Israel, with security guarantees for both sides.
The declaration was endorsed by a broad group of international partners that had chaired working groups during the conference, including Brazil, Egypt, Japan, Ireland and the EU, in what organizers described as an âunprecedented global consensusâ on the urgent need to resolve the long-standing conflict.
âThe war in Gaza must end now,â the declaration stated. It condemned the attacks by Hamas against Israeli civilians on Oct. 7, 2023, and the subsequent Israeli military operations in Gaza that have resulted in large-scale civilian casualties and the destruction of infrastructure.
It warned that a continuing conflict, absent a credible path to peace, âposes grave threats to regional and international stability,â and called for the immediate implementation of a phased ceasefire agreement, brokered by Egypt, Qatar and the US, to end hostilities, secure the release of hostages, and ensure the withdrawal of Israeli forces from Gaza.
The declaration additionally called for the reunification of Gaza and the West Bank under the control of the Palestinian Authority, and for Hamas to relinquish power in Gaza and surrender its weapons. A transitional administrative committee, backed by international partners, would be established under the authority of the PA, supported by a temporary, UN-led stabilization mission to protect civilians and assist with the security and governance transitions.
âOnly a political solution can deliver peace or security,â the declaration stated, as it reaffirmed international backing for a two-state solution based on 1967 borders, with East Jerusalem as the capital of a future Palestinian state.
The declaration also pledged broad international support for the reconstruction of Gaza, endorsing an Arab-Organization of Islamic Cooperation recovery plan, and announced a forthcoming Gaza Reconstruction Conference to take place in Cairo. It committed to the creation of a dedicated international trust fund, reaffirmed the role of UN Relief and Works Agency, and backed the Palestinian Authorityâs agenda for reforms.
Recent commitments made by Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas to hold elections and pursue peaceful statehood, alongside plans for democratic reforms and enhanced governance, were welcomed.
The signatories also called on Israeli authorities to halt settlement activity, end settler violence, and give a clear public commitment to a two-state solution. âUnilateral measures threaten to destroy the last remaining path to peace,â the declaration warned.
It linked Palestinian statehood to broader normalization and integration efforts in the Middle East. It proposed exploration of a regional security framework, modeled on the Association of
Southeast Asian Nations and the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, and floated the idea of a future âPeace Dayâ to mark the formal conclusion of the conflict and the launch of regional cooperation in trade, energy and infrastructure.
The co-chairs of the conference pledged to present a progress report on efforts to implement the declaration during the 80th session of the UN General Assembly in September, and tasked the chairs of the working groups with establishing a follow-up mechanism under the umbrella of the Global Alliance for the Implementation of the Two-State Solution.
âThis is a historic opportunity,â the declaration stated. âThe time for decisive, collective action is now â to end the war, realize Palestinian statehood, and secure peace and dignity for both peoples.â