UNITED NATIONS: The UN Security Council urged the 193 United Nations member nations on Tuesday to use all possible means to settle disputes peacefully. The UN chief said that is needed now more than ever as he pointed to âthe horror show in Gazaâ and conflicts in Ukraine, Sudan, Haiti and Myanmar.
The vote was unanimous on a Pakistan-drafted resolution in the 15-member council.
In urging greater efforts to pursue global peace, Secretary-General Antonio Guterres told the council: âAround the world, we see an utter disregard for â if not outright violations of â international lawâ as well as the UN Charter.
It is happening at a time of widening geopolitical divides and numerous conflicts, starting with Gaza, where âstarvation is knocking on every doorâ as Israel denies the United Nations the space and safety to deliver aid and save Palestinian lives, Guterres said.
Israel denies deliberately targeting civilians and aid staff as part of its war with Hamas and blames UN agencies for failing to deliver food it has allowed in.
In conflicts worldwide, âhunger and displacement are at record levelsâ and security is pushed further out of reach by terrorism, violent extremism and transnational crime, the secretary-general said.
âDiplomacy may not have always succeeded in preventing conflicts, violence and instability,â Guterres said. âBut it still holds the power to stop them.â
The resolution urges all countries to use the methods in the UN Charter to peacefully settle disputes, including negotiation, inquiry, mediation, conciliation, arbitration, judicial settlement, referral to regional arrangements or other peaceful means.
Pakistani Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar, who chaired the meeting, cited âthe ongoing tragediesâ in Gaza and between Pakistan and India over Kashmir, one of the oldest disputes on the UN agenda, that need to be resolved peacefully.
âAt the heart of almost all the conflicts across the globe is a crisis of multilateralism; a failure, not of principles but of will; a paralysis, not of institutions but of political courage,â he said.
The Pakistani diplomat called for revitalizing trust in the UN system and ensuring âequal treatment of all conflicts based on international law, not geopolitical expediency.â
Acting US Ambassador Dorothy Shea said the Trump administration supports the United Nationsâ founding principles of saving succeeding generations from the scourge of war and working with parties to resolve disputes peacefully.
Under President Donald Trumpâs leadership, she said, the US has delivered âdeescalationâ between Israel and Iran, India and Pakistan, and Congo and Rwanda.
The US calls on countries involved in conflicts to follow these examples, Shea said, singling out the war in Ukraine and Chinaâs âunlawful claimsâ in the South China Sea.
The war in Ukraine must end, she said, and Russia must stop attacking civilians and fulfill its obligations under the UN Charter, which requires all member nations to respect the sovereignty and territorial integrity of every other country.
âWe call on other UN member states to stop providing Russia with the means to continue its aggression,â Shea said.