\n| \n Department of Public Information • News and Media Division • New York<\/strong><\/p>\n<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/table>\n\n \n
\n<\/p><\/div>\n \n Security Council <\/p><\/div>\n \n 6107<\/span>th<\/sup><\/span> Meeting (AM) <\/span><\/p><\/div>\n<\/p>\n \n \n<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n \n ‘IMPORTANT JUNCTURE’ REACHED, AS INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY PREPARES TO STEP UP<\/u><\/strong><\/p><\/div>\n\n DIPLOMATIC ENGAGEMENT WITH MIDDLE EAST PEACE PROCESS, SECURITY COUNCIL TOLD<\/u><\/strong><\/p><\/div>\n\n In Briefing, Under-Secretary-General for Political Affairs Says<\/u><\/strong><\/p><\/div>\n\n For Sake of Region’s People ‘There Must Be Peace and Not Simply Further Process’<\/u><\/strong><\/p><\/div>\n\n As the international community prepared to step up its diplomatic engagement towards the Middle East peace process, the region and the world had once again reached an important juncture, the Under-Secretary-General for Political Affairs told the Security Council this morning.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n \n “For the sake of the people of the region there must be peace and not simply further process”, B. Lynn Pascoe said during his monthly briefing to the Security Council. “We, therefore, encourage the early resumption of Israeli-Palestinian negotiations on all core issues without exception as agreed by the parties and as called for in Security Council resolution 1850 (2008)”.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n \n Underlining the international community’s commitment to achieving a two-State solution, he highlighted the nexus of recent and upcoming international diplomatic activity, particularly noting United States Envoy George Mitchell’s recent regional tour of the Middle East and welcoming the former Senator’s stated commitment to “vigorously pursue the creation of a Palestinian State” as part of the Obama Administration’s comprehensive regional peace strategy, which aims to integrate and develop the Arab Peace Initiative.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n \n To this end, he said Jordan’s King Abdullah was scheduled to meet President Obama next week during the first official visit to the United States by an Arab leader to discuss the regional peace process. A visit by Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas was also expected soon, while Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu planned to visit Washington following Israel’s internal review of its national security priorities.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n \n The Secretary-General strongly supported a reinvigorated role for the Quartet, he said, noting that its envoys had agreed to hold regular meetings in the region when they met in the United Nations offices in Ramallah on 17 April to discuss plans to advance the peace process. The Secretary-General had also welcomed the formation of the new Israeli Government and expected that the Middle East peace process would resume.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n \n Turning to the situation in Gaza and southern Israel in his detailed briefing on the past month’s developments, he said there had been very little progress on the key elements outlined in resolution 1860 (2009), including on the parties’ commitment to a durable and sustainable ceasefire; the opening of crossings for humanitarian access and recovery materials; and intra-Palestinian reconciliation. Nevertheless, those principles were indispensable for the international community’s sustained commitment to the peace process.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n \n Despite a significant drop in violent incidents, the situation remained fragile in the absence of a proper ceasefire regime, he said. Thirty rockets and mortars had been fired by Palestinian militants at southern Israel and the Israeli military had carried out two air strikes in the Gaza strip. On 13 April the Israeli Army reported that a Palestinian vessel had exploded near an Israeli naval ship without causing injury. On 15 April, Egyptian police reportedly found 900 kilograms of explosives along its Gazan border. Five days earlier, its security forces had arrested 18 people for allegedly smuggling weapons and cash into Gaza.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n \n Israel’s policy of near total closure of the Gaza Strip, in force since Hamas’s takeover in June 2007, had continued in the wake of Operation “Cast Lead”. Over 73 per cent of all imports during the reporting period had consisted of foodstuffs and cleaning materials. The population’s basic emergency needs had largely been met. Food distributions remained at the same levels as last month, with the World Food Programme (WFP) reaching 365,000 beneficiaries and the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) reaching 750,000.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n \n But, while he welcomed the Israeli Cabinet’s decision to allow all kinds of food into Gaza without restriction, he noted each food shipment still required coordination with Israeli authorities and that assistance to Gaza should not be limited to food, blankets or medical supplies. Broader humanitarian assistance and early recovery were impossible without adequate entry of fuel, cash, and materials for repairing schools, clinics, sanitation networks and shelters. Moreover, except for small quantities delivered to UNRWA, the total ban on petrol and diesel imports had continued since 2 November 2008, with Israel allowing the transfer of approximately half of the industrial fuel needs of Gaza’s power plants in the past month.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n \n As a result of these restrictions, he said many Gazans continued to face intermittent power cuts. The ban on the import of spare parts for the electrical network’s maintenance exacerbated the situation, with 10 per cent of the population lacking any electricity. Only two truckloads of electrical transformers and cables had been allowed entry since the network was damaged during Israeli’s military offensive.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n \n Other limitations on cash entering Gaza also made many humanitarian relief programmes impossible, he said. Out of 250 million shekels requested for the salaries of 65,000 Palestinian Authority staff, Israel had allowed a transfer of only 50 million on 7 April. Meanwhile, only one truck of cement and a limited quantity of plastic piping, needed to improve water and sanitation projects, had been allowed to enter Gaza over the last month. Records from primary health-care clinics in the Khan Younis area showed that water and sanitation-related infectious diseases were increasingly prevalent in 2009 compared to 2008.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n \n Against this backdrop, “the lack of access to Gaza is deeply frustrating”, he said. The international community had pledged some $4.5 billion for the Strip’s reconstruction at the 2 March donor conference in Sharm el-Skeikh. But, the Palestinian reconciliation process that, it was hoped, would provide a framework for reconstruction had not moved forward. Nevertheless, the United Nations had and would continue to support early recovery and reconstruction and was working to ensure support programming once the conditions allowed for it. To that end, the Special Coordinator for the Peace Process and his Deputy were intensifying their visits to Gaza, but without the material needed, that recovery and reconstruction process could not begin. A substantial easing by Israel of its closure policy, including steps to return to the framework of the 2005 Agreement on Movement and Access, was required.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n \n He noted that Palestinian reconciliation talks had adjourned for the third time on 2 April with no agreement on the composition or political platform of a transitional Government. With talks scheduled to resume later this month, Egyptian efforts aimed at uniting the Palestinian factions under one Government led by President Abbas on the basis of PLO principles must be supported. The divide between Gaza and the West Bank continued to grow, at the expense of Gaza’s population.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n |