The UN Security Council is set to vote on a resolution demanding a Ramadan cease-fire
The U.N. Security Council is set to vote on a resolution demanding a humanitarian cease-fire in Gaza during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, but the United States warned the measure could hurt negotiations to halt Israeli-Hamas hostilities
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Your support makes all the difference.The U.N. Security Council is set to vote on a resolution demanding a humanitarian cease-fire in Gaza during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, but the United States warned the measure could hurt negotiations to halt Israeli-Hamas hostilities.
The resolution, put forward by the 10 elected council members, is backed by Russia and China, who vetoed a U.S.-sponsored resolution Friday that supported āan immediate and sustained cease-fireā in the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza.
The 22-nation Arab Group at the U.N. issued a statement Friday night appealing to all 15 council members āto act with unity and urgency" and vote for the resolution "to halt the bloodshed, preserve human lives and avert further human suffering and destruction.ā
āIt is long past time for a cease-fire," the Arab Group said. Ramadan began March 10 and ends April 9.
The council scheduled a vote on the resolution Saturday morning (10 a.m. EDT). Many members are hoping that the U.N.ās most powerful body, which is charged with maintaining international peace and security, will demand an end to the war that began after Gaza's Hamas rulers launched a surprise attack into southern Israel on Oct. 7, killing about 1,200 people and taking some 250 others hostage.
Since then, the Security Council has adopted two resolutions on the worsening humanitarian situation in Gaza, but none has called for a cease-fire.
More than 32,000 Palestinians in Gaza have been killed during the fighting, according to the Gaza Health Ministry. It does not differentiate between civilians and combatants in its count, but says women and children make up two-thirds of the dead.
Gaza also faces a dire humanitarian emergency, with a report from an international authority on hunger warning this week that āfamine is imminentā in northern Gaza and that escalation of the war could push half of the territoryās 2.3 million people to the brink of starvation.
The brief resolution scheduled for a vote Saturday demands an immediate humanitarian cease-fire for Ramadan āleading to a permanent sustainable cease-fire.ā It also demands āthe immediate and unconditional release of all hostages ā and emphasizes the urgent need to protect civilians and deliver humanitarian aid throughout the Gaza Strip.
U.S. Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield told the council after Fridayās vote that the resolutionās current text āfails to support sensitive diplomacy in the region. Worse, it could actually give Hamas an excuse to walk away from the deal on the table.ā
āWe should not move forward with any resolution that jeopardizes the ongoing negotiationsā being carried out by the United States, Qatar and Egypt, she said, warning that if the diplomacy isn't supported, "we may once again find this council deadlocked.ā
āI truly hope that that does not come about,ā Thomas-Greenfield said.
The United States has vetoed three resolutions demanding a cease-fire in Gaza, the most recent an Arab-backed measure. That measure was supported by 13 members with one abstention in a Feb. 20 vote.
Russia and China vetoed a U.S.-sponsored resolution in late October calling for pauses in the fighting to deliver aid, the protection of civilians and a halt to arming Hamas. They said it did not reflect global calls for a cease-fire.
They again vetoed the U.S. resolution on Friday, calling it ambiguous and saying it was not the direct demand to end the fighting that much of the world seeks.
A key issue was the unusual language that said the Security Council ādetermines the imperative of an immediate and sustained cease-fire.ā The phrasing was not a straightforward ādemandā or ācallā to halt hostilities.
The vote in the Security Council became another showdown involving world powers that are locked in tense disputes elsewhere, with the United States taking criticism for not being tough enough against its ally Israel, even as tensions between the two countries rise.
Before the vote, Russia's U.N. Ambassador Vassily Nebenzia said Moscow supports an immediate cease-fire, but he criticized the diluted language, which he called philosophical wording that does not belong in a U.N. resolution.
He accused U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken and U.S. Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield of ādeliberately misleading the international communityā about calling for a cease-fire.
āThis was some kind of an empty rhetorical exercise,ā Nebenzia said. āThe American product is exceedingly politicized, the sole purpose of which is to help to play to the voters, to throw them a bone in the form of some kind of a mention of a cease-fire in Gaza ā¦ and to ensure the impunity of Israel, whose crimes in the draft are not even assessed.ā
Chinaās U.N. ambassador, Zhang Jun, said the U.S. proposal set preconditions and fell far short of expectations of council members and the broader international community.
āIf the U.S. was serious about a cease-fire, it wouldnāt have vetoed time and again multiple council resolutions,ā he said. āIt wouldnāt have taken such a detour and played a game of words while being ambiguous and evasive on critical issues.ā
The vote in the 15-member council was 11 members in favor and three against, including Algeria, the Arab representative on the council. There was one abstention, from Guyana.
After the vote, Thomas-Greenfield accused Russia and China of vetoing the resolution for ādeeply cynical reasons,ā saying they could not bring themselves to condemn Hamasā terrorist attacks in southern Israel on Oct. 7, which the resolution would have done for the first time.
A second āpettyā reason, she said, is that āRussia and China simply did not want to vote for a resolution that was penned by the United States, because it would rather see us fail than to see this council succeed.ā She accused Russia of again putting āpolitics over progressā and having āthe audacity and hypocrisy to throw stonesā after launching an unwarranted invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.
The resolution did reflect a shift by the United States, which has found itself at odds with much of the world as even allies of Israel push for an unconditional end to fighting.
In previous resolutions, the U.S. has closely intertwined calls for a cease-fire with demands for the release of Israeli hostages in Gaza. This resolution, using wording thatās open to interpretation, continued to link the two issues, but not as firmly.