The U.N. General Assembly on Friday voted 120 votes in favor, 14 against and 45 abstentions in a non-binding resolution for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza.
Reporting from the U.N. News website:
The [Jordanian]resolution calls for an âimmediate, durable and sustained humanitarian truceâ, and demands all parties comply with international humanitarian law and âcontinuous, sufficient and unhinderedâ provision of essential supplies and services into the Gaza Strip.
It also calls for the âimmediate and unconditional releaseâ of all civilians held captive as well as demanding their safety, well-being and humane treatment in compliance with international law. The resolution does not mention Hamas or the events of Oct.
Gilad Erdan, Ambassador of Israel to the U.N., said in response to the resolution passing that âtoday is a day that will go down in infamyâ.
âWe have all witnessed that the U.N. holds not even one ounce of legitimacy,â he said. âThe U.N. is committed to ensuring further atrocity. According to the family of nations, Israel has no right to defend itself.â
There are no talks or discussions to be held with Hamas, he said, adding that Israel will not sit idly by to let them commit atrocities again. The resolution does not mention Hamas once, as if the war started on its own.
âWhat is going on here?â he asked, questioning whether the goal was to tie Israelâs hands. âThe only way to destroy Hamas is to root them out. Why are you not holding Hamas accountable?â
âWe know there is no humanitarian crisis in accordance with international humanitarian law,â he said, noting that every statistic comes from Hamas about information about Gaza.
Anyone interested in preventing violence should call on Hamas to lay down their arms, turn themselves in and return all hostages, he said.
âIf this were to happen, the war would end immediately,â he said. âThis is a dark day for the U.N. and mankind. Israel will defend itself and will do what must be done to eradicate Hamasâ capabilities and bring the hostages home.â

France: Security Council must act
Franceâs Ambassador Nicolas de RiviĂšre speaking after the resolution passed, said his delegation voted in favour, as ânothing justifies the killing of civiliansâ.
âWe have to work collectively to set up a humanitarian truce because the situation in Gaza is catastrophic,â he said, noting that France has already sent an aid vessel. âThe Assembly must call for the release of hostages.â
However, the adoption of this resolution cannot replace the Security Councilâs efforts nor the decisions that the organ must now adopt, he said, expressing hope that the Council can reach a decision.
âWe have a duty to prevent a worsening of the situation,â he said. âThe only viable solution is a two-State solution.â
Israel must be named too: Pakistan
In a powerful speech rebutting Canadaâs explanation, Pakistanâs ambassador Munir Akram said that if Canada was being fair in its amendment it would agree to name Israel as well as Hamas.
Not naming either side was the best choice he said, as the Jordanian resolution does.
âIsrael needs to be named too, if you are to be fair and equitable and justâ, he said.
We all know who started this. It is 50 years of Israeli occupation and the killing of Palestinians with impunity, he said.
Israel canât face the truth or face justice. The Israeli occupation is the original sin, not what happened on 7 October.
Canadian amendment failed to get enough support
The votes on the amendment were 85 for, 55 against, with 23 abstentions, so it failed to get the required two-thirds majority.
Canadaâs Ambassador Bob Rae said the Assembly was meeting to show Israelis and Palestinians that any life lost is a tragedy. Yet, the critical reason for being here has been forgotten. On 7 October, Hamas wreaked terror on Israel. Since then, more that 7,000 Palestinians have been killed.
âWe can see the need for a rapid response,â he said.
Unfortunately, Canada cannot support the current text, he said, adding that the Assembly cannot act without recognizing the 7 October terrorist attacks and the hostage taking.
If the proposed amendment is not adopted, the Assembly will not have recognized one of the worldâs worst terrorist attacks and âwe will all have to live with that failure as the tragedy continues to unfold,â he said.
If the proposed amendment is not adopted, the Assembly will not have recognized one of the worldâs worst terrorist attacks and âwe will all have to live with that failure as the tragedy continues to unfold,â he said.
This amendment ânames what has to be namedâ, he said. Emphasizing that the crisis must not spread through the region, he reiterated that Canada supports the two-State solution and continues to provide humanitarian aid for Gaza.
Source: Popularresistance.org