New York
Friday, 17 November 2006
Madam President,
As the General Assembly resumes its tenth emergency special
session on the situation in the occupied Palestinian Territory, my delegation
takes this opportunity to express its closeness to the civilian populations
suffering the consequences of recent violence. I would also like to convey the
invitation of Pope Benedict XVI to join him in prayer "that God will enlighten
the Israeli and Palestinian Authorities, as well as those nations that have a
particular responsibility in the region, so that they may do all they can to put
an end to the bloodshed, increase humanitarian aid initiatives and encourage the
immediate resumption of direct, serious, and concrete negotiations".
While regretting a new toll of deaths and condemning the spiral of violence
caused by both military operations and terrorist attacks, we cannot but note
that these horrendous occurrences form part of a much larger issue which, as we
all know, has festered far too long in the region. Each time we hold an
emergency meeting such as this, we recite the seemingly endless list of
difficulties and differences separating Israelis and Palestinians, which make it
all the more urgent for states to address the problem of the fundamental
injustice at the heart of this question. To make a litany of symptoms without
addressing the root cause is hardly helpful to either party. Each is forced to
live under the horrible tensions of potential explosive acts of terror or
military incursions that result in death, casualties and the destruction of
infrastructures.
The centrality of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict in the persistent
instability in the Middle East cannot be ignored. It is a sad fact that the
international community has failed to engage the Israelis and Palestinians in
significant and substantive dialogue, along with resolution of disputes, in
order to bring stability and peace to both. It falls squarely upon the
international community to use its good offices to facilitate with all speed a
rapprochement between the two sides.
This is a time of both urgency and of opportunity: urgency, because the
situation is not static, rather it is deteriorating by the minute, as this
emergency special session testifies; opportunity, because besides some
favourable elements in this political conjuncture, civilian populations
everywhere have seen and suffered the devastations of the conflicts and are
surely more willing than ever for an honourable peace.
The only peace with a chance of lasting in the region will be a truly
comprehensive one. It will involve all major players in the Middle East region
and it will have to be based upon bilateral peace treaties and multilateral
agreements on all questions of common concern, including water, environment and
trade. To do so requires a new and all-embracing vision that will usher
in concrete plans for peace.
Thank you, Madam President.