UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres visited Gaza in August 2017 but several proposed Security Council visits to the Palestinians territories have been blocked. - AFP Photo |
UNITED NATIONS - Israel has told the UN Security Council that it opposes a planned visit by the top UN body to the Palestinian territories for a close-up look at the situation, Kuwait’s ambassador said Wednesday.
Kuwait and other council members proposed the visit to the occupied territories during a meeting last week on Israel’s decision to end the international observer force in the West Bank city of Hebron.
During a closed-door meeting on Wednesday, the council president briefed members on talks held with Israel and the Palestinians on the proposal for a visit.
"He said Israel categorically refused the council visit," Kuwait’s Ambassador Mansour al-Otaibi told reporters after the meeting.
"They don’t want to receive a visit by the Security Council" even though they are prepared to welcome delegations from countries on the council, he added.
"We expressed our regret that this visit will not take place because it has been raised many times by the council."
The Israeli mission did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The visit would have come at a tumultuous time: Israel is headed for elections in April and the United States is reportedly putting the finishing touches to its much-awaited peace proposals.
The Security Council has adopted several resolutions on the Israeli-Palestinian peace process that call for a two-state solution and holds monthly meetings on the conflict.
Israel maintains that the UN body is biased in favour of the Palestinians.
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres visited Israel and the Palestinian territories in August 2017 but the Security Council has never traveled on a mission to that region.
In 1979, envoys from the top UN body went to Jordan, Syria, Lebanon and Egypt as part of a special mission.
Over the past years, several proposals for a visit to Gaza and the occupied territories have been quashed by the United States, a veto-wielding member of the Security Council.
The council later Wednesday travels to Guinea-Bissau and Ivory Coast and is planning a trip to Mali in March. Last year, it made a high-profile visit to Myanmar and Bangladesh to meet with Rohingya refugees. – AFP