Israel's ambassador to the United Nations called actions by Iran, Syria and
Palestinian leaders "declarations of war," but the Palestinian envoy said on
Monday Israel's attacks on Gaza were inhumane and violated international law.
Palestinian President
Mahmoud Abbas (C) speaks to the media upon his arrival in the West Bank
city of Ramallah April 17, 2006. A Palestinian suicide bomber killed nine
people and wounded 60 others in the Israeli city of Tel Aviv on Monday, in
an attack a spokesman for Islamic militant group Hamas called an act of
'self-defence'. [Reuters] |
The two diplomats opened a U.N. Security Council debate, that included more
than two dozen speakers. The session had been scheduled before Monday's
Palestinian suicide bombing in Tel Aviv, in which nine people were killed and 60
wounded.
Nevertheless, the Palestinian U.N. observer, Riyad Mansour, echoed the
condemnation made by Mahmoud Abbas, president of the Palestinian Authority. The
Hamas-led Palestinian government has not made similar comments.
"We restate our condemnation of the loss of innocent lives, Palestinian and
Israelis, and we call upon the occupying power to do the same," Mansour told the
council.
Israeli Ambassador Dan Gillerman said every day fundamentalist leaders were
inciting acts of terrorism.
"A dark cloud is looming above our region, and it is metastasizing as a
result of the statements and actions by leaders of Iran, Syria, and the newly
elected government of the Palestinian Authority," Gillerman said.
"These recent statements are clear declarations of war, and I urge each and
every one of you to listen carefully and take them at face value."
He said Iran and Syria harbored and financed Hamas and Lebanon's Hizbollah
group, citing comments from Hamas leaders based in Syria, Ismail Haniya, the
Palestinian Authority's prime minister, and Iranian President Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad, who has called for Israel to be wiped off the map.
"Those words speak for themselves and do not need any interpretation. They
are clear and represent the stated goal of this axis of terror, which to our
dreadfulness, was again executed this morning in Tel Aviv," Gillerman said.
Arab and African delegates backed Mansour's condemnation of what he called
Israel's "excess and indiscriminate force against Palestinian civilians,"
particularly those in Gaza that he said killed 15 to 21 civilians, among them
two children.
In the past week, Israel has bombarded targets in Gaza, from where militants
often fire home-made rockets into Israel. The death toll is the highest since
Israel pulled out of Gaza last August and September after 38 years of
occupation.
The meeting was called after the United States last week refused to agree to
a compromise statement on Israeli military strikes in Gaza, saying the draft was
"disproportionately critical of Israel."