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The resolution “demands” the withdrawal of Zionist forces from the Palestinian territories, a halt to new settlements, the return of seized land and property, and the possibility of return for displaced Palestinians.

It also calls on states “to take steps toward ceasing” arms provisions to the Zionist entity when there are “reasonable grounds to suspect that they may be used in the Occupied Palestinian Territory”. “The Palestinians want to live — not survive. They want to be safe in their homes,” said Mansour Tuesday ahead of the passage of the first resolution ever introduced by the Palestinians. “How many more Palestinians need to be killed before change finally takes place to stop this inhumanity?” The ICJ opinion was “a historic opinion as this was the first time the court examined the (Zionist) occupation as a whole,” Mansour said.

US Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield condemned the resolution ahead of the vote as “inflammatory” and said it “is not going to advance the cause of peace”. “It also fails to acknowledge, among other things, that Hamas, a terrorist organization, is currently exerting power, control and influence in Gaza,” Thomas-Greenfield added. The United States voted against the resolution.

While the Security Council is largely paralyzed on the Gaza issue — with the United States repeatedly vetoing censures of its ally the Zionist entity — the General Assembly has adopted several texts in support of Palestinian civilians amid the current war. Unlike in the Security Council, no country in the General Assembly has veto power. More than 41,272 Palestinians, a majority of them civilians, have been killed in the Zionist military campaign in the Gaza Strip since the war began.— AFP