Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan said that the UN Security Council was unable to call for an effective ceasefire in Gaza with one voice.
"Israel’s brutal attacks on Gaza and its population constitute war crimes. We urge all civilised nations to disassociate themselves from those crimes," Fidan told on Wednesday at a Security Council meeting on the situation in the Middle East.
Fidan said strong global institutions are needed in such dire times to enforce international law and protect the moral compass of humanity.
"Unfortunately, the Security Council which was entrusted by the UN Charter to do so, time and again failed to fulfill its responsibility to maintain international peace and security.
"It was unable to call for an effective ceasefire with one voice," he added.
The Security Council cannot even present a remedy to undo the historical injustice that the Palestinians have been suffering for many decades, he stressed.
"This paralysis will surely reverberate in coping with other global crises and further erode the Council’s credibility in the eyes of humanity. It also wrecks the rule-based international system that the United Nations was established upon.
"Without international law, principles and a moral compass, we are all in uncharted waters. If we don’t fix this problem soon, we will all be haunted yet again by aggravated radicalism of all sorts, which will be feeding on impunity and injustice," he added.
Türkiye's guarantorship proposal
Fidan said millions of people all around the world are rallying in solidarity with Palestine. They expect the Security Council to ensure a cease-fire leading to cessation of hostilities and enable unhindered humanitarian assistance into Gaza, he said.
"We are also following the scenarios about the day after with grave concerns. Those deliberations give further ammunition to Israel to uproot millions of Gazans from their homeland and to impose upon them an oppressive regime.
"Therefore, we should translate this dark episode into an opportunity to address the root cause of the conflict. Otherwise, the symptoms that we see today will be more catastrophic tomorrow," he said.
He reiterated Türkiye's support for a two-state solution to the Palestine-Israel conflict, which includes the establishment of a Palestinian state with East Jerusalem as its capital.
"Israel and Palestine should be able to live side by side in peace and security along pre-1967 borders, with East Jerusalem as the capital of the state of Palestine. We also have to make sure that such a settlement will be implemented, unlike past experiences," said Fidan.
Turning to Türkiye's proposal for a guarantor system in the conflict, Fidan said the mechanism would safeguard peace and prevent breaches from any of the parties.
"This could be envisaged in the process leading to the final agreement and become a part of the package.
"From the statements of our many partners, we understand that such a mechanism is indeed needed and supported," he said.
Joint stakeout ahead of UNSC meeting
Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan on Wednesday reiterated his call for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza, at the joint stakeout by the ministerial committee assigned by the joint Arab-Islamic extraordinary summit.
"We are as a group working very hard to make sure that international community lives up to its responsibilities, both legal and moral. I think this is very important because in the absence of moral compass, we will lose our way as humanity," Fidan said.
The committee in New York is set to attend UN Security Council meeting on the situation in the Middle East.
"Therefore, as international community, we need to do our best to address this issue at every level, at humanitarian level, at political level, and we need an immediate ceasefire. We need immediate humanitarian assistance," Fidan said.
The root cause of the problem is needed to be addressed immediately, he said, reiterating Türkiye's support for a two-state solution to the Palestine-Israel conflict, which includes the establishment of a Palestinian state with East Jerusalem as its capital.


















