United Nations chief Antonio Guterres has called on Israel to abandon plans to annex parts of the occupied West Bank, saying such a move would be a “most serious violation of international law”.
The UN secretary-general made the comments in a report to the Security Council on Tuesday, a day before the 15-member body holds its twice-yearly meeting on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
The government of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said it could begin the annexation process from July 1.
In the document, Guterres said an Israeli annexation would be “devastating” for hopes of fresh negotiations and an eventual two-state solution.
“This would be calamitous for Palestinians, Israelis and the region,” he said, adding that the plan threatened “efforts to advance regional peace”.
Guterres’s comments came a day after thousands of Palestinians protested in Jericho against the Israeli plans, in a rally also attended by dozens of foreign diplomats.
The Palestinian leadership proposed last week a plan that seeks to create a “sovereign Palestinian state, independent and demilitarised”, with East Jerusalem as its capital. It also leaves the door open to border modifications between the proposed state and Israel, as well as exchanges of land equal “in size and volume and in value – one to one”.
The Palestinian proposal came as a response to US President Donald Trump’s controversial plan that gave a green light for Israel to annex large swaths of the occupied West Bank, including settlements considered illegal under international law, and the Jordan Valley.
Unveiled in late January, Trump’s plan proposed the establishment of a demilitarised Palestinian state on the remaining patchwork of disjointed parts of the Palestinian territories without occupied East Jerusalem. The plan has been rejected in its entirety by the Palestinians.
The Security Council meeting, to be held by video conference, will be the last major international meeting on the issue before the July 1 deadline.
“Any decision on sovereignty will be made only by the Israeli government,” Israel’s UN envoy Danny Danon said in a statement on Tuesday.
Diplomats expect a vast majority of UN members to again oppose the Israeli plans on Wednesday(today).