Ban Intensifies Diplomatic Push for Gaza Ceasefire
New York, Dec 31 2008 3:10PM
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon is “on full alert” as he intensifies diplomatic efforts to secure a ceasefire in the Gaza
fighting, his spokesperson said today, as other United Nations officials voiced disappointment that Israel has so far
rejected the idea of a 48-hour lull.
Mr. Ban is “continuing to work the phones” speaking with Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni and United States
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice yesterday and Foreign Ministers of Brazil and Canada today, spokesperson Marie Okabe
told a news conference, as the surge of Israeli air strikes on Gaza and Hamas rocket attacks into Israel entered its
fifth day.
“He will be on full alert over the coming days as he continues to do what he can to work towards a ceasefire,” she said
as humanitarian officials painted a grim picture of the situation in Gaza with many people facing “a life or death
situation,” grave shortages of vital supplies such as food, and fuel-starved hospitals confronting their largest ever
trauma caseloads.
“We’re obviously very disappointed that the proposal for a 48-hour lull or ceasefire, whatever you want to call it, has
been rejected but we hope that diplomatic efforts to achieve a ceasefire will bear some fruit in the coming days,” UN
Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator John Holmes told the same news
conference.
Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert was quoted by media reports as saying conditions were not yet ripe for a ceasefire
since they had not yet reached the point of promising safety in southern Israel which has been targeted by increasingly
longer-range Hamas missiles from Gaza.
Speaking by video link from Gaza, UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA)
Commissioner-General Karen AbuZayd portrayed the deep disappointment felt by ordinary Gazans.
“This is something that had gone round the public in the markets and so on for those people who are venturing out and
they were very disappointed because they’d been rather cheerful, thinking ‘oh good, it’s going to stop for a couple of
days at least and we’ll get things in and we’ll have a little bit of peace from the noise of the bombs and the noise of
the drones overhead,’” she said.
She noted the traumatic effect the air strikes were having on the civilian population, with some parents trying to quiet
their alarmed children by telling them the bombs were the sounds of wedding celebrations.
ENDS