UN chief calls for de-escalation across Gulf region
UN chief calls for de-escalation across Gulf region after killing of top Iranian General in US airstrike
The UN Secretary-General António Guterres has
expressed deep concern over the latest escalation in tension
across the Gulf region, following the killing of a top
Iranian General in Iraq, in an airstrike carried out by the
United States.
In a statement issued on Friday morning, UN
Deputy Spokesperson Farhan Haq, said that the UN chief had
“consistently advocated for de-escalation", adding that
“this is a moment in which leaders must exercise maximum
restraint.”
The head of Iran’s Quds Force,
General Qasem Soleimani, was targeted and killed on the
outskirts of Baghdad airport, in a strike that was ordered
by US President Donald Trump, according to a statement
issued by the US Department of Defense.
Iraqi militia leader Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis, was also among those killed during the strike, according to media reports. His Kataib Hezbollah group had been blamed by the US for a rocket attack which killed a US civilian contractor in Iraq a week ago, and he led a group of militias within Iraq, aligned with Iran.
Iran’s supreme leader, Ayattollah Ali Khamenei, issued a statement calling for three days of public mourning following the death of General Soleimani and said there would be retaliation for the US strikes, according to news reports.
“This is a moment in
which leaders must exercise maximum restraint”, said the
statement from the UN Secretary-General. “The world cannot
afford another war in the Gulf.”
Speaking to reporters at UN Headquarters in New York during the regular Noon Briefing, Mr. Haq said that Mr. Guterres had spoken to the US Ambassador to the UN about the situation within the past half hour, but did not give details of the call.
He said the UN would continue its extensive work on the ground in Iraq, and the UN Mission there, UNAMI, would continue to advocate strongly for stability across the country. Mr Haq said there was no change to report in deployment of UN personnel at this time.
The UN Special Representative, Jeanine Hennis-Plesschaert, responded to the UN chief's message by saying that unless restraint is shown by leaders across the region, the result could be "another devastating cycle of violence".
"For too long" she said on Twitter, "Iraq has been a theatre for different power competitions. Iraqis deserve stability and peace. Cool heads must prevail."
In a series of tweets, the independent UN expert on extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions, Agnes Callamard, questioned the legality under international law of the US strike, and urged the UN to use the "legal tools and the platform" at its disposal, to intervene more robustly.
"There is no more pressing
time for the UN and its leadership to step up than now", she
said.