Occupied Jerusalem - SANA
The permanent representative of Palestine to the United Nations, Riyad Mansour, reiterated his assertion that the escalation of the implementation of the colonial settlement plans of the Israeli occupation and its attacks on the Palestinian people constitutes a flagrant violation of international law, calling on the international community to stop them.
Mansour said in a message addressed to the Secretary-General of the United Nations, the President of the United Nations Security Council and the President of the United Nations General Assembly, transmitted by the Wafa Agency ... that the occupation authorities' intention to establish 3,300 settlement units in the West Bank in addition to establishing more than 450 other units in Jerusalem constitutes a flagrant violation of international law and United Nations resolutions. The United Nations stressed the need to address such violations aimed at cutting off geographical contact between Palestinian cities and towns.
Mansour pointed to the continued attacks of the occupation forces through bombing, demolition, forced evictions and settlements, in addition to the escalation of provocative incursions by settlers against Palestinians.
In the same context, Mansour stressed that the Palestinian prisoners, including children, were exposed to various kinds of oppression and attacks in the occupation prisons, in addition to the lack of health care due to deliberate medical negligence in light of the outbreak of the Corona epidemic, which led to the infection of dozens of them with the virus, calling on the international community to take effective action to stop the violations of the occupation and launch The release of the Palestinian prisoners and the accountability of the occupation officials for their crimes.
And the occupation authorities recently announced a new plan to establish more than 3,300 settlement units on the occupied Palestinian territories, as part of the settlement war and Judaization that aims to isolate Palestinian cities and villages from each other, in implementation of the so-called "deal of the century."