On Tuesday, the United Nations General Assembly overwhelmingly adopted a resolution introduced by Egypt and Mauritania and co-sponsored by more than 100 states demanding an ”immediate humanitarian ceasefire” in Gaza. The measure won by 153 votes, with only 10 opposed and 23 abstentions.
The UN Security Council’s own resolution calling for a ceasefire failed after the U.S. vetoed it in a 13 to 1 vote on Friday.
The General Assembly’s vote margin on Tuesday was much bigger than the October 27 vote on a resolution calling for a ”humanitarian truce leading to a cessation of hostilities” (somewhat weaker language than the latest resolution). That one was adopted with a huge margin of 121 votes in favor and 14 opposed.
Most of the Global South states that had not supported the Oct 27 resolution were in favor this time around. These included India, Cambodia, Philippines, Jamaica, Zambia, Ethiopia, Fiji, and Benin. The shift of India, Philippines, Ethiopia, and Fiji is particularly notable from a geopolitical perspective. Läs artikel