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What’s new in the UN Gaza ceasefire resolution, and will it succeed?

The UN Security Council has passed yet another resolution calling for a Gaza ceasefire. This is the fourth such resolution adopted by the council since Hamas’ October 7 attack.

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Gaza ceasefire - UN resolution

Gaza ceasefire, UN resolution | Photo courtesy: UN

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The UN Security Council has passed yet another resolution calling for a Gaza ceasefire. This is the fourth such resolution adopted by the council since Hamas’ October 7 attack on southern Israel and the launching of Israel’s war in Gaza.

Little has come from the three previous resolutions, all of which have been legally binding since they were passed by the Security Council:

  • a resolution on March 25 calling for a Gaza ceasefire that was ignored by Israel

  • a resolution on December 22 calling for a “sustainable cessation of hostitilies”, which also had no immediate practical effect

  • a resolution on November 15 calling for “humanitarian pauses”, which did nothing to alleviate Palestinian suffering or secure the release of hostages.

So, what is new about this latest Gaza ceasefire resolution? And does it have any more chance of succeeding than previous attempts at a ceasefire?

What is new

First, this most recent Gaza ceasefire resolution, which was drafted by the United States and supported by a vote of 14-0 (with Russia abstaining), has much more specific terms. For example, it lays out a three-stage approach to achieving a “permanent end to hostilities”.

In this first stage, all fighting will stop and some of the remaining hostages will be returned in exchange for Palestinian prisoners. And if the negotiations take longer than six weeks, the ceasef

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