← NewsAll
UN approves Gaza ceasefire plan put forward by Trump administration
Summary
The UN Security Council voted to adopt a US-backed 20-point Gaza plan with 13 votes in favor and abstentions from Russia and China; the plan includes provisions for a ceasefire framework, an international stabilization force and a transitional governing board.
Content
The United Nations Security Council on Monday adopted a US-backed 20-point plan intended to secure a ceasefire and create a framework for Gaza's recovery. The measure passed with 13 votes in favor while Russia and China abstained. The resolution endorses elements of the US plan that call for an International Stabilization Force and a transitional "Board of Peace" to oversee Gaza until 2027. Some Council members raised concerns about the plan's language on Palestinian statehood.
Key facts:
- The Security Council vote was 13 in favor, with Russia and China abstaining and no vetoes used.
- The adopted text describes an International Stabilization Force to help secure borders and humanitarian corridors and a temporary Board of Peace to oversee governance in Gaza.
- The resolution references a conditional pathway toward Palestinian self-determination tied to reforms and rebuilding.
- A competing Russian draft was circulated before the vote, and regional states participated in negotiations reported as helping to shape support for the measure.
Summary:
The Council's adoption moves the US proposal toward implementation discussions, including possible deployment of an international stabilization force and the set-up of a transitional governing body. The detailed political and operational timelines for those steps remain undetermined at this time.
