Over 30 states meet during Netanyahu's UN speech to weigh action against Israel
The Hague Group convenes 34 states on the sidelines of
the General Assembly to gather support for eight concrete measures to stop the
Gaza genocide
By Sondos Asem
Published date: 26 September 2025
https://www.middleeasteye.net/news/states-meet-netanyahu-un-speech-weigh-action-israel
As Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu took the
stage at the United Nations General Assembly in New York on Friday, 34 states
convened under the banner of The Hague Group to coordinate legal, diplomatic
and economic measures aimed at halting Israel’s genocide in Gaza.
Scores of diplomats also walked
out of Netanyahu's
speech in protest against his government's conduct in occupied Palestine and
multiple attacks on countries in the Middle East and North Africa over the past
two years.
The ministerial meeting, co-chaired by Colombia and
South Africa, brought together governments spanning Latin America, Africa,
Asia, Europe and the Middle East.
In addition to the co-chairs, states attending were:
Algeria, Antigua and Barbuda, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Comoros, Cuba, Djibouti,
Guyana, Honduras, Iceland, Indonesia, Iraq, Ireland, Jordan, Kuwait, Malaysia,
Maldives, Mexico, Namibia, Nicaragua, Norway, Oman, Palestine, Qatar, Saint
Vincent and the Grenadines, Saudi Arabia, Slovenia, Spain, Turkey, Uruguay and
Venezuela.
The Hague
Group is a bloc of
eight states - Bolivia, Colombia, Cuba, Honduras, Malaysia, Namibia, Senegal
and South Africa - launched on 31 January in the eponymous Dutch city with the
stated goal of holding Israel accountable under international law.
But on Friday, it was the first time several states,
including Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Iceland, attended an event by the group, in
a sign of mounting international pressure on Israel.
In their closing remarks at the meeting, Colombian
Foreign Minister Rosa Villavicencio and South Africa’s Minister of
International Relations Ronald Lamola warned: “The choice before every
government is clear: complicity or compliance. History will judge us not by the
speeches we delivered, but by the actions we took.”
The group pledged to share enforcement tools and legal
mechanisms to help governments adopt measures designed to sever Israel’s access
to arms, finance and energy.
The measures include pledges to:
- Prevent
military and dual-use exports to Israel
- Refuse
Israeli weapons shipments at ports
- Prevent
vessels carrying weapons to Israel under their national flags
- Review
all public contracts to prevent public institutions and funds from
supporting Israel’s illegal occupation
- Pursue
justice for international crimes and support universal jurisdiction to
hold perpetrators accountable
- Halt military procurement from
Israel
- Divest
public institutions from complicit companies
- Institute an energy embargo
The meeting coincided with the expiration of a
12-month deadline set by a UN resolution demanding that Israel comply with an
International Court of Justice ruling to end its occupation of Gaza, the West
Bank and East Jerusalem, and that other states refrain from supporting or
recognising the occupation.
“The people of Palestine cannot wait, and The Hague
Group will not rest until it has rallied the world to defend the international
laws that protect them,” the co-chairs declared.
Varsha Gandikota-Nellutla, the group’s executive
secretary, said Gaza had become “the litmus test of our lifetime”, insisting
that condemnation alone was insufficient.
“The proposed measures are not optional, not radical,
not novel. They are legal obligations, binding under the Genocide Convention,
ICJ advisory opinions and UN resolutions,” she said.
Varsen Aghabekian, Palestine’s foreign minister,
argued that the real substance of this year’s General Assembly summit lay not
in speeches but in concrete action.
“It will be found in the actions that states will take
to halt the genocide of our people and the illegal occupation of our land,” she
said.
Palestine’s UN ambassador, Riyad Mansour, described
The Hague Group as an “inflection point” in the pursuit of accountability.
He highlighted the Bogota
Declaration, an
earlier policy framework endorsed by the group in July, as the most coordinated
enforcement effort yet seen at the national and international levels.
Israel 'must be stopped'
Brazil’s Foreign Minister Mauro Vieira accused Israel
of maintaining an unlawful blockade on humanitarian aid, warning that states
failing to act could themselves face responsibility for complicity in genocide.
Turkey’s Deputy Foreign Minister Nuh Yilmaz said
Israel’s military actions against Lebanon, Syria, Yemen, Iran and Qatar
demonstrated that the crisis was now destabilising the wider region.
“Israel, as the exporter of war, must be stopped. Its
privilege of impunity must be lifted,” he said.
Qatar’s Minister of State Sultan bin Saad Al Muraikhi
also delivered remarks, denouncing Israeli attacks on his country as a
violation of sovereignty and international law.
The UN special rapporteur on the right to food,
Michael Fakhri, said Israel was conducting “the fastest and most vicious
starvation campaign in modern history”. He called for broad-based sanctions,
arguing that Israel’s economy had profited by an estimated $628bn from the
occupation of Palestine between 2000 and 2020.
Gandikota-Nellutla argued that unilateral measures had
left governments exposed to retaliation. “The only antidote to unilateral
punishment from powerful states… is collective action,” she said.
The Hague Group sponsored a two-day emergency
summit in Bogota in July, culminating in a joint declaration by states
demanding international sanctions against Israel and legal
accountability for what participants described as "grave violations of
international law" in Gaza.
Since then, many states have expressed support for the
group's goals, without formally becoming members. These include Turkey, Spain
and Ireland, which have declared their own sanctions against Israel in line
with The Hague Group's pledges.
The ongoing 80th session of the UN General Assembly
has been dominated by damning speeches by world leaders criticising Israel for
its genocide in Gaza and the relentless expansion of settlements in the
occupied West Bank in defiance of international law.
Netanyahu's flight en route to the US on
Thursday avoided most EU airspace for the first time, reportedly
over fears that EU member states may arrest and surrender him to the
International Criminal Court.
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