UN Secretary-General to visit Gaza border as Israel vows Rafah attack

A displaced Palestinian boy selling detergent in small packages looks for customers at a makeshift camp beside a street in Rafah on March 14, 2024, amid ongoing battles between Israel and the Hamas militant group.(Photo by Mohammed ABED / AFP)

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres is expected to visit the Egypt-Gaza border on Saturday, following Israel’s announcement of deploying troops to combat Hamas in the nearby city of Rafah

During his visit, Guterres plans to reiterate his call for a humanitarian ceasefire, though renewed international pressure has so far failed to dissuade Israel from the planned ground offensive in Rafah.

Despite warnings that such an operation would cause mass civilian casualties and worsen the humanitarian crisis gripping the territory, Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he will press ahead with the attack.

“I hope to do that with the support of the United States, but if we need to, we will do it alone,” Netanyahu told visiting US Secretary of State Antony Blinken on Friday.

International efforts to pause the almost six months of fighting have intensified, with the health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza reporting 32,070 people killed in the Palestinian territory as of Friday and multiple UN warnings of imminent famine.

“This is a man-made catastrophe,” the head of the United Nations agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA), Philippe Lazzarini, wrote on social media platform X. He added that a ceasefire and “flooding Gaza with food + lifesaving goods” was the only solution.

The latest bid for a Security Council resolution on an “immediate” ceasefire failed on Friday as China and Russia vetoed the American proposal, which Arab governments complained was too weak.