Israel ‘gone beyond self-defence’ in Gaza, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi says, calls to ‘stop collective punishment’
- Israel ‘should seriously listen to the calls of the international community and UN’, Wang Yi tells Saudi counterpart in phone call on conflict
- China ‘communicating intensively with all parties’ for a ceasefire, top priority is ‘safety of civilians’, Chinese readout quotes Wang as saying
“Israel’s actions have gone beyond self-defence,” Wang told Prince Faisal bin Farhan Al Saud, according to a Chinese foreign ministry readout released early on Sunday.
“It should seriously listen to the calls of the international community and the United Nations secretary general and stop collective punishment of the people of Gaza.”
“China opposes and condemns all actions that harm civilians because they violate basic human conscience and basic norms of international law,” Wang said.
He also urged all parties to refrain from escalating the situation and to return to negotiations as soon as possible, the readout added.
“China is communicating intensively with all parties to urge for a ceasefire. The top priority now is to ensure the safety of civilians, open humanitarian aid channels and safeguard the basic needs of Gaza’s people,” Wang said.
Al Saud said Saudi Arabia was deeply concerned about the Israel-Palestine conflict. He condemned all attacks on civilians and opposed Israel’s forcible relocation of Gaza residents.
The UN has said it “considers it impossible for such a movement to take place without devastating humanitarian consequences”.
UN chief Antonio Guterres, who earlier said the situation in Gaza had “reached a dangerous new low”, has been urging Israeli authorities “to avert a humanitarian catastrophe”.
Humanitarian organisation Norwegian Refugee Council has also called on Israel to reverse the evacuation order, saying the “collective punishment of countless civilians” amounted to a war crime.
“My colleagues inside Gaza confirm that there are countless people in the northern parts who have no means to safely relocate under the constant barrage of fire,” council chief Jan Egeland said on Friday.
“The loss of civilian lives caused by deliberate or indiscriminate use of force is a war crime.”
Some 1,300 people were killed and dozens taken hostage by Hamas fighters after they attacked a music festival and border towns in southern Israel early on October 7. Retaliatory air strikes launched by Israel have killed more than 2,200 people in Gaza, according to Palestinian authorities.
China’s special envoy for Middle East affairs Zhai Jun, who will visit the region this week, warned that the conflict was spilling over, with armed clashes with pro-Palestinian groups on Israel’s northern borders with Lebanon and Syria.
“The international community must be highly vigilant and work together to control the situation and prevent it from getting out of control with objectivity and fairness,” Zhai told state broadcaster CCTV on Saturday.
He said Chinese citizens in Israel could take commercial flights back or to third countries as needed, and Beijing would continue to monitor air and land routes and provide help.
Zhai said his upcoming visits would aim to push for a ceasefire, protection of civilians, de-escalation of the situation and the promotion of peace talks. He did not specify “the relevant countries” to be included on the trip.
His trip will follow the United States Secretary of State Antony Blinken’s ongoing diplomatic tour of the Middle East covering Israel, Qatar, Jordan, Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates as well as Saudi Arabia.
Wang said the “two-state solution”, a proposed framework to establish an independent Palestine alongside the Jewish state, remained the “fundamental way out” for the conflict, according to the Chinese readout of the call. Blinken agreed, it noted.