DRAFT RESOLUTION 1.
X
Committee: United Nations Security Council
Topic: The Israel Palestine Conflict and Iran’s interventions
Signatories: Palestinian Liberation Organisation, The Arab Republic of Egypt,
Lebanon, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, Kazakhstan,
Hamas, Syria, Iraq, Kuwait, Sudan, The Russian Federation, Kingdom of
Thailand, Islamic Republic of Iran, and the Republic of Korea
The Security Council,
Deeply concerned due to the the bombardment of Rafah which has led to
thousands being internally displaced,
Bearing in mind the international law violations by Israel which include the 4
Geneva conventions and the United Nations Charter which has decreased the
GDP of Palestine from $20 billion to $1.8 billion in 3 months,
Alarmed by the blockade and siege of Gaza which has restricted the flow of
goods in and out of the country acting as a major hurdle in the path of
development,
LFully aware of the tensions between Iran and Israel and the recent death of
the Iranian President Ibrahim pRaisi,
1. Approves the CBBRHA framework to immediately deal with the
catastrophes of the war which consists of:
a. Ceasefire - an immediate and permanent ceasefire to be
organised by the UN and all Israeli forces inside Gaza to withdraw
from therein;
b. Borders - mandate of the 1947 borders to be followed;
c. Blockade - The naval blockade and siege of Gaza to be lifted to
allow the free flow of goods and aid, inside and outside the
country;
d. Relief Fund - An international relief fund to be set up:
i. The relief fund to be named “Palestinian Emergency Relief
Fund”;
ii. To be set up under the World Bank;
iii. Fund to be advertised on various social media platforms such
as Instagram, Facebook, Whatsapp;
iv. Funds to be used to deal with various problems causes by the
long war;
v. An increased funding to be given to UNRWA for the
rehabilitation of refugees;
e. Healthcare - to ensure the health of the civilians devastated by
the long war, the following steps would be taken:
i. Creation of a ‘’Palestinian health commission”;
ii. The construction of 3 large hospitals in 1 year in collaboration
with United Nations Development Program, health commission to
supervise the constructions;
iii. Experienced foreign doctors to be employed through Locum;
iv. Nurses, janitors and clerics to be trained and employed
through the health commission;
v. Advanced medical facilities to be imported from other countries
such as Egypt;
vi. Hospitals to deal with all the diseases caused by long wars
that are respiratory problems, infectious diseases etc;
vii. The hospitals to be free for all;
f. Accommodation - the following steps would be taken to provide
shelter to the local palestinians devastated by war:
i. The “Palestinian Construction Commission” to be built;
ii. Volunteers to be hired both, from and outside Palestine who
are willing to participate in this construction;
iii. Each society to have an area of 5km^2;
iv. All the societies to be distributed equally across the Gaza Strip;
v. These societies to be funded by the “Palestinian Relief fund”;
vi. Commercial Zones to be built in each society and to be rented
out to the locals of the society at low rates;
vii. Houses in 5 of the societies given out for free, houses in 2 of
the societies given at low costs and houses in 3 of the societies to
be rented out at low rates;
viii. Rents of the houses and the commercial zones to be going to
the Construction Commission for future projects;
2. Calls upon the Maritime Trade Framework:
a. A port to be built on the gaza coastline;
b. The port to built in collaboration with the UNDP;
c. Aims to build 30 harbours in the time of 5 years;
d. Gaza maritime commission to be created to overview the
development of the port;
e. Large quantities of concrete as well as skilled labour to be
imported from Egypt;
f. The United Nations Sustainable Development Goal’s point 14 to
be kept in mind while the construction of the port which is to
conserve and sustainably use the oceans, seas, and marine
resources for sustainable development;
g. Wind power to be used to provide electricity to the port;
h. The profits collected from the port would be kept with the Port
Commission until the proposed plan of 30 ports in not achieved;
i. All raw material for local industries could come to the port tariff
free for the first 5 years when the port is being built;
j. High tariffs would be charged on finished goods if they can be
locally produced, especially luxurious goods;
3. Affirms the GDF (Gaza Development Framework):
a. Planning board to be build under the UNDP;
b. A development program to be drawing up by the board in
compliance with the UN SDGs and MDGs to deal with the
economic damage done by Israel;
c. The Palestinian Employment Program to be initiated by the
development board to train the local Palestinians so the supply of
skilled labour can be increased in the country;
d. A new efficient tax collection system would be set up;
e. Corporate tax for small and medium sized enterprises would be
abolished for the first 5 years;
f. Overall corporate tax would not increase 5% for any company
whether foreign or local;
g. The Palestinian Construction Commission to build:
i. 1000 schools;
ii. 10 colleges;
iii. 3 universities;
h. Government to run initiatives to promote small businesses:
i. Providing small grants on interest rate as low as 1%;
ii. Makin research of universities available to them;
iii. Helping them contact the skilled labour directly which are
trained by the Palestinian Employment Program ;
i. Solar power generation plants to be set up to provide electricity to
the local Palestinian industries and societies set up by the
construction commission;
4. Demands an arms embargo to be placed on Israel;
5. Endorses the adoption of the Cairo plan which is an umbrella framework
acting on 5 intricate pillars to counter the economic, social, refugee, and
political problems faced in the Israel-Palestine conflict:
a. First Pillar calls for the formation of an International fundpool,
“Geneva Fund Pool” to promote the economic condition of the
palestinian people:
i. This fund pool would be used to repair the
destruction caused in Gaza due to the Israeli attacks
ii. All signatories of this document would provide a minimum
of million and maximum of 10 million dollars of funding to
the fund pool annually at their own discretion;
iii. The Fund pool would work on a Hierarchical Basis with all
members of the Pro-peace bloc acting as Founders;
iv. It would be at the discretion of the Founders on a
unanimous vote per every transaction coming in and out of
the fundpool;
v. These funds would be allocated to promote the industrial
integrity of palestine to recover from the conflict:
1. To ensure the validity of the allocation of this money
a weekly report is to sent to the UN secretary
General and the Founding council of the Geneva
Fundpool for verification:
b. Pillar 2 calls for the demilitarisation of the violent Non-state actors
which include but are not limited to Hamas, Hasbulla etc after the
establishment of a ceasefire and to adopt the following:
i. i. For Hamas to be given the identity of a political party
within the Palestinian parliament
ii. This would give them the ability to stand in elections to
represent the government
iii. Elections to be held in Palestine, with voting polls present
respectively in the Gaza Strip and the West bank:
iv. These voting polls to be provided through funding from the
Geneva Fundpool;
6. Proposes mediating talks between Israeli Parliamentary Forces after a
negotiation according to the 1948 Borders is complete, and the peaceful
removal of IPF and stopping of resistive actions by Hamas through the
Project Peace which calls for:
a. An interim period of 24 months to be granted to allow the
complete removal of Israeli Paramilitary forces from Gaza under
the committee of OCHA;
b. A monthly report, for the 24 months, to be produced for the
progress and upkeep of the negotiations to ensure actively both
parties are taking steps to reduce their militant presence;
c. The Israeli paramilitary to reside only at the border between
Gaza and Israel to ensure no illegal control of land, and hence
ensuring issues such as those of security and trade fall under
Palestine’s own jurisdiction in Gaza;
d. Takes the international community in confidence to maintain
accountability and a fair share of power between the PA and
Israel;
e. An election to be held in Palestine after partition, to decide
whether the PLO or Hamas takes power, with Hamas conducting
diplomatic talks with PLO to reduce further problems;
7. Proposes the following Election Plan to take place after partition to
decide which party gets control over which areas and it will be as
follows:
a. New Elections will be funded via the United Nations Central
Emergency Relief Fund;
b. To ensure that elections go as planned, they will be regulated by
the New Palestinian Voting Agency (NPVA), which will be trained
under UN guidelines by international authorities,
c. UN Peacekeeping Forces along with Egyption Forces will be
deployed to ensure peace during the elections,
d. Based on these elections, parties will be allowed to set up
provincial governments in areas where they are majorities and will
take full control over local subjects which include:
i. Local Government,
ii. Education and Healthcare,
iii. Local Environment,
e. A central unit will be given the name Joint Union of Palestine (JUP),
where according to elections parties will obtain seats considering the
following guidelines:
i. This union will have a total of 120 seats with 50 each reserved
for the PLO and Hamas, with the rest 20 being for others,
ii. This union will control subjects such as Justice and Police etc,
iii. It will require 4/5th of the committee to pass any sort of action;
f. It will be supervised by Election of The Human Rights Council;
8. Encourages the rebuilding of Gaza and eliminating all threats through
the Project Red which calls for:
a. The deployment of:
i. The NGO International Tracing Instruments to trace small and
only illegal arms across borders, IEDs and Remnants of War;
ii. Checkpoints every 5 kilometres to the east of Gaza and in Rafah
utilising UN Military Staff Committee and UN Peacekeeping Forces;
iii. Technical resources on borders to include, but not be limited to
Automatic License Plate Recognition, Tethered Aerostats Radar System
(TARS), Language Translators, Surveillance Drones, Radiation
Detectors, Aerial, and Underground Sensors;
b. Sending a cross-parliamentary fact-finding mission across Gaza
and Israel to assess both regions for:
i. The mission will include UN Disengagement Observer Force,
cross-parliamentary fact-finding missions to act as rapporteurs and to
help draft a more informed ceasefire;
ii. Standard of investigation set under the UN would be ensured
through organisations such as UN Office of Internal Oversight Services
(OIOS) and Investigative entities in the mission including Special
Investigative Unit (SIU) and ad-hoc panels;
iii. The mission emphasises on the fact that each region has a unique
situation hence, urges the OIOS and other investigative bodies to
provide annual reports to help better gauge the problems for a suitable
solution to be drafted;
c. Encourages state-building for Palestine through establishing a
trade partnership with independent countries;
d. Funding to be provided through;
1) The Global Conflict Prevention Pool;
2) Thematic funding pools consisting of NGOs and MNSCs;
3) Utilising the UN 5th Committee for budgeting.
9. Remains actively sized on the matter.