Israel's UN envoy claims Palestinians 'have no right of return'
Israel’s Ambassador to the United Nations Gilad Erdan speaks during a meeting of the U.N. Security Council on "The Middle East, including the Palestinian question" at U.N., headquarters in New York City, U.S. April 25, 2023. (Reuters File Photo)


The Israeli ambassador to the United Nations claimed Palestinians do not have the right to return to their homes.

''Let me be clear, there is no right of return. You all know this,'' Gilad Erdan told a U.N. Security Council meeting.

"The demand of returning millions of descendants of refugees demands to obliterate the Jewish people's right to self-determination, and this will never happen."

There are currently 5.9 million Palestinian refugees in the Gaza Strip, the West Bank, as well as neighboring countries in the Middle East, according to UNRWA, the U.N.'s Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees.

The Palestinian ambassador to the U.N. said that there are more than 700,000 Israeli settlers in occupied Palestinian territory, including East Jerusalem.

"The Israeli occupation is a settler-colonial occupation," he said. "The only way the international community can end it is to address its settler-colonial nature."

He called for U.N. resolutions to be translated into an action plan with measures to be taken by every "peace-loving" state to dissuade Israel from entrenching its occupation.

Israel occupied East Jerusalem, where Al-Aqsa Mosque is located, during the 1967 Arab-Israeli War. It annexed the entire city in 1980, in a move never recognized by the international community.

Israeli forces and fanatical Jewish Israeli settlers frequently carry out raids at Al-Aqsa Mosque to provoke the Palestinians, and recent years have seen the incursions grow larger and more brazen.

Tensions have been running high across the occupied West Bank in recent months amid repeated Israeli raids into Palestinian towns.​​​​​​​