By Eric Vandenbroeck and co-workers
Gulf Arab states told
the U.N. Human Rights Council on Wednesday they face an existential threat from
Iran as they condemned Iranian attacks on their infrastructure, which the U.N.
rights chief said might constitute war crimes.
The nearly month-long
U.S.-Israeli war on Iran has sparked large-scale Iranian retaliation in the
form of drone and missile strikes on energy and civilian infrastructure in Gulf
countries, killing civilians and driving up oil prices.
"We are seeing
an existential threat to international and regional security. This aggressive
approach is undermining international law and sovereignty," Kuwait's
ambassador Naser Abdullah H. M. Alhayen told the
Geneva-based council. Other Gulf states also denounced Iran's actions, which
they said were designed to spread terror.
Countries at the
47-member council will vote on a motion condemning Iran's strikes, asking Iran
for reparation, and asking the U.N. rights chief to monitor the situation.
Iran defended its
actions, saying more than 1,500 civilians had been killed in the U.S.-Israeli
strikes so far. "We fight on behalf of all of you against an enemy that,
if not restrained today, will be beyond containment tomorrow," said Iran's
ambassador to the U.N. in Geneva, Ali Bahreini, referring to Israel.
Iran has called for
its own emergency session on a fatal strike on a primary school, which will
take place on Friday.
The United Nations'
top rights official, Volker Turk, on Wednesday urged states to end the Iran
conflict, describing the situation as extremely dangerous and unpredictable.
"This conflict
has an unprecedented power to ensnare countries across borders and around the
world," he said.
"Attacks on
civilians and civilian infrastructure must end. If they are deliberate, such
attacks may constitute war crimes."
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