Home / Politics / US cannot cover crime against Palestinian children

US cannot cover crime against Palestinian children

'The situation in Palestine is deteriorating, and more than 200 are martyred and more than 22,000 people have already been injured,' said Gholamali Khoshroo at a Security Council meeting devoted to Palestine and the Middle East on Thursday.

He added, 'What the Palestinian demonstrators want is return to their ancestral home and an independent Palestinian state and their natural right'.

Iran's envoy to the United Nations continued, 'The Israeli regime kills them because they are Palestinian and because they consider no rights for Palestinian, even the right to live. This is the result of 70 years of oppression of the Palestinians, which has continued with the US support and for the indifference of the Security Council.'

Khoshroo, recalling that the United States vetoed 44 resolutions against Israel on the Security Council, said, 'It has approved about 300 resolutions on Palestinian issues, but Israel has violated all of them. This regime is at the forefront of the violators of the resolutions of this institution.'

In response to claims by Nicky Haley, the resigned US ambassador who had referred to martyr Fahmide to prove the claim that Iran had used children in Syria, said that the United States could not cover its and Israel's crimes against Palestinian children and their brutal killing.

Iran's envoy to the United Nations added, 'The United States, whose representative tried to be a very kind mother of Iranian children, must have said that a large number of Iranian children were martyred by Saddam who was supported by them, and that the American murderer of 66 Iranian children that they were among the passengers of Iranian flight that the United States overthrew in the Persian Gulf.

9455**1420
Follow us on Twitter @IrnaEnglish

www.irna.ir

Check Also

Iran’s parliament speaker calls for S Korea’s to immediate solution to unfreeze frozen funds

During a meeting with South Korean Prime Minister Chung Sye-kyun, Qalibaf noted that "we are …