U.N. rights expert Francesca Albanese on Wednesday condemned the U.S.-brokered cease-fire proposal in Gaza, saying it fails to address Israel's ongoing "genocide” of Palestinians with Washington's support.
A fragile truce is in place as part of a deal to end two years of Israeli attacks, which also involves the recovery of hostages, delivery of more aid to Gaza and eventual rebuilding of the devastated Palestinian territory.
The plan is "absolutely inadequate and it doesn't comply with international law", said Albanese, the U.N. special rapporteur on human rights in the occupied Palestinian territories.
There needed to be commitment to "ending the occupation, ending exploitation of Palestinian resources, ending colonization," Albanese told reporters.
Israeli troops currently control around half of the coastal Palestinian territory.
"It's not a war, it's a genocide where there is a determination to destroy a people as such," said Albanese, who is mandated by the United Nations.
U.N. investigators and several human rights groups, among them Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch, accuse Israel of committing genocide in Gaza, based on evidence. Israel has denied that charge as "distorted and false," while accusing the authors of "antisemitism."
'System collapse'
Albanese was in South Africa, which has laid a case of genocide against Israel at the International Court of Justice, to deliver the annual Nelson Mandela Lecture on Oct. 25.
Under U.S. sanctions since July for her outspoken criticism of Israel, she will also present her next report to the United Nations from South Africa in the coming days.
"The United States and Israel are leading not just the genocide in Gaza," Albanese said.
"They are leading to the erosion, the collapse of the multilateral system, threatening everyone who tries to advance justice and accountability," she charged, mentioning four ICC judges also under U.S. sanctions.
Renewed discussions over the past months about a two-state solution to the Israel-Palestinian conflict have "been a pretence of doing something while the emergency was to discuss ... how we stop the genocide," she said.
The Italian lawyer said U.N. member states should be disengaging with Israel because they are "obliged not to aid and assist a state which commits wrongful acts".
Those "who still have ties with Israel, diplomatic, but especially economic, political and military ties, are all responsible in some measure," she said.