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'Powder keg' could spark wider war, says UN rights chief

Demonstrators holding placards take part during a protest urging to open the Rafah border, in Jakarta, Indonesia. — Reuters
Demonstrators holding placards take part during a protest urging to open the Rafah border, in Jakarta, Indonesia. — Reuters
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GENEVA: The Gaza war between Israel and Palestinians is a "powder keg" with the potential to spark broader conflict in the Middle East, UN human rights chief Volker Turk said Monday.


Turk said it was imperative to to take all possible measures to avoid a wider conflagration.


"The war in Gaza has already generated dangerous spillover in neighbouring countries," he said in his global update to the United Nations Human Rights Council.


"I am deeply concerned that in this powder keg, any spark could lead to a much broader conflagration. This would have implications for every country in the Middle East and many beyond it."


He said that overlapping emergencies made the spectre of spillover conflict very real, and cited the examples of Yemen and Lebanon as places where the Gaza war is having a wider effect.


"The military escalation in southern Lebanon between Israel and armed groups is extremely worrying," Turk said.


The UN high commissioner for human rights said almost 200 people had been killed in Lebanon and some 90,000 internally displaced.


"Incidents in which civilians, including children, paramedics and journalists, have been killed in attacks must be fully investigated," said Turk.


Some 80,000 people have also been displaced from areas in northern Israel along the country's border with Lebanon, he added.


"It is imperative to do everything possible to avoid a wider conflagration," he said.


The Gaza war began after the October 7 attack, which resulted in the deaths of about 1,160 people in Israel, according to a tally of Israeli figures.


The Palestinian groups also took captives, 130 of whom remain in Gaza.


Israel's retaliatory bombardment and ground offensive in Gaza have killed more than 30,000 people in under five months, most of them women and children.


Yemen's groups have been targeting Red Sea shipping for months in protest at the war in Gaza.


Yemenis say they are attacking Israeli-linked shipping in solidarity with Palestinians in the beseiged territory.


The unrest has forced several companies to reroute shipments in the commercially vital waterway, driving up delivery times and costs.


The United States, Israel's key ally, has led reprisal strikes on targets in Yemen in a bid to quash the attacks.


Turk said the attacks had not only disrupted global maritime trade but had driven up the price of goods, which has had a significant impact on developing countries. — AFP


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