UNITED NATIONS, Jan. 8 (Xinhua) -- The UN Security
Council is scheduled to meet on the Gaza conflict again at 5 p.m. EST (22:00
GMT) on Thursday, the UN Spokesman's Office announced.
The announcement came as top diplomats from Arab and
Western countries are meeting behind closed doors to discuss the proposals on
how to end the conflict in Gaza, which already lasted 13 days and left more than
700 Palestinians killed.
The Security Council is expected to meet in a closed
session to discuss the text of a possible draft resolution on the Gaza conflict.
Arab foreign ministers and their U.S., British and
French counterparts, who stayed at the UN Headquarters in New York for an extra
day, have been debating two competing draft resolutions to try to reach a
compromise.
Earlier, Amr Moussa, secretary-general of the Arab
League, told reporters here that Arab countries are to request the UN Security
Council to vote on a draft resolution on the Gaza conflict on Thursday
afternoon.
Moussa is leading a team of Arab foreign ministers at
the UN Headquarters to press the 15-nation Security Council to adopt a
resolution demanding an immediate end to the Israeli military assaults on Gaza.
"Our firm position is that we cannot waste more time,
(and) the Security Council will be asked, requested to vote on a draft
resolution this afternoon," Moussa told reporters as he emerged along with other
Arab representatives from closed-door consultations here.
According to Arab diplomats here, an immediate end to
the conflict, the lifting of embargo and the opening of crossings are key
elements that should be included in the draft resolution to be voted on by the
Security Council.
The United States has dropped its strong objection to
a binding UN Security Council resolution on the Gaza conflict, diplomatic
sources here said.
A divided UN Security Council has weighed the Gaza
conflict, facing two competing texts on an immediate ceasefire -- a draft
resolution presented by Libya, and a presidential statement proposed by France,
which holds the rotating presidency of the Security Council for January, said
Jean-Marice Ripert, the French UN ambassador and Council president for the
month, on Wednesday.
With Gaza medical officials reporting more than 700
Palestinian deaths, Libya, the only Arab member of the 15-nation Council,
insisted on an early vote on a draft resolution "that demands an immediate end"
to the Israeli offensive that was launched to stop rocket fire by Hamas
militants.
"There is no unanimity on either of these texts,"
Ripert said. "We have decided to continue our discussions."
Zalmay Khalizad, the US ambassador to the United
Nations, said that the non-binding statement was "the best way to proceed" and
enjoyed "broad support."
Arab ministers want a vote on the Libyan draft, which
requires nine votes in favor and no veto from any of the five permanent members
of the Security Council -- Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States
-- for ratification. But the wording of the draft was unlikely to be acceptable
to the veto-holding United States and other Western countries, diplomatic
sources here said.
Egyptian UN Ambassador, Maged Abdelaziz, told
reporters that they would not provoke veto and will discuss with Council members
in order to amend the draft.
The United States has blocked the approval of a
Security Council statement on how to end the Gaza
conflict.